Two and a half million years ago, in what is today
Northern Tanzania, the top blew off a gigantic volcanic
mountain leaving behind one of the biggest craters in
the world. Over the millennia the crater became a national
park for wildlife. Herbivores followed vegetation to
the Ngorongoro and predators followed herbivores. Men
followed, too, hunting for the tusks of rhinos and elephants,
and the coats of the zebra. Rangers, photographers,
and anthropologists came, too, to the place that many
call the Garden of Eden. Kunkel's beautiful, often astonishing,
sometimes startling images, alongside landscapes of
a primeval grandeur, make this book a triumph of wildlife
photography.
Kunkel has been photographing there since 1973. He
has lived with and shot the land and the animals - the
lions, elephants, eagles, buffalo and hippopotamuses
-- for the last thirty years. He has shot them mating,
raising their young, killing their prey. He has watched
herds of buffalo charge and scatter lions, followed
the egrets searching for insects in the steps of the
rhinos, stayed up nights waiting for the female rhino
to accept the advances of the male, observed jackals
and vultures staring each other down in confrontation
over a kill, and the flamingoes feasting on the abundant
blue-green algae. Unrivalled in the richness and diversity
of its animal and plant life, Ngorongoro has been called
the eighth wonder of the world.
The original edition of this book was published in
the United States in 1992. This edition is udated
with new photographs and extended by a new 16-page signature
on the Maasai.