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#kilimanjaro – @earthstory on Tumblr
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The Earth Story

@earthstory / earthstory.tumblr.com

This is the blog homepage of the Facebook group "The Earth Story" (Click here to visit our Facebook group). “The Earth Story” are group of volunteers with backgrounds throughout the Earth Sciences. We cover all Earth sciences - oceanography, climatology, geology, geophysics and much, much more. Our articles combine the latest research, stunning photography, and basic knowledge of geosciences, and are written for everyone!
We hope you find us to be a unique home for learning about the Earth sciences, and we hope you enjoy!
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xandrotours
🔸️Above the gently rolling hills and plateaux of northern Tanzania rises the snowy peak of Mt. Kilimanjaro, it’s slopes and glaciers shimmering above the rising clouds.
The mountain’s ecosystems are as strikingly beautiful, as they are varied and diverse, providing home to thousands of species of flora and fauna.
🔸️My name is Xandro Eliaxi
🔹️I'm a tour operator here in Tanzania national parks and mountain Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar vocation!

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ladzinski
From desert to rain forest to glacial, Mount
#Kilimanjaro
is home to the 8 primary terra ecosystems. Depending on where you begin your hike you can actually experience all 8 as you leave the desert floor and make your way up Africa’s tallest mountain. Here’s a small collection of time lapses I shot along the way up in 2015.
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Original caption:

This video was shot over two trips starting in Moshi town, to reach Uhuru peak, standing at 5895m Kilimanjaro is the highest mountain in Africa. The first route we took was the easy-going Lemosho route in February 2018, during our ascent we encountered the worst storm and snowfall in 25 years. Machame route started off a little harder but quickly joins the Lemosho which we completed in September 2018.
Thanks to the great effort by Adventure Alternative and the Becoming X foundation we managed to pull off a world first - to legally fly a drone on the summit of Kilimanjaro.
Like with any of my work done on Kilimanjaro, I would like to thank the porters working relentlessly around the clock on this spectacular volcano. Helping tourists from around the world including myself reach the summit of their dreams. This video would not have been so easy to produce had it not been for the locals.
For stock video please contact me directly [email protected]
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Original caption:

In February 2018, my sister and I made another trip: Africa. We started with the 7 day climb of Mt. Kilimanjaro. It was hard, but we made it to the top! After that we rented a 4x4 land cruiser at Victoria Falls and drove through Botswana, Namibia and ended in Cape town. In these 6 weeks we experienced a lot of new things.Too many to count. So, with 6 weeks of filming in this continent I made a short edit with all the highlights of our trip. Enjoy!
Countries we visited: Tanzania Zambia Botswana Namibia South-Africa
Cameras used: Sony RX100 IV GoPro Hero 4
Software used: Adobe Premiere Pro 2018
Music used: African Skies (Stephen J. Anderson The Lion King Epic Orchestral Cover by parademics
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Kilimanjaro

Cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev captured this gorgeous view of the Kilimanjaro volcanic complex sticking its head above a sea of clouds earlier this month. From this vantage point you can see both the central volcanic crater at the summit and the highest point in Africa, on the rim of that crater. The high point just to the edge of the crater is called Uhuru peak and a recent survey assessed it to reach 5891 meters above sea level.

Kilimanjaro is the culmination of 3 volcanic complexes built up over the last 2 million years. Lavas on the slopes of the main peak, partially buried by more recent activity, show that there was a volcano developed here between 2.3 and 1.9 million years ago. That volcano, known as Shira, remains as a ridge on the slope of the largest peak today. 1.9 million years ago, that volcano collapsed to form a caldera, prior to nearly a million years of quiet at this site, and during that time the former peak partially eroded away.

950,000 years ago, volcanism restarted at the site seen off to the left edge of this image, a summit called Mawenzi. This peak was built up out of lava flows between 950,000 and 488,000 years ago. Eruptions at this peak ceased after a major collapse and avalanche event, which triggered lahars that flowed down the slopes.

The main peak of Kilimanjaro is known as Kibo. Activity on it may have started as early as 1 million years ago, but the youngest well-exposed activity is about 463,000 years old. It is likely that both Kibo and Mawenzi were erupting simultaneously as those 463,000 year old rocks are at roughly the same elevation as the summit of Mawenzi – meaning the volcano had to grow to that height by that time. These eruptions have partially buried the remnants of Shira, leaving it only weakly exposed. The main summit grew through a series of explosive, crater and caldera forming eruptions, intrusive lava flows, and dome formations. The flat summit of this peak is thought to have formed in an eruption about 200,000 years ago, associated with an intrusion of igneous rocks, a dome collapse, and lahars that probably involved melting glaciers at the summit.

Smaller cinder cones have formed since this last main volcano-building event, and these dot the landscape around the main mountain.

-JBB

Source: facebook.com
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The Mawenzi tanzanite

Discovered in 2005 and weighing in at a whopping 16389 carats (divide by 5 to get the grams, so a whiff above 3.2kg), this is the largest piece of gem zoisite ever found (see http://bit.ly/1B8IMQy for more on this lovely gem). Measuring some 22x9x7cm , it was named after Kilimajaro's second highest peak, in case a larger should turn up at the mine.

Loz

Image credit: Tanzanite One

http://bit.ly/1sfQ1Zx

Source: facebook.com
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