African rivers are generally not navigable due to rapids and waterfalls formed as the rivers drop from the interior basins to the coast. Africa is massive Regular coastline prohibits penetration factor Nature of the Coastline Four factors • Coastal mountains • Coastal deserts • Massive.

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Transcript African rivers are generally not navigable due to rapids and waterfalls formed as the rivers drop from the interior basins to the coast. Africa is massive Regular coastline prohibits penetration factor Nature of the Coastline Four factors • Coastal mountains • Coastal deserts • Massive.

African rivers
are
generally
not
navigable
due to
rapids and
waterfalls
formed as
the rivers
drop from
the interior
basins to
the coast.
Africa is
massive
Regular
coastline
prohibits
penetration
factor
Nature of the Coastline
Four factors
• Coastal mountains
• Coastal deserts
• Massive continent with a regular
coastline
• Coastal swamps
The Nature of the
Continent
- No mountain
backbone
- Plateau
structure
- Five generally
flat interior
basins
averaging
about 2500 feet
above sea level
Debo Swamp
Lake Chad
Ubangi Swamp
Okavango Swamp
- Five
generally flat
interior
basins with
poor
drainage
- Giant interior
swamps in
each of the
The Sudd
basins, each
about the
size of New
England
The Sahara & North Africa
Desert
• Kalahari Desert
• Namib Desert
Steppe
Baobab Tree of
the semi-arid
areas. The
native people
told legends
about this tree…
“They kept
walking around
so God planted
them upside
down.”
This area
borders the
arid areas.
This area is
susceptible to
famine and
drought. Rain
is
unpredictable rain increases
as one moves
toward
Equator.
.
Desertification is a serious problem
in this area. The desert encroaches
more every year.
From the Atlantic to the mountains of Ethiopia, the Sahel stretches for
4,300 miles. It is plagued by drought. The word Sahel is Arabic for
“Shore” (shore of the Sahara). PASTORAL NOMADISM – practice of
moving cattle from one area to another in arid areas is the main
occupation.
To improve condition in the Sahel, farmers place rocks along contour
lines in order to hold back the soil when it rains. The rocks work like a
dam – stopping the top soil from washing away.
Tropical
Rainforest
Second largest rain
forest in the world.
The tropical rain forest is a forest of tall trees in a region of yearround warmth. An average of 50 to 260 inches (125 to 660 cm.) of
rain falls yearly.
Form of agriculture where farmers plant crops in cleared areas and then
abandon the fields when they become infertile, and search for better land
Agriculture performed in one location where fertile soils and reliable
rainfall can support it.
When the top layer (topsoil) is washed or blown away. This is usually caused
by cutting down trees that protect the ground or by overgrazing which
removes the grass that holds the soil in place. Farmers place rocks along
contour lines so that when it rains, the rocks work like a dam and hold the
water and the topsoil in place.
Subsistence economies take large amounts of land
and benefit only a few people. 80% of Africans are
farmers or herders. When problems occur with the
land, the people are directly and immediately
impacted.
Malnutrition, disease, war, and poverty as well as a hard
life of subsistence farming take a toll on the population.
A grassy woodland where crops are grown
and cattle are able to graze. Some savanna
is spotted with trees. This is the land of the
Safari.
In this region, it alternates between
very wet and very dry.
Savanna
Mountain
Mountain
climate &
tundra –
it gets
colder as
elevation
increases
.
Temperatures
in the
mountain
region are
cooler due to
elevation.
Climate is
similar to the
climate on the
Great Plains.
Hot summers
and cold
winters.
A deep trench formed when large sections
of the Earth’s crust drop between two
parallel cracks or faults – Where the plates
are moving away from each other.
The Great Rift Valley stretches from the
Mediterranean Sea - south along the Red Sea
and then through the Ethiopian Highlands,
Kenyan Highlands, and the Lake District.
Aerial view of Mt. Kilimanjaro, 19340 feet, the tallest
mountain in Africa.
2/17/1993
Kilimanjaro’s Ice Cap
is down 82 percent
since 1900 and
could be gone by
2020.
2/21/2000
Kalahari Desert:
a region of arid
sand dunes
and semiarid
savanna
Internal
drainage
Largest inland
delta in the
world – 210
miles across
Water levels
rise and fall,
but there is
always
plentiful
permanent
water
standing in
the middle of
the Kalahari
Why is the area at the
tip of South Africa more
productive than the
rest of Africa?
This is the only region that
has a temperate climate
and reliable water.
Marine
Climate similar to San Francisco,
California. This climate is not found
in Northern Africa.