:''This article is about a geographical region; for the National Park see
Serengeti National Park''

A zebra and wildebeests during migration
The 'Serengeti' is a 60,000
square kilometer savanna which lies over
Tanzania and
Kenya.
[1] The biannual migration that occurs there is considered one of the
seven tourist travel wonders of the world. The region contains several
national parks and
game reserves. Its name is derived from the
Maasai language and means "Endless Plains".
The Serengeti has more than 2 million
herbivores and thousands of
predators.
Blue Wildebeests,
gazelles,
zebras and
buffalos are the animals most commonly found in the region.
The Serengeti hosts the largest and longest overland migration in the world,
[2] a biannual occurrence. Around October, nearly 2 million herbivores travel from the northern hills toward the southern
plains, crossing the
Mara River, in pursuit of the rains. In April, they then return to the north through the west, once again crossing the Mara river. This phenomenon is sometimes called the Circular Migration. Over 250,000 wildebeest alone will die along the journey from Tanzania to Maasai Mara reserves in upper Kenya, a total of 500 miles. Death is often caused by injury, exhaustion, or
predation.
The migration is chronicled in the 1994 documentary film, ''.
The area is also home to the
Ngorongoro Conservation Area, which contains the
Olduvai Gorge, where some of the oldest
hominid fossils are found, as well as the Ngorongoro Crater, the world's largest unbroken volcanic caldera.
The area was used as location inspiration for the animated
Disney film ''
The Lion King'' and subsequent theatrical production.
References
1. Selling wildlife short: The great game parks of East Africa may have to be given over to wheat unless tourists can be persuaded to pay the right price, , Fred, Pearce, New Scientist,
2. The fast show Frank Partridge
See also
★
Serengeti National Park