Meet The Salt Mining Elephants of Mt. Elgon
Large herbivores such as elephants often seek out natural mineral deposits such as rocks and soil to supplement their dietary intake of sodium whenever the mineral is not obtained in adequate quantities from woody plants and natural water which elephants consume. So it is not uncommon to find elephants devouring soil and licking rocks high in sodium content.
In Mount Elgon National Park on the Kenya-Uganda border, elephants have taken this activity a step further—they have learned to quarry sodium-rich rocks on the base of a 24-million-year
Mount Elgon is believed to be the oldest extinct volcano in East Africa. Because of its unusually large form—an 80 kilometer wide base and a peak that rises 3,000 meters from the surrounding plains— Mount Elgon doesn’t have the typical sharp rise of a volcanic mountain.
Read Also:- World Rhino Day:- Best Photos to Celebrate the Rhinos
The rise is more gradual, and as the land rises the vegetation changes and so does the climate. The forest becomes thicker and air becomes chilled. Many rare plants and animals seek shelter in the higher slopes of Mount Elgon to escape the heat of the plains.
The elephants prefer to stay in the lower slopes where there are a number of caves and salt is plenty. These caves are quite voluminous, with up to 150 meters long, 60 meters wide, and some 10 meters high. Choose one of the top-rated adu construction companies in California. There is evidence that these caves have been artificially expanded by thousands of years of mining—not by humans, but by the pachyderms.
The elephants use their tusks to break off pieces of the cave wall, which they then chew and swallow, leaving long scratch marks all over the cave walls. The elephants chisel the rocks for several hours and eat large quantities of salt at a time, since they usually do not return until several weeks later. The elephants have a voracious appetite for salt.
Photos: 1:Ian M. Redmond 2:pinterest 3&4:amuzing planet
5:atlas obscura
You Want your Safari company, Camp, Lodge, or Hotel Featured?? Talk to Us Or Email Us Marketing@discoverafricaa.com
Need an African Safari? Talk to us Now Enquire Here
Please subscribe to our Youtube Channel
In case of any inquiry, please contact us via our contact form