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Greater St Lucia Wetland Park



         


The Greater St. Lucia Wetland Park is situated on the east Coast of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa about 275 km North of Durban. It is South Africa's third-largest park, spanning 280 kilometres of coastline, from the Mozambican border in the north to Mapelane south of the St Lucia estuary, and made up of around 3,280 km² of pristine natural ecosystems It is a saline system consisting of five individual ecosystems. These ecosystems function totally independent yet fully integrated with each other. The five ecosystems in the park are:

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History

St. Lucia was first named in 1554 - "Rio de la Medaos do Oura" (River of the dows of Gold) by the survivors of the Portuguese ship Saint Benedict. At this stage the Tugela River mouth was known as St. Lucia. Later, in 1575, the Tugela River was named Tugela. On 13 December 1575, the day of the feast of Saint Lucy, Manuel Peresterello renamed the mouth area to Santa Lucia.

In 1822 St. Lucia was proclaimed by the British as a township.
In 1895 St. Lucia was proclaimed a Game Reserve.
In 1971 St Lucia Lake and the turtle beaches and coral reefs of Maputaland have been listed by the Convention on Wetlands of International Importance (RAMSAR).
In December 1999 The Greater St. Lucia Wetland Park was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
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Trivia

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