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Ngorongoro Conservation Area
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Ngorongoro Conservation Area

The world's largest volcanic caldera — 25,000 animals in a natural 260 km² amphitheatre.

Overview

About Ngorongoro Conservation Area

The Ngorongoro Conservation Area spans 8,292 square kilometres and was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979 for both its natural and cultural significance. The Ngorongoro Crater — the world's largest unbroken volcanic caldera at 19 kilometres in diameter — shelters approximately 25,000 large animals in a 260-square-kilometre floor. The conservation area also encompasses Olduvai Gorge, where Louis and Mary Leakey discovered 1.8-million-year-old Homo habilis fossils in 1959.

Best Time to Visit

When to Go

June to October for the best crater-floor game viewing with dry conditions. December to March when flamingos flock to the crater's Lake Magadi. Year-round destination as the crater floor always has water.

Wildlife

What You'll See

The crater floor supports the densest concentration of large mammals on Earth: approximately 62 black rhino (one of Tanzania's largest populations), 7,000 wildebeest, 4,000 zebra, and an estimated 62 lions. Hippo pools, flamingo-lined Lake Magadi, and herds of eland on the crater rim complete the spectacle.

Getting There

Your Journey Begins

3.5-hour drive from Arusha (190 km) via the Lodoare Gate. Flights from Arusha to Lake Manyara airstrip (45 minutes), then 1.5-hour road transfer to the crater rim. Often combined with Serengeti in a 5-7 day northern circuit itinerary.

Areas to Explore

Within Ngorongoro Conservation Area

01

Ngorongoro Crater Floor

260 km² of concentrated wildlife drama at 1,800 metres — the floor of Earth's largest unbroken caldera.

The crater floor covers 260 square kilometres at an elevation of 1,800 metres, ringed by walls rising 600 metres. Lake Magadi, a shallow alkaline lake, attracts lesser flamingos by the thousands. The Lerai Forest of yellow-barked acacia supports elephant bulls and buffalo herds. A limited number of vehicles are permitted daily, and overnight stays on the crater floor are prohibited to minimize impact.

02

Olduvai Gorge

Walk through 2 million years of human evolution at one of the world's most important paleoanthropological sites.

Olduvai Gorge (properly Oldupai, from the Maasai word for wild sisal) is a 48-kilometre-long ravine in the eastern Serengeti plain where the Leakeys' discoveries revolutionized understanding of human evolution. The site has yielded fossils spanning 2 million years including Homo habilis, Paranthropus boisei ('Nutcracker Man'), and early Homo sapiens tools. The on-site museum displays casts of key finds and a lecture hall explains the excavation history.

03

Empakaai Crater

A guided crater descent through montane forest with views of Africa's only active carbonatite volcano.

Empakaai Crater is a smaller volcanic caldera 6 kilometres in diameter, with a deep soda lake covering most of its floor. A guided hike (with an armed ranger) descends 300 metres from the forested rim to the lake shore, passing through montane forest inhabited by buffalo, bushbuck, and blue monkeys. On clear days, the crater rim offers views of both Ol Doinyo Lengai — Africa's only active carbonatite volcano — and distant Kilimanjaro.

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