Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'iSimangaliso Wetland Park' has mentioned 'Bay' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
Lake St.xc2xa0Lucia St.xc2xa0Lucia Game Reserve False Bay Park Kosi Bay Lake Eteza Nature Reserve Lake Sibhayi St.xc2xa0Lucia Marine Reserve St.xc2xa0Lucia Marine Sanctuary Sodwana Bay National Park Mapelane Nature Reserve Maputaland Marine Protected Area Cape Vidal Ozabeni Mfabeni Tewate Wilderness Area Mkuze Game Reserve | WIKI |
The park is part of a transfrontier marine park, the Ponta do Ouro-Kosi Bay Transfrontier Conservation Area, straddling South Africa, Mozambique, and Eswatini. | WIKI |
Until 1895, the bay had been a home of the Tsonga people and their Tsonga fish kraal. | WIKI |
The Swiss missionary, Reverend Henri-Alexandre Junod (known as HA Junod), conducted a scientific and ethnographic study of the Tsonga people during the early 1890s and produced a detailed map, showing the occupation of the bay by the Tsonga Tembe people. | WIKI |
[8] The Swiss Missionary, Rev Junod, illustrated in his detailed map that the area was known as Tembeland and that the Tembe capital city was located in the St Lucia bay. | WIKI |
St Lucia bay and Maputo bay are one land and they belong to the Tsonga people, Tsonga villages were built from St Lucia bay until Maputo and they were not separated by any natural division. | WIKI |
Some of the most spectacular coral diversity in the world is located in Sodwana Bay. | WIKI |
The park is not inhabited by people apart from six small townships in the Kosi Bay Coastal Forest Reserve (insert current number of inhabitants). | UNESCO |
South Africa has solid legislation that affords iSimangaliso the necessary legal protection, such as the World Heritage Convention Act, 1999.xc2xa0 iSimangaliso contains four Ramsar sites [St. Lucia Lake System (Ramsar Site # 345) (ii) Turtle Beaches/Coral Reefs of Tongaland (Ramsar Site # 344) (iii) Kosi Bay Lake System (Ramsar Site #527), and (iv) Lake Sibaya (Ramsar Site # 528)] that recognise the ecological functions of wetlands as well as their importance as resources of economic, cultural, scientific and recreational value. | UNESCO |