Seychelles
Geography
A trip to the Seychelles, one of the world's very last frontiers, promises adventure and breathtaking natural beauty in pristine surrounds.
Seychelles
Geography
A trip to the Seychelles, one of the world's very last frontiers, promises adventure and breathtaking natural beauty in pristine surrounds.
The Seychelles’ 115 granite and coral islands extend from between 4 and 10 degrees south of the equator and lie between 480km and 1,600km from the east coast of Africa in the western Indian Ocean.
This Indian Ocean republic occupies a land area of 455 km² and an Exclusive Economic Zone of 1.4 million km². It represents an archipelago of timeless beauty, tranquillity and harmony that is famous for its world-beating beaches and for its great diversity which rolls from lush forests down to the warm azure ocean. Of these 115 islands, The 41 Inner Islands constitute the oldest mid-oceanic granite islands on earth while a further 74 form the 5 groups of low-lying coral atolls and reef islets that are the Outer Islands.
Seychelles is home to no less than two UNESCO World Heritage Sites: the legendary Vallée de Mai on Praslin where the wondrously shaped Coco-de-Mer nut grows high on ancient palms and the fabled Aldabra, the world’s largest raised coral atoll.