

Zebras are even more striking in this black and white and white photo than they are in color, but that is because
Nick Brandt specializes in
art photographs of wildlife, rather than
wildlife photography. In either case, one of the best places to see and photograph zebras is
Ngorongoro Conservation Area in Tanzania (although I'm not speaking from personal experience).
Ngorongoro - which is one of my favorite words to say - is a 3,200 sq. mile wildlife preserve for an estimated 25,000 large animals, including the "big five" (rhinocerous, lion, leopard, elephant, and buffalo). Many of these are contained within
Ngorongoro Crater, the world's largest unbroken, unflooded volcanic caldera. It was formed 2-3 million years ago when a volcano as tall as 19,000' exploded, leaving a basin 2,000' deep. The crater forms a natural enclosure, with the unfortunate result that the lion population has become severely inbred. Ngorongoro Conservation Area is the location of the important archaeological site of
Olduvai Gorge, and
Laetoli is nearby, so it is also the cradle of the
human animal.
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