In the middle of Africa, in the heart of the continent, lies a mist-shrouded wonder of nature - a mountain range so high and inaccessible that Europeans only got to see it a little over
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In the middle of Africa, in the heart of the continent, lies a mist-shrouded wonder of nature - a mountain range so high and inaccessible that Europeans only got to see it a little over a century ago. The Rwenzori Mountains tower high above Uganda's savannah. To the west, it drops steeply into the dense jungle of the Congo. The mountain range on the equator has the third highest mountain in Africa, Mount Stanley, which is over 5,000 meters high. Long before this high mountain range was explored and mapped, scientists had suspected its existence. The ancient Greek author Ptolemy suspected that the world's longest river, the Nile, had its source in distant, snow-covered mountains. He called them the "Mountains of the Moon." Many consider the Rwenzori Mountains to be this place: the rain that falls here flows into the White Nile. (Text: Servus TV)