Showing posts with label Adam's Peak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adam's Peak. Show all posts

15 January 2012

Capturing the First Rays of Sun at the Top of Sri Pada, Sri Lanka

15th January 2012, www.sundayobserver.lk, Image By Saman Mendis


The Sri Pada season is now in full swing with thousands of pilgrims and tourists climbing the Holy Peak daily. The sunrise from the summit of Sri Pada is often described as one of the most stunning sights anywhere in the world.

Here tourists from New Zealand set up their cameras to capture that perfect moment when the first rays of the Sun beckon the faithful at the top of Sri Pada.

Related Info :

Sri Lanka Tourism Statistics and Tourist Arrivals

02 August 2010

Sri Lanka's Central Highlands Added to UNESCO's World Heritage Sites. Includes Adam’s Peak, Knuckles Range & Horton Plains

31st July 2010, www.reuters.com

Sri Lanka's central highlands and a protected marine area in Hawaii, the only habitats of several endangered plant and animal species, have been added to UNESCO's list of World Heritage sites, the U.N. body said on Saturday.

Sri Lanka's central highlands were deemed of prime importance because of the pristine forests that are home to the Sri Lanka leopard and other rare animal and plant life.

The Hawaiian marine site, known as Papahanaumokuakea, is the habitat of the endangered Hawaiian Monk seal and rare birds. The site encompasses about 140,000 square miles of the Pacific Ocean. Its isolated reef ecosystems are dominated by top predators like sharks.

"This feature has been lost from most other island environments due to human activity," said Tim Badman, a top adviser at the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.

Badman's group is the advisory body to UNESCO's World Heritage Committee and makes recommendations to the committee based on its field research at the sites.

The UNESCO committee is meeting in Brazil's capital, Brasilia. On Friday it declared the Florida Everglades an endangered World Heritage site due to pollution and water shortages.

(Reporting by Peter Murphy, Editing by Stacey Joyce)

More Info:
www.worldheritagesite.org - Central Highlands of Sri Lanka