World Heritage Places                    By         Mr.Hassakorn Panyasarakhun                 M.6/1 No.21                         To                 Teacher advisor:          Miss Wilaiporn Petchsiri
Donana National Park    Doñana National Park in Andalusia occupies the right bank of the  Guadalquivir river at its estuary on the Atlantic Ocean. It is notable for the  great diversity of its biotopes, especially lagoons, marshlands, fixed and  mobile dunes, scrub woodland and maquis. It is home to five threatened bird  species. It is one of the largest heronries in the Mediterranean region and is  the wintering site for more than 500,000 water fowl each year
Namhansanseong          Namhansanseong was designed as an emergency capital for the Joseon  dynasty (1392–1910), in a mountainous site 25 km south-east of Seoul. Built and  defended by Buddhist monk-soldiers, it could accommodate 4,000 people and  fulfilled important administrative and military functions. Its earliest remains date from  the 7th century, but it was rebuilt several times, notably in the early 17th century in  anticipation of an attack from the Sino-Manchu Qing dynasty. The city embodies a  synthesis of the defensive military engineering concepts of the period, based on  Chinese and Japanese influences, and changes in the art of fortification following the  introduction from the West of weapons using gunpowder. A city that has always been  inhabited, and which was the provincial capital over a long period, it contains  evidence of a variety of military, civil and religious buildings and has become a  symbol of Korean sovereignty.
Historic Centre of the city of Salzburg    Salzburg has managed to preserve an extraordinarily rich urban fabric, developed   over the period from the Middle Ages to the 19th century when it was a city-state  ruled by a prince-archbishop. Its Flamboyant Gothic art attracted many craftsmen  and artists before the city became even better known through the work of the Italian   architects Vincenzo Scamozzi and Santini Solari, to whom the centre of Salzburg  owes much of its Baroque appearance. This meeting-point of northern and southern    Europe perhaps sparked the genius of Salzburg’s most famous son, Wolfgang       Amadeus Mozart, whose name has been associated with the city ever since.
W-Arly-Pendjari Complex     This transnational extension (Benin, Burkina Faso) to the W National Park of Niger,     inscribed in 1996 on the World Heritage List, cover a major expanse of intact    Sudano-Sahelian savannah, with vegetation types including grasslands, shrub lands,    wooded savannah and extensive gallery forests. It includes the largest and most    important continuum of terrestrial, semi-aquatic and aquatic ecosystems in the West     African savannah belt. The property is a refuge for wildlife species that have      disappeared elsewhere in West Africa or are highly threatened. It is home to the  largest population of elephants in West Africa and most of the large mammals typical       of the region, such as the African Manatee, cheetah, lion and leopard. It also              harbours the only viable population of lions in the region.
Great ZimBabwe National Monument    The ruins of Great Zimbabwe – the capital of the Queen of    Sheba, according to an age-old legend – are a unique   testimony to the Bantu civilization of the Shona between    the 11th and 15th centuries. The city, which covers an area  of nearly 80 ha, was an important trading centre and was           renowned from the Middle Ages onwards.
                                
                                
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