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Corbett Tourism

The Corbett National Park is a primal jungle as Rudyard Kipling put it.
Despite extensive tourism, the park has managed to retain its primeval ambience,
where man must walk timorously, in awe and with a strong sense of his own
insignificance.
The Park is named after the famous hunter and naturalist, Jim Corbett, who
popularised this land and its animals in his book "The Man-Eaters of
Kumaon". Corbett recounts many fascinating tales of hunting down man-eating
tigers. Always a nature lover, he helped set up a sanctuary called Hailey
Park in 1936.
Eventually, an all India initiative for the protection of the Tiger was
launched from here. The park has a high density of tiger population. The
park spans almost 920 square kms, at an altitude of 600 to 1100 metres in
the foothills of the western Himalayas, in the state of Uttaranchal (formerly
part of Uttar Pradesh). In its eventful 64-year life, it has grown considerably
in size and now includes the Sonanadi Wildlife Sanctuary as a part of its
1,319 sq km of reserved forest area.
Places of Interest
Flora & Fauna 
Corbett National Park is rich in vegetation, with different kinds of trees
and shrubs. The lower reaches of the Park, where the land is flat compared
to the upper reaches, consists of tall and slender sal (Shorea robusta)
trees. Shisham (Dalbergia sissoo) and khair (Acacia katechu) trees are found
in the middle reaches, while the upper reaches of the mountains are full
of bakli (Anogeissus latifolia), chir (Pinus roxburghii), gurail (Bauhinia
racemosa) and bamboo trees.
The Park is dotted with lantana shrubs, a species that is a great cause
for concern. Imported years ago from America, the lantana shrub ensures
that nothing else grows near it. In the Park are 110 species of trees, 51
species of shrubs, and over 33 species of bamboo and grass that are mostly
found in chowds, or meadows.