Cast your vote for Table Mountain!
Table Mountain is one of 28 finalists in the New 7 Wonders of Nature competition, in which the world's top natural sites are being whittled down to seven winners in an exercise in global democracy that is expected to draw over a billion participants.
In 2007, the New7Wonders Foundation, a Zurich-based non-profit organisation, announced the New 7 (man-made) Wonders of the World after more than 100-million votes were cast via the internet in "the first-ever worldwide election".
Its follow-up campaign, to choose the "Big Seven" of the natural world, entered its final stage on 21 July 2009, when a panel of experts led by former Unesco director-general Federico Mayor announced the 28 finalists in Zurich, Switzerland.
The panel made its selection from a list of 77 nominees that were chosen, from a list of 261 national and cross-national representative sites, by people around the world in internet voting.
The final, two-year round of voting to choose the New 7 Wonders of Nature, runs through 2010 and into 2011.
"Congratulations to the supporters of Table Mountain from around the world for their passionate, inspiring work in bringing them up from over 440 participants into this elite finalist group of just 28," New7Wonders founder Bernard Weber said in a statement.
"This is an extraordinary achievement, and the eyes of the planet will be upon Table Mountain and South Africa for the next two years.
"We look forward to an exciting and record-breaking final race, with the whole world coming together to choose the official New 7 Wonders of Nature, seven locations that will become part of global memory for ever."
Only one other African site – Tanzania's Mount Kilimanjaro – made the list of finalists, which include some of the world's most spectacular mountains, canyons, lakes, waterfalls, ocean reefs and a myriad other natural attractions.
These range from the extremely famous – the Grand Canyon in the USA, the Galapagos Islands off Ecuador, the Amazon Rainforest spanning nine South American countries – to relatively lesser-known sites such as the Mud Volcanoes of Azerbaijan and the Puerto Princesa Underground River in the Philippines.
The 28 finalists
- Amazon
- Angel Falls, Venezuela
- Bay of Fundy, Canada
- Black Forest, Germany
- Bu Tinah Shoals, United Arab Emirates
- Cliffs of Moher, Ireland
- Dead Sea (Israel, Jordan and Palestine)
- El Yunque, Puerto Rico
- Galapagos, Ecuador
- Grand Canyon, USA
- Great Barrier Reef (Australia and Papua New Guinea)
- Halong Bay, Vietnam
- Iguazu Falls (Argentina and Brazil)
- Jeita Grotto, Lebanon
- Jeju Island, South Korea
- Kilimanjaro, Tanzania
- Komodo, Indonesia
- Maldives Islands
- Masurian Lake District, Poland
- Matterhorn/Cervino (Italy and Switzerland)
- Milford Sound, New Zealand
- Mud Volcanoes, Azerbaijan
- Puerto Princesa Underground River, Philippines
- Sundarbans (Bangladesh and India)
- Table Mountain, South Africa
- Uluru, Australia
- Vesuvius, Italy
- Yushan, Chinese Taipei
Man-made Wonders
The New 7 (man-made) Wonders of the World, announced in 2007, are the Colosseum in Italy; the Great Wall of China; India's Taj Mahal; Jordan's Petra; Brazil's Christ the Redeemer Statue; Machu Picchu in Peru; and the Pyramid at Chichen Itza in Mexico.
A number of similar lists have been compiled over the ages, the best known being the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, the first known list of the most remarkable man-made creations of classical antiquity – of which only the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt is still in existence.
- See Wikipedia: Wonders of the World
Some reasons to vote for Table Mountain
SAinfo reporter
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