Ha Long Bay Cruise
Ha Long Bay map
Location : Ha Long Bay, Vietnam.
Hạ Long Bay (Vietnamese: Vịnh
Hạ Long, literally: "descending dragon bay") is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and a popular travel destination, in Quảng Ninh Province, Vietnam. Administratively,
the bay belongs to Hạ Long City, Cẩm Phả town, and part of Vân Đồn District. The bay features thousands of limestone karsts and isles in
various sizes and shapes. Hạ Long Bay is a center of a larger zone which
includes Bái Tử Long bay to the northeast, and Cát Bà islands to the southwest.
These larger zones share similar geological, geographical, geomorphological, climate, and cultural characters.
Thien Cung grotto in Ha Long Bay, Vietnam
The
bay consists of a dense cluster of some 1,600 limestone monolithic islands
each topped with thick jungle vegetation, rising spectacularly from the ocean.
Several of the islands are hollow, with enormous caves. Hang Đầu Gỗ (Wooden
stakes cave) is the largest grotto in the Hạ Long area. French tourists visited
in the late 19th century, and named the cave Grotte des Merveilles. Its three large chambers contain large numerous stalactites and stalagmites (as well as 19th
century French graffiti). There are two
bigger islands, Tuần Châu and Cát Bà, that have permanent inhabitants, as well as tourist
facilities including hotels and beaches. There are a number of beautiful
beaches on the smaller islands. The community in Ha Long Bay live on
floating houses and are sustained through fishing and marine aquaculture
(cultivating marine biota), plying the shallow waters for 200 species of fish
and 450 different kinds of mollusks. Many of the
islands have acquired their names as a result of interpretation of their
unusual shapes. Such names include Voi Islet (elephant), Ga Choi Islet (fighting cock), Khi Islet (monkey), and Mai Nha
Islet (roof). 989 of the islands have been given names. Birds and animals
including bantams, antelopes, monkeys, and lizard also live on some
of the islands.
In
2000, the UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee has inscribed the Hạ Long Bay in
the World Heritage List according to its outstanding examples representing
major stages of the Earth’s history and its original limestone karstic
geomorphologic features. The hundreds of rocky islands with form the
beautiful and famous landscape of the Bay are the individual towers of a
classic Fenglin landscape where the intervening plains have been submerged by
the sea. Most towers reach a height of between 50 and 100m with a height to
width ratio of about 6. The karst dolines were flooded by the sea becoming the
abundance of lakes that lie within the limestone islands. For example, Dau Be
island at the mouth of the Bay has six enclosed lakes including those of the Ba
Ham lakes lying within its fencong karst. The Bay contains examples of the
landscape elements of fengcong, fenglin and karst plain.
Halong Bay is host to two ecosystems: a tropical, moist,
evergreen rainforest ecosystem and a marine and coastal ecosystem.
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