Phang Nga Bay
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Phang Nga Bay ( th, อ่าวพังงา}, ) is a bay in the Strait of Malacca between the island of Phuket Province, Phuket and the mainland of the Kra Isthmus of southern Thailand. Since 1981, an extensive section of the bay has been protected as the Ao Phang Nga National Park. The park is in Phang Nga Province, at . Limestone cliffs with caves, collapsed cave systems, and archaeological sites are found about Phang Nga Bay. Around 10,000 years ago, when sea levels were lower, it was possible to walk from Phuket Province, Phuket and Krabi.


Etymology and history

''Phang Nga'' is the modern Thai transliteration of the Malay word ''pangan'', literally 'heathen, pagan, primitive people,' or as proper noun, ''Pangan'' in reference to a generalised tribe or people typically inhabiting jungle areas of the Malay Peninsula and its offshore islands. Historically, in 1824 when Siamese troops defeated the Burmese and the challengers were expelled, King Rama III renamed a major area adjacent to the bay ''phang-nga''. This bastardisation of Malay ''pangan'' offers vivid indication that the entire region was likely populated by Orang Asli or other aboriginal people.


Ramsar site

Phang Nga Bay Marine National Park was declared a protected Ramsar Site (no. 1185) of international ecological significance on 14 August 2002. Phang Nga is a shallow bay with 42 islands, comprising shallow marine waters and intertidal forested wetlands, with at least 28 species of mangrove; seagrass beds and coral reefs are also present. At least 88 bird species, including the globally threatened Malaysian plover (''Charadrius peronii'') and Asiatic dowitcher (''Limnodromus semipalmatus''), can be found within the site, as well as 82 fish species, 18 reptiles, three amphibians, and 17 mammal species. These include the dugong (a vulnerable species), Lar gibbon, white-hand gibbon (''Hylobates lar''), the endangered Mainland serow, serow (''Capricornis sumatraensis''), and the black finless porpoise (''Neophocaena phocaenoides''). A number of diverse cultures co-exist in local communities, which practice fishing, harvesting Nypa fruticans, Nypa palm fronds for thatch, and catering to an international tourist presence drawn both by the natural beauties and by the archaeological sites, which have paintings more than a thousand years old. "The Annotated Ramsar List: Thailand", The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
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In pop culture

The most famous of the many islands in the bay may be the pair of Khao Phing Kan and Ko Ta Pu, the so-called James Bond Island; in the 1974 movie ''The Man with the Golden Gun (film), The Man with the Golden Gun'', Khao Phing Kan is the home base of the villain, with the needle formed limestone rock of Ko Ta Pu, off the main beach, featured prominently. Ko Ta Pu also featured in the 1997 Bond film ''Tomorrow Never Dies'', in which Phang Nga Bay served as a stand-in for Ha Long Bay in Vietnam. Nearby villages include Ao Luk. In ''Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith'', the bay was used as main photography for the planet Kashyyyk, the home of the Wookiees, including Chewbacca.


Gallery

File:Dramatic karst formations in Phang Nga Bay, Thailand.jpg, Karst landscape, Phang Nga Bay. File:Dramatic karst landscape of Phang Nga Bay, Thailand.jpg, Karst formations, Phang Nga Bay. File:Limestone karst landscape of Phang Nga Bay, Thailand.jpg, Karst formations, Phang Nga Bay. File:Emerald tropical lagoon in Phang Nga Bay, Thailand.jpg, Tropical lagoon. File:Dreamy sunrise over Phang Nga bay, Koh Yao tropical island, Thailand.jpg, Sunrise over limestone islands, Phang Nga Bay.


See also

* List of Ramsar wetlands of Thailand * Strait of Malacca


References


External links

* {{authority control Geography of Phang Nga province Strait of Malacca National parks of Thailand Bays of Thailand