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Your Guide to Madagascar
<span style="width:32px;height:22px;float:left; margin-top: 5px; border: 0px solid green;">http://www.madacamp.com/extensions/GoogleMaps/images/button_map_open.gif </span> This wiki includes a Google Map authoring tool for adding satellite maps to pages. To create a Google Map, click on the map button above the editing box for the editor to appear. Find the region you wish to display and thereafter copy the generated <nowiki><googlemap>...</googlemap></nowiki> code into the edit box and save the page. <!--The map editor can also be used to add place-markers, info-bubbles, pathways as well as draw regions around areas on the maps.--> <br>
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The continent separated from Africa 165 million years ago, and since then its flora and fauna have evolved according to its own fantasy, like nowhere else in the world: Lemurs are known worldwide, but the red island (on account of its vividly coloured soil) is home to several endemic species of chameleons, fossas, frogs, birds, snakes, jumping rats, baobabs, carnivorous plants, orchids and many more strange "living beings"! With the lemurs, 80% of its flora, 40% of its birds, 98% of its reptiles being endemic, Madagascar is a naturalist's promised land! The same is true for the Malagasy people, about 20 million: a unique blend of African and Asian, whose culture resembles no other worldwide. The population is divided in 18 ethnic groups. The nomad Vezo fisherman swears only by the sea, the zebu is everything to the Bara of the desertic south, while land is the gretatest wealth for the Betsileo of the malagasy "altiplano". The relative isolation of the island due to geography and recent history, kept the traditional way of living, rites and the ancestral beliefs, very lively and genuine. For the traveller avid to find something different, a dream! Madagascar has it all: deserted beaches, tropical forests, mountains, spiny forests, rice-terraced highlands...
 
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The official language of this country is Malagasy, however French is spoken by everyone. English is widely understood, especially in the capital and by tourist establishments. Madagascar's tourism is still developing and sometimes requires an understanding of not everything working according to plan. Visitors can however expect to be compensated in the form of a unique and rich nature, culture and a friendly Malagasy people.
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