Hesabu hiyo kuwa ni sadaka tu unatoa; na usitegemee cho chote. Binadamu anaweza kukubadilikia wakati wo wote japo hatuombei iwe hivyo!
Mimi pia nina mpango wa kumsomesha mtu shahada ya juu mwaka huu lakini huyu ni rafiki yangu sana tu na nafanya hivyo kwa moyo mweupee bila kutegemea cho chote in return. Tufanye hivyo maana maisha ni haya haya hakuna mengine na dunia ni hii hii!
The oldest place on planet Earth is in Venezuela and it is called Mount Roraima Mount Roraima, in Venezuela One of the most beautiful and impressive natural wonders in the world For more than 500 years, scientists around the world have attempted to decipher the unique geological origin of Mount Roraima, southern Venezuela. In addition to rising almost 3,000 meters above sea level, the mountain has an unnatural morphology, which seems to have been cut with knives due to the precision of its million-year-old angles. This rock formation is the largest of its kind in all of South America, and is part of the Pakaraima mountain range. For more than 5 centuries, it has intrigued historians, geologists and other scientists because it is a mountain without a point. The top of Mount Roraima is completely horizontal, and occupies an area of more than 30 square kilometers, surrounded by waterfalls, cliffs and other rare geographical features in the world. Seen this way, it could be considered an island in the heights. Mount Roraima is home to a great diversity of endemic plant and animal species. Geologists and biologists from around the world estimate that it hides some of the species that science has no record of, since there are spaces in the mountain that still remain unexplored. 𝙎𝙪 𝙤𝙧𝙞𝙜𝙚𝙣 𝙚𝙨 𝙪𝙣 𝙢𝙞𝙨𝙩𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙤. It is thought that Mount Roraima was the product of a large earthquake in the past. However, its origin is not certain, since geological features that were created in similar ways do not have that shape. This has led scientists to think that it may be the oldest rock formation on Earth. Source: MOUNT RORAIMA: THE MOST MYSTERIOUS GEOLOGICAL FORMATION IN HISTORY / National Geographic
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