Title: Sub-Saharan Africa
1Sub-Saharan Africa
- Geography 200
- Dr. Stavros Constantinou
2Africa
- Africa is the poorest and least urbanized of the
world regions. - Present day boundaries of African countries are a
legacy of colonialism. - Africa is made up of a series of plateaus
separated by escarpments. - Africa has a rich resource base, but political
fragmentation prevents exploitation of these
resources by any one country. - Colonialism, governmental instability, and
tribalism prevent Africa from achieving economic
development. - The people of Africa face a high incidence of
diseases such as malaria, sleeping sickness
(trypanosomiasis), and river blindness.
3AFRICA LOCATION AND SIZE
- Africa is positioned astride the Equator,
reaching as far north as the latitude of
Richmond, Virginia, and as far south as Buenos
Aires, Argentina. The continent has no Pacific
coastline and is located at the heart of the land
hemisphere. Africa has a minimum aggregate
distance to the world's other continents as well
as a central location antipodal to the Pacific. - Africa has an area of 30,186,000 square
kilometers (11,698,111 square miles) which
represents about 20 percent of the total
planetary surface (world total land is
149,961,000 square kilometers or 57,900,000
square miles). - Africa had a population of 861,000,000 people in
2003, which accounts for 13.6 percent of the
world total population.
4AFRICA LANDFORMS
- Africa lacks major mountain ranges. The Atlas
Mountains of the Maghreb occupy a mere corner in
the northwest of Africa. The Cape Ranges in the
far south have only local, not regional
dimensions. - The following form the most striking of Africa's
physical landscapes - In East Africa there is a set of elongated lakes
(with the exception of Lake Victoria) from Lake
Malawi (formerly Nyasa) in the south to Lake
Turkana in the north. Rift valleys are formed
when huge parallel cracks or faults appear in the
earth's crust and in the in-between strips of
land sink or are pushed down to form valleys.
These valleys extend from the north end of the
Red Sea to Swaziland in southern Africa. - (continued on next slide)
5AFRICA LANDFORMS
- Unusual river course systems
- The Niger starts in the far west of Africa, on
the slopes of the Futa Jallon Highlands and then
flows inland toward the Sahara Desert. Then
after forming an interior delta, it suddenly
turns southward, leaves the desert area, plunges
over falls as it cuts through the plateau area of
Nigeria, and creates another large delta at its
mouth. - The Congo River begins as the Lualaba River on
the Zambia-Congo boundary, and for some distance
it actually flows northeast before turning north,
then west, then southwest, finally to cut through
the Crystal Mountains to reach the ocean. - The Zambezi River, whose headwaters lie in Angola
and northwestern Zambia, the situation is the
same it first flows south, toward the inland
delta known as the Okovango Swamp then it turns
northeast eventually to reach its delta
immediately south of Lake Malawi. - The Kafue River, the Zambezi's chief tributary,
flows southwest also toward the Okovango Swamp,
but then abruptly vacates its course to turn due
east as though the Zambezi "captured" and
diverted it. - The Nile River, has a famed and erratic course,
which braids into numerous channels in the Sudd
area of the Southern Sudan. In its middle course.
it actually reverses direction and flows
southward before resuming its flow toward the
Mediterranean delta.
6AFRICA LANDFORMS
- Coastal areas in Africa are small and few in
number except for some low-lying areas of
coastal Mozambique and Somalia, and along the
north and west coasts, nearly all of Africa lies
300 meters in elevation and fully half of it is
more than 800 meters high. - Even the Congo Basin, Equatorial Africa's
tropical lowland, lies well more than 300 meters
above sea level, in contrast to the much lower
Amazon Basin across the Atlantic.
7AFRICA LANDFORMS
- Among other outstanding features of Africa are
- The Zambezi River's Victoria Falls 1000 meters
wide and 100 meters high. - Volcanoes and other erosional left-overs stand
above the landscape in many areas--even in the
Sahara Desert, where the Ahaggar and Tibesti
Mountains both reach about 3000 meters. - The Kalahari Desert
- The Great Escarpment in South Africa. The high
veldt drops precipitously from more than 1.5
kilometers in elevation to a narrow, hilly
coastal belt. Africa has a disproportionately
large share of the escarpment by world standards. - Africa's western coastline has a configuration
that matches the east coast of South America
8AFRICA LANDFORMS
- The present day landscapes of Africa are a
reflection of the historical evolution of the
planet. In the geologic time scale, Africa along
with South America, Antarctica, Australia,
Madagascar, and even Southern India formed a
super continent called Gondwana or sometimes
called Gondwanaland. - Africa occupied a central position in Gondwana.
- More than 100 million years ago the breaking up
started and the various fragments moved radially
away from Africa and are continuing to do so.
Africa moved least of all from its location near
the South Pole. - Africa occupied the heart of Gondwana and did not
have the coasts it has today. The rivers that
arose in the interior failed to reach the sea
The upper Niger flowed into Lake Djouf, the Shari
River into Lake Chad, the Upper Nile into Lake
Sudan, the Lualaki into Lake Congo, and the Upper
Zambezi into the Okovango Delta on the shores of
Lake Kalahari. When the coasts of Africa were
formed after the breakup of Gondwana, the rivers,
by head ward erosion, reached the long isolated
lake basins in Africa's interior. With the huge
volumes of lake water these rivers cut deep
gorges and formed fast retreating waterfalls.
Africa today has half of the hydroelectric power
potential of the world.
9AFRICA LANDFORMS
- Africa's major rivers have upper courses
pre-drift and lower courses which are younger and
result from the release of the pent-up lakes. - Africa has the worlds longest rift valley. A
rift valley is a trench-like valley with steep
parallel sides essentially a graben between two
normal faults associated with crustal spreading.
- East Africas rift valley is about 9,600 km
(6,000 mi) long and extends from the Red Sea
southward to the Zambezi River. - Major rivers and several long deep lakes--Lake
Nyasa and Lake Rudolph for exampleoccupy some of
the valley floors.
10AFRICA LANDFORMS
- Africa's rift valleys are part of a
globe-girdling system of mid ocean ridges,
magma producing rifts that are the foci of
crustal spreading. - Mid ocean ridges first formed as fracture-rifts
across the great Gondwana landmass. When the
continental pieces began to drift away ocean
water invaded as the newly formed, separating
crust became "sea floor." - Sea floor spreading, then, might better be called
crustal spreading and may be seen going on today
in East Africa's earthquake-prone, volcanically
active regions. - Madagascar's separation may represent an old rift
stage the Rift Sea is just the beginning of what
will eventually be a wide portion of the ocean.
11AFRICA LANDFORMS
- Tectonics is a geological term pertaining to
earth movements. The movements in question
involve the lithosphere, the rigid outer shell
of the earth, which is on the order of 100
kilometers (60 miles) thick. - The lithosphere floats on the asthenosphere and
is segmented into about six primary slabs or
plates, each of which may encompass a continent
and part of an adjacent ocean basin. - The boundaries of the lithospheric plates are
delineated by narrow earthquake prone zones where
the plates are moving with respect to each other.
12AFRICA LANDFORMS
- Three types of boundaries between tectonic plates
are recognized - Convergent plate boundary Two adjacent plates
move together and collide or, where one plate
plunges downward under the other plate and is
absorbed into the interior of the earth -- its
lithosphere is destroyed. - Subduction is the descent of the edge of a
crustal plate under the edge of an adjoining
plate, presumably involving melting of the
subducted material. - Divergent plate boundary Two adjacent plates
move apart new lithosphere is added to each
plate by the process of sea-floor spreading
(continental drift). Lithosphere is created. - Because the convergent and divergent plate
boundaries counteract each other, the diameter of
the earth is not changing radically. - Parallel plate boundary (transcurrent) Two
adjacent plates move edge to edge along their
common interface.
13AFRICA CLIMATE
- The main climatic Types of Sub-Saharan Africa are
the following - Dry summer subtropical or Mediterranean (Csb). A
small pocket of this climatic type is found in
the area around Capetown in South Africa. - Humid subtropical (Cfa). This climatic type
predominates in the eastern section of the
Republic of South Africa. - Steppe (BSh). This climatic type prevails in the
interior of South Africa and extends into
Botswana, Angola and adjacent areas.
14AFRICA CLIMATE
- Desert (BWh). An extensive area that covers the
western section of South Africa, Namibia, and
coastal section of Angola. - Savanna (Aw). A very extensive area that borders
on the north and south of the wet equatorial. - Wet equatorial (Af). This climatic zone extends
along the equatorial region of Africa. - Monsoon (Am). A narrow zone that extends along
the western coastal regions of Africa.
15AFRICA VEGETATION
- The major vegetative regions of Africa are the
forest biome, savanna biome, and desert biome. - The equatorial and tropical rainforest is found
in the areas straddling the equator with an
additional pocket in western Africa and another
one in eastern Africa. - The savanna biome is the most extensive
vegetation region in Africa and is found in
extensive areas north and south of the equator. - The desert biome surrounds the savanna biome.
16AFRICA SOILS
- An examination of the soil map of Africa shows
that overall the soils of the continent are of
medium to low fertility. - An extensive area of oxisols is found in the
equatorial regions of the continent. Surrounding
the oxisols is an extensive area of entisols that
extends all the way from Congo (Zaire) to the
Republic of South Africa. - North and south of this zone, one can find a
broad area of alfisols. - A small pocket of ultisols is found in western
Africa. - Large areas of aridisols are found in the
northern tier of Sub-Saharan countries, in the
horn of Africa, and the southern part of the
continent. - Note the absence of any mollisols or histosols.
17AFRICA RESOURCES
- Sub-Saharan Africa is very well endowed in a
great array of minerals. - As a region it leads the world in the production
of cobalt, vanadium, chromite, and gold. - It produces 3.9 of the world coal (all of it in
the Republic of South Africa) and has 6.3 of the
world's reserves in coal. - Africa produces 6.9 of the world's petroleum and
has 6.5 of the world's oil reserves. - Africa produces 2.2 of the worlds natural gas.
18AFRICA RESOURCES
- Among individual countries, South Africa leads
the world in the production of vanadium,
chromite, and gold it ranks second in the
production of manganese - Zambia leads the world in the production of
cobalt. - Congo (Zaire) ranks second worldwide in the
production of cobalt. - Guinea ranks second worldwide in the production
of of bauxite.
19AFRICA HAZARDS AND DISEASES
- General terms
- Epidemic This term describes a situation in
which a disease outbreak occurs, leading to a
high percentage of afflictions in a population. - An example of this disease is the sudden outbreak
of Ebola fever in the Sudan in the 1970s, the
Congo in the 1990s, and Uganda in 2000-2001. - Another example of an epidemic disease in
Tropical Africa is trypanosomiasis, the disease
known as sleeping sickness and vectored by the
tsetse fly. The infection is caused by a
trypanosome, of the genus of parasitic flagellate
protozoa that infests the blood of various
vertebrates including man. They are usually
transmitted by the bite of an insect. They
include some that cause a serious disease
(sleeping sickness). It appears to have
originated in West Africa in the 1400s and from
there, diffused to much of Tropical Africa. -
20AFRICA HAZARDS AND DISEASES
- Pandemic Worldwide spread of a disease such as
influenza. - Africas and the worlds most deadly disease is
malaria which is transmitted by mosquitoes and
kills as many as 1,000,000 children per year. - Another example of a pandemic disease is Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). People
infected with Human Immunodeficiency Syndrome
(HIV) do not display symptoms of the disease
immediately. In some cases, people may carry the
virus for years without being aware of it. - According to the United Nations, more than
32,000,000 people were infected with HIV
worldwide in 2001. - Approximately 27,000,000 lived in Tropical
African countries, specially the AIDS Belt that
extends from Congo to Kenya. - In Zimbabwe and Botswana more than 25 of all
persons aged 15-49 were infected with the HIV
virus. The percentage of infections in Zambia is
about 20 and in South Africa about 13. - The impact of AIDS on Africa is devastating.
- Yellow fever is another African pandemic disease.
- There was an outbreak in Senegal in the 1960s
that claimed more than 20,000 lives.
21AFRICA HAZARDS AND DISEASES
- Endemic A disease exists in a population in a
state of equilibrium (syphilis and mononucleosis
in the U.S.). - Endemic African diseases include malaria, yellow
fever, onchocerciasis (river blindness) and
schistosomiasis also called bilharzia. - The name bilharzia comes after Theodor Bilharz a
German physician who died in 1862.
22AFRICA HAZARDS AND DISEASES
- Schistosomiasis Infestation with schistosome
(any elongated trematode of the genus
Schistosoma, parasitic in the blood vessels of
man and other mammals) a blood fluke. - Onchocerciasis (river blindness) A
fly-transmitted tropical disease in which
parasitic filarial worms cause tumors, skin
lesions, and blindness. - Kwashiorkor Severe malnutrition resulting in
anemia, loss of skin pigmentation, hair loss or
color change, and protruding stomachs.
23AFRICA POPULATION
- In 2003, Africa had a population of 861,000,000,
13.6 percent of the world total. - Sub-Saharan Africa, as defined here (excluding
North Africa), had 711,300,000 people in 2003. - The realm is divided into 55 countries,
approximately one fourth of the political units
of the world. - The overall rate of natural increase of the
population in Africa is 2.4 percent, the highest
of any world region (world rate of natural
increase is 1.3 percent). - The doubling time for Africas population is only
29 years as compared to 54 years for the world as
a whole.
24AFRICA POPULATION
- The major clusters of population in Africa are
the following - Eastern Africa, especially the area around the
great lakes region Rwanda and Burundi. - Western Africa, most notably in Nigeria and
Ghana. - Southern Africa, particularly the industrial
sections of the Republic of South Africa. - Among the smaller population clusters the
following are noted - 1. Northern Morocco and Algeria.
- 2. The Nile Valley and Delta.
25AFRICA POPULATION
- Sub-Saharan Africa's most populous countries are
- Nigeria -- 133,900,000
- Ethiopia (Abyssynia) -- 70,700,000
- Congo (Zaire) -- 56,600,000
- South Africa -- 44,000,000
26AFRICA POPULATION
- Among the smallest African countries eight have
populations less than 1,000,000, including - Seychelles
- Sao Tome and Principe
- Mayotte
- Cape Verde
- Equatorial Guinea
- Comoros
- Djibouti
- Reunion
27AFRICA MIGRATION
- An estimated 30,000,000 Africans were forced from
their homelands in bondage by the practices of
the Europeans and Arabs with the use of African
middlemen. - Africa formed the major source areas for slavery.
- A western African core area supplied the slaves
for North America and the West Indies. - Present day Angola and Mozambique, both
Portuguese colonies, supplied the slaves for
Brazil and other Portuguese possessions. - Eastern Africa supplied the slaves for Arab lands
and other points north and east of this region. - The Arabs introduced slavery in eastern Africa
long before the Europeans carried out similar
practices in western Africa. - The Arab traders used dhows to carry African
slaves to Arabia, Persia and India. - The practice of slavery, notwithstanding the
extreme misery that it caused to the indigenous
populations, resulted in the decline of the
interior savanna states, reoriented trade routes
and ravaged the population of the interior
because of the insatiable demand for slaves.
28AFRICA URBAN GEOGRAPHY
- Africa is the least urbanized of the world's
regions with only 33 percent of its people living
in urban areas. Only 11 African cities have more
than 1,000,000 people. Kinshasa, the capital of
Congo (Zaire), is Sub-Saharan Africa's largest
city in terms of population size.
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30AFRICA CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
- Culture is a seamless web that describes patterns
of learned human behavior that form a durable
template by which ideas and images can be
transferred from one generation to another, or
from one group to another. - 1. Transfer is not through biological means
- 2. The main imprinting forces in cultural
transfers are symbolic, with language playing a
particularly important role. Imprinting refers
to the spontaneous acquisition of information,
particularly those habits of speech and behavior
acquired in the early years of life. - 3. Culture has a complexity and durability that
set it apart from the learned behavior of other,
nonhuman animals.
31AFRICA CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
- In the case of Africa, the Niger-Kordofanian
family of languages is the most extensive with
the Bantu subfamily being the most important. - Nilo-Saharan Family
- The Khoisan family, including the Bushmens
languages, represents the oldest surviving
African languages. - Malay-Polynesian family. Madagascar's languages
belong to a non-African, Malay-Polynesian family.
- Indo-European Family. Afrikaans is an
Indo-European language spoken by the majority of
the 4.5 million whites living in South Africa.
32AFRICA ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
- Primary Sector
- The majority of Africa's people are employed in
farming for survival, which is mainly labor
intensive. A great number of farmers depend on
subsistence farming. - Hunting and gathering still sustain the Bushmen
of the Kalahari and the Pygmies of Congo (Zaire).
- The Masai pastoralists of Kenya and Tanzania in
Eastern Africa consider cattle as a measure of
the wealth and prestige of their owners in the
community. - In only a limited number of areas of the
continent is farming carried out on a commercial
basis. Such areas are mainly located in Middle
Equatorial Africa and in Southern Africa. - Several African countries depend almost
exclusively on the export of selected commodities
for their survival. Nigeria, Africa's most
populous country, depends heavily on crude oil
exports which account for 95 percent of all
exports of the country. - The chief crops are cocoa (a main export item),
tobacco, palm products, peanuts, cotton,
soybeans, timber, rubber, and hide.
33AFRICA ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
- Secondary sector
- The industrial sector accounts for only a small
portion of Sub-Saharan Africa's economy, - Usually around one-fifth or less of the labor
force is employed in manufacturing. - The only African economy that can be classified
as industrial is that of the Republic of South
Africa which compares favorably with the
industrial countries of Europe, North America,
and Asia, both in terms of output and variety of
industrial goods produced. - For the remaining countries the industrial sector
is limited to food processing and light
industries.
34AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- The present day political organization of Africa
is a reflection of the colonial scramble for
Africa. - The term colony referred to any territory
invaded, conquered, and settled by a white
immigrant population. - European colonial powers pursued different
colonial policies in Africa and these are
summarized on the next slide.
35AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- Britain - indirect rule the least centralized
among European colonizing nations. - Belgium - paternalism It tended to treat
Africans as children, to be tutored in Western
ways, although slowly. - France - assimilation the acculturation of
Africans to French ways of life. - Portugal - exploitation
36AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- Types of British colonial organization
- Colony white settler minorities had substantial
autonomy, e.g., Southern Rhodesia, Kenya. - Protectorate the rights of African people were
guarded more effectively, e.g., Uganda, Northern
Rhodesia. - Mandate later trust territories that the
British undertook to uphold the League of
Nations, later the United Nations,
administrative rules, e.g., Iraq, Palestine. - Condominium where the administration is shared
with another government, e.g., Anglo -Egyptian
Sudan, ruled by the British and the Egyptians. - Dominion territories which enjoyed sovereignty
within the Commonwealth long before the beginning
of the second World War, e.g., Canada, Australia,
New Zealand, and South Africa.
37AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- Forward capital cities Several examples of
African countries exist that moved their capital
cities to refocus national attention and
strengthen national control of their territories.
- For example, Nigeria, following the Biafra
rebellion by the Ibo, moved the capital of the
country from Lagos to Abuja, a city that is
better situated to control the national
territory. - Tanzania moved the capital of the country from
coastal Dar es Salaam to the interior city of
Dodoma. - Cote d Ivoire moved the capital city from
Abidjan to Yamoussoukro.
38AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- Geometric boundaries Straight line boundaries
separate the national territories of many African
countries. For example, Libya is separated from
Egypt by the 28th meridian. The 20th meridian
separates Namibia from Botswana and Namibia from
the Republic of South Africa.
39AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- Internal ethnic conflict An example of ethnic
conflict is Nigeria. - Nigeria has an area of 910,770 sq. km. (351,650
sq. mi.). For comparison purposes, Nigeria is
more than twice the size of California. - The country is inhabited by four main ethnic
groups Hausa 21 Yoruba 20 Ibo 17 Fulani
9 Others, 33. - The main languages of the country are English
(official), Hausa, Yoruba, and Ibo. - In terms of religion, the Moslems account for 47
and they are concentrated mostly in the northern
part of the country Christians constitute 34
of the population of the country and they are
concentrated mainly in the southern section. - (continued on next slide)
40AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- Following independence on October 1, 1960,
Nigeria was organized into a federal state with
three regions, two in the South and one in the
North. - 1. Western Region. This region formed the
Yoruba core, people with a long history of
urbanization and good farmers. Colonialism
introduced cash crops. For example, cocoa was
introduced by Fernando Po in the 1870's and
fostered trade. Among the major urban centers of
the area are the cities of Lagos, 3.4 million,
and Ibadan, 1 million. At the time of
independence, 10 million people lived in the
area, more than any other part of Nigeria.
41AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- 2. Eastern Region. This region formed the Ibo
core and included the area east of the Niger and
south of the Benue where the influence of
colonialism was less pronounced. The population
of this region was less urbanized. About 10 of
the population was urban in 1985. Thirteen
million people live in the area which has high
rural densities. On May 30, 1967, the Eastern
Region seceded proclaiming itself the Republic of
Biafra and plunging the country into civil war
which ended on January 12, 1970 with the
capitulation of the secessionists. Casualties
were estimated at 1,000,000. - 3. Northern Region. This region formed the
Moslem north centered on the Hausa-Fulani
population cluster. Thirty million people live
in this area with a legacy of a feudal social
system, conservative traditionalism, and
resistance to change. - The original three regions were subdivided and
rearranged into a federal structure of 19 states
plus the federal capital territory. A new
capital, Abuja, was built in a more central
location.
42AFRICA POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
- Sudan. In the Sudan, the Muslim North has been
involved in a prolonged war with the Christian
and animist South. - Eritrea. The Eritrean People's Liberation Front
has been fighting the Ethiopian government for
the past 30 years. In May 1992, this
organization took control of Eritrea and in an
agreement with the Ethiopian government there is
going to be an internationally supervised
referendum on independence. - Territorial disputes. War between Ethiopia and
Somalia over the Ogaden region in southeastern
Ethiopia not far from the ancient city of Harare.
Somali claims on Ogaden resulted in open warfare
in the 1970s and intermittent skirmishes since
then.
43AFRICA REGIONS
- Africa is usually subdivided into five regions
- Northern Africa
- Western Africa
- Eastern Africa
- Southern Africa
- Equatorial Africa
- The last four regions are part of Sub-Saharan
Africa. The binding elements and criteria that
are used to organize these regions are the
following - Cultural and historical momentum.
- Set of parallel ecological belts.
44NORTHERN AFRICA
- Northern Africa includes seven countries
- Algeria
- Egypt
- Libya
- Morocco
- Sudan
- Tunisia
- Western Sahara
- This area is covered in greater detail in the
Northern Africa Southwest Asia unit.
45WESTERN AFRICA
Western Africa includes sixteen countries
- Liberia
- Mali
- Mauritania
- Niger
- Nigeria
- Senegal
- Sierra Leone
- Togo
- Benin
- Burkina Faso ( formerly Upper Volta).
- Cape Verde
- Gambia
- Ghana
- Guinea Bissau,
- Guinea
- Côte d Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
46WESTERN AFRICA
- This region extends from the margins of the
Sahara Desert south to the coast and from Lake
Chad to Senegal and includes sixteen countries. - West Africa comprises former British and French
dependencies, four British and nine French. - While the British colonies of Nigeria, Ghana,
Sierra Leone, and Gambia were all separated from
one another, Francophone West Africa was
contiguous. - Their proximity notwithstanding, there was little
trade between British influenced and Francophone
countries. For example, Nigeria's trade with
Britain is about one hundred times as great as
its trade with nearby Ghana.
47WESTERN AFRICA
- Guinea-Bissau was once Portuguese and
long-independent Liberia was never colonized. - A rough division can be made between the very
large, mostly steppe and desert states that
extend across the Southern Sahara (Chad
included), and the better-watered, smaller
coastal states. Burkina Faso is small, but dry
and landlocked, and does not fit into either
group.
48WESTERN AFRICA
- Criteria for regionalization of West African
Region - Remarkable cultural and historical momentum.
- Old states and empires
- Ancient Ghana
- Ancient Mali
- Ancient Songhai
- 2. Western Africa contains a set of parallel
east-west ecological belts, pervasive in the
development of the region. - 3. Early impact of European colonialism,
maritime dominance, and slave trade.
49WESTERN AFRICA
- Western Africa constitutes one of Africa's major
population clusters and includes Nigeria,
Africa's largest country in terms of population
with 133,900,000 in 2003. Ghana with 20,500,000
is this region's second most populous
nation-state, followed by Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory
Coast) which has 17,000,000 people.
50EASTERN AFRICA
Eastern Africa includes nineteen countries
- Mozambique
- Reunion
- Rwanda
- Seychelles
- Somalia
- Zimbabwe
- Tanzania
- Uganda
- Zambia
- Cape Verde
- Burundi
- Comoros
- Djibouti
- Eritrea
- Ethiopia
- Kenya
- Madagascar
- Malawi
- Mauritius
51EASTERN AFRICA
- Eastern Africa includes nineteen countries.
Among those are the British colonial territories
of Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania (formerly
Tanganyika), and its offshore islands of Zanzibar
and Pemba also the Belgian wards of Rwanda and
Burundi. - Eastern Africa is mostly a highland plateau with
savanna type vegetation that turns into a steppe
in the dryer northeast. - Great volcanic mountains rise above a plateau
that is cut by the giant rift valleys -- a
valley which has been formed by the sinking of
land between two roughly parallel faults. Such a
valley is long in proportion to its width. The
rift valley running from Syria, Israel and Jordan
through East Africa is more than 4,800 km or
3,000 mi. in length. Graben is a synonym for
rift valley.
52EASTERN AFRICA
- Lake Victoria is a pivotal physical feature of
Eastern Africa, where the three major countries
boundaries come together. Uganda's primary core
and the secondary cores of Kenya and Tanzania are
located here. - Rainfall is marginal or insufficient. The heart
of Tanzania is dry, tsetse and malaria ridden,
and occasionally faces food shortages. - Eastern and Northern Kenya consist of steppe
country with frequent drought. - Uganda receives more rainfall than its neighbors.
- Major minerals include diamonds in Tanzania (not
far south of Lake Victoria), and copper in
Uganda.
53EASTERN AFRICA POPULATION
- The Eastern Africa population cluster includes
262,800,000 people. The most populous countries
of this region are Kenya (31,600,000), Tanzania
(35,400,000), and Ethiopia (70,700,000). Rwanda
and Burundi have very high population densities. - Tanzania lacks a primary core area and has many
ethnic groups. Tanzania never had a white
population of more than 20,000. - Kenya has a strongly concentrated core area
centered on its capital Nairobi, which has a
population of 1,505,600. Kenya is dominated by
the Kikuyu 21. Other ethnic groups include the
Luo 13, Luhya 14, Kelenjin 11, and Kamba 11.
Also, there are 280,000 Asians, 70,000
Europeans, and 30,000 Arabs. - In Uganda 75,000 Asians were ordered to leave the
country within a three month period in 1972,
under the government of dictator Idi Amin
(1971-1979). This was a classical case of
forced migration.
54EASTERN AFRICA TANZANIA
- In Tanzania, commercial agriculture predominates
with sisal plantations along the north coast,
coffee on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro (near
the Kenya border), cotton south of Lake Victoria
and tea in the southwestern part of the country.
- New villages, cooperatives, and improved farming
methods were introduced under Julius Nyerere. - Tanzania served as haven for insurgents fighting
the Portuguese in Mozambique. It had a difficult
merger with Zanzibar and moved the capital from
Dar es Salaam (1.8 million) to Dodoma in the
interior. - The Chinese built the Tan-Zam or TAZARA railway.
Tan-Zam Railway provides Tanzania with a link to
neighboring landlocked Zambia, as well as access
to a poorly developed domestic area with
relatively good agricultural potential in the
southern highlands. - Despite significant improvements in farming
practices, pressures from a fickle environment
and periodic food shortages are a frequent
problem.
55EASTERN AFRICA KENYA
- Kenya, with an area of 582,800 sq. km. (219,960
sq. mi.), is twice the size of Nevada. - The country had a population of 31,600,000,000 in
2003. - The population density is 54 persons per sq. km.
(141 persons per sq.mi.) - Kenya has an average annual growth of 2.0 percent.
56EASTERN AFRICA KENYA
- The physical environment of the country can be
divided into these physiographic regions the
equatorial and coastal plain the arid north
southwestern fertile Lake Victoria Basin and the
eastern depression of the Great Rift Valley which
separates western highlands from those that rise
from the lowland coastal strip. - Kenya has about 10 to 15 percent of its land used
for agriculture with 23 percent of the labor
force employed in farming. The principal
products include coffee, sisal, tea, cotton,
pyrethrum, and livestock. Sisal is a strong
durable white fiber used to make hard cordage and
twine (also called sisal hemp) widely cultivated
in West India, sisal comes from the leaves of the
sisalana plant.
57EASTERN AFRICA KENYA
- The industrial sector of the Kenyan economy
employs about 14 of the labor force. - Among the major industrial goods are plastics,
furniture, batteries, textiles, and soap. - The official language of Kenya is Swahili, with
Bantu, Kikuyu, and English among the other
important languages. - In terms of religion, the Kenyan population is
27 Protestant, 26 Roman Catholic, 19 Animist,
and 6 Islamic.
58EASTERN AFRICA KENYA
- Only 22 of the population is classified as
urban. - Nairobi (835,000), the capital city and the port
city of Mombasa (400,000) are the most important
urban centers of the country. - Kenya, formerly a British colony and
protectorate, was made a crown colony in 1920. - The whites domination of the White Mountains
(which were long regarded as Kikuyu territory)
led to the Mau movement in 1952. - Kenya gained independence on December 12, 1963.
59EASTERN AFRICA UGANDA
- Uganda has an area of 199,560 sq. km. (93,066
sq. mi). - It is twice the size of Pennsylvania, has
25,300,000 people and a density of 105 persons
per sq. km. (271 persons per sq. mi). - The Ugandan annual population growth rate stands
at 3 percent.
60EASTERN AFRICA UGANDA
- The major landforms of Uganda include swampy
lowlands, a fertile plateau with wooded hills,
and a desert region. - Uganda is a landlocked country which depends on
coastal Kenya for its exit to the ocean however,
relations between Uganda and Kenya have not been
good. - Uganda's former dictator, Idi Amin, claimed a
large part of western Kenya and an Ugandan
corridor to the sea through Northern Tanzania.
61EASTERN AFRICA UGANDA
- English serves as the official language of
Uganda. Swahili, Luganda, Ateso, and Luo are also
spoken in the country. - Religion 64 of the people are Christian Islam
accounts for 6. - About 21 of the land is used for agriculture,
and 90 of the labor force is involved in
farming. The principal products are coffee, tea,
cotton, tobacco, sugar, and fish. - Coffee, tea, and cotton are the major export
items. - Only 3 of the labor force is employed in
industry. Major industrial products are copper,
cement, shoes, fertilizer, and beverages.
62MIDDLE AFRICA
- Middle Africa includes nine countries
- Angola
- Cameroon
- Central African Republic
- Chad
- Congo
- Equatorial Guinea
- Gabon
- Sao Tome and Principe
- Congo (Zaire).
63MIDDLE AFRICA
- Middle Africa is a region of subsistence farming
and raw material exports. - Chad, located on the northern side of the Central
African Republic, was an administrative part of
French Equatorial Africa and is one of the
countries still included in this region, but it
lies between Niger and Sudan in the Western
African-related savanna belt.
64MIDDLE AFRICA CONGO (ZAIRE)
- Congo (Zaire) with an area of 2,400,000 square
kilometers (905,351 square miles) is the largest
country of this region, both in terms of area and
population. Congo (Zaire) is about one quarter
the size of the United States. - Congo (Zaire) has 56,600,000 people in 2003,
which is more than the combined population of the
remaining countries in this region. - The population density is 24 persons per sq. km.
(63 persons per sq. mi.). - The population annual natural growth rate is
3.1, well above the world natural rate of
increase of 1.3.
65MIDDLE AFRICA CONGO (ZAIRE)
- Most of Congos (Zaire's) margins occupy the
plateau rim surrounding the Congo Basin, but the
interior and northeast quadrant fall within the
basin. - Mineral wealth lies within the basin's rim.
- The river system is not navigable because rapids
exist in many key locations. - The principal tributaries of the Congo River are
the Ubangi and Bonu in the North and the Congo in
the West. - The entire length of Lake Tanganyika lies along
the eastern border with Tanzania and Burundi.
66MIDDLE AFRICA CONGO (ZAIRE)
- The most important mineral resources of Congo
(Zaire) include copper, cobalt, zinc, industrial
diamonds, manganese, tin, gold, rare metals,
bauxite, iron, and coal. - Congo (Zaire) also has 13 percent of the world's
hydroelectric potential. - While only 2 percent of the land is used for
agriculture, about 70 to 80 percent of the labor
force is employed in this activity. - The principal agricultural products of Congo
(Zaire) include coffee, palm oil, rubber, tea,
cotton, cocoa, bananas, vegetables, and fruits.
67MIDDLE AFRICA CONGO (ZAIRE)
- Political-geographical implications
- The population of Congo (Zaire) is composed of
these ethnic groups Bantu, Sudanese, Nilotics,
Pygmies, Hamites. - They speak French, Bantu dialects, mainly
Swahili, Lingala, Ishiluba, and Kikongo. - About 50 percent are Animists and the remaining
are Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Islamic. - Congo (Zaire) has about 40 percent of its people
living in urban centers. Kinshasa (3,000,000),
the most important urban center of the country,
is the capital city and the largest African city
south of the Sahara. - Among the other urban centers are Kananga,
(800,000) Lubumbashi (525,000) Mbuji-Maji
(425,000).
68MIDDLE AFRICA
- Gabon and Cameroon fared better economically than
the landlocked Central African Republic and
Congo. - Gabon is small, compact and thinly settled, with
modest oil reserves, substantial metallic mineral
deposits, and abundant forest resources. - Cameroon has a fair commercial agriculture base,
including tea, bananas, coffee, and palm oil.
69SOUTHERN AFRICA
- Southern Africa includes five countries
- Botswana
- Lesotho
- Namibia
- Republic of South Africa
- Swaziland
70SOUTHERN AFRICA
- Botswana, Swaziland, and Lesotho are landlocked.
- Southern Africa is Africa's richest region in
material terms. - A great zone of mineral deposits extends from
Zambia's Copperbelt, through Zimbabwe's Great
Dyke, and South Africa's Bushveld Basin and
Witwatersrand, to the gold fields of the Orange
Free State in the heart of the Republic of South
Africa. - Among the most important minerals are gold,
chromium, diamonds, platinum, coal and iron in S.
Africa. - Copper, lead, and zinc are found in Namibia (SW
Africa) at Tsumeb. - Diamonds are found along the beaches facing the
Atlantic.
71SOUTHERN AFRICA
- The country was organized in 1910 as the Union of
South Africa. - It was officially proclaimed the Republic of
South Africa on May 31, 1966. - South Africa has an area of 1,220,900 sq km
(471,400 sq mi). - It is 11.5 times the size of Ohio. The U.S. is
seven and one-half times the area of South
Africa. - In 2003, South Africa had 44,000,000 people, a
population that is 6.2 of the African population
south of the Sahara. - The population density is 36 persons per sq km
(93 persons per sq mi). - The population grows at a rate of natural
increase of 0.9.
72SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- Landforms
- 1. High interior plateau, or veld, nearly half of
which averages 1,219 m (4,000 ft). - 2. Great Escarpment, separating the veld from the
coastal plain, rises to 3,350 m (11,000 ft) in
the Drakensberg Mountains in the east. The
principal river is the Orange rising in the
Lesotho and flowing westward for 2,092 km (1,300
mi) to the Atlantic. Vaal is its major
tributary, and an important source for urban,
industrial irrigation use. The country's
agricultural heartland, the "maize heartland," is
located here. -
73SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- The southernmost point of Africa is Cape Agulhas,
located in Cape Province about 161 km (100 miles)
southeast of the Cape of Good Hope. - The lengthy Limpopo River, forming much of South
Africa's northern border is of little economic
value as it fluctuates in volume during the year,
and from year to year. - Short streams from the Drakensberg to the Indian
Ocean include Tugela, Pongola, Kei, Fish and
Umzimvuda.
74SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- Climates
- 1. Mediterranean or Dry Summer Subtropical
(Csb). Area around Cape Town. - 2. Humid Subtropical (Cfa) in eastern section
of the country. - 3. Marine West Coast (Cfb) in southern section.
- 4. Cwb in the northern area of Cfb.
- 5. Tropical subtropical steppe (Bsh).
- 6. Tropical subtropical desert (BW).
75SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- Agriculture
- Only about 15 of the country is arable and
precipitation is variable. - Labor force that is employed in agriculture 53
- Principal products Corn, wool, wheat, sugar
cane, tobacco, citrus fruit. - Wool from sheep in the Karoo is the second most
important export item after gold. - Crop specialization Maize from the high veld
also, tobacco, wheat, dairy products, and beef. - In the SW Cape Wine, wheat, and fruit are
produced. - In Natal Sugar is cultivated.
76SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- Economy Minerals constitute about 2/3 of all
exports. - Natural resources
- Gold (2/3 of world production)-in Witwatersrand.
- Diamonds, platinum, coal, iron, ore, and
manganese in the Northern Orange Free State. - Mining employs 90 of the 700,000 man labor force
which is Black, including workers from
Mozambique, Lesotho, Botswana, and Swaziland. - Two new ports were opened in the 1970s to handle
mineral exports Saldanha Bay north of Cape Town
and Richard's Bay north of Durban. - Labor force that is in industry 15
- Major products Machinery, textiles, iron and
steel, chemicals, fertilizer, fish.
77SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- The Dutch East India Company landed the first
European settler at Table Bay near the Cape of
Good Hope in 1652, and founded the settlement of
Cape Town. By the end of the 18th century its
population numbered about 15,000. - The Dutch settlers were joined by French and
German immigrants, as slaves from Malaya and
Eastern and Western Africa began to be brought. - Intermarriage between Europeans and slaves and
Khoikoi locals gave rise to the Cape Coloreds,
who clustered in the Western Cape Region. Today
they constitute about 10 percent of South
Africa's population.
78SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- The language of the European settlers and
Coloreds was a dialect of Dutch that is known
as Afrikaans. - Europeans who traced their ancestry to the early
Dutch-French-German settlers identified
themselves as Boers or more recently as
Afrikaners. - Afrikaners constitute 60 percent of the European
total, which accounts for about 19 percent of
South Africa's population.
79SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- In 1806, England took control of the Cape from
Holland and began the process of Anglicizing the
colony. British immigration was encouraged and
today about 30 percent of the European population
is of British extraction. - In the 1830s, groups of Boers, reacting to the
British abolition of slavery, began the "Great
Trek" into the interior high veld where they
founded the Afrikaans speaking republics of
Transvaal and Orange Free State. In order to
deter the Boers from acquiring access to the
ocean, the British annexed Natal (Kwazulu-Natal)
and established the port of Durban 1842. In
1860, the British introduced Indians to Natal as
indentured laborers on sugar plantations. Today,
descendants of these and later arrivals
constitute almost 4 percent of South Africa's
population, and are 70 percent Hindu and 20
percent Muslim. Indians reside in Natal mostly
in the Durban area.
80SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- Diamonds were discovered at Kimberley in 1869 and
gold just north of the Vaal River 1886. - These discoveries led to conflict between the
Boers and the British. - The British victory in the Anglo-Boer War of
1899-1902 resulted in the joining together of
Natal, Cape of Good Hope, Transvaal, and the
Orange Free State as the Union of South Africa in
1910.
81SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- The Europeans quickly assumed political power and
the newly formed parliament enacted legislation
that excluded other racial groups from
participating in the political process. In 1948,
an Afrikaner dominated government began to
implement the policy of apartheid or separate
development. The long term goal was to create
separate homelands or Bantustans for the
different African ethnic groups and one homeland
for whites. Apartheid did not include a
possibility for the formation of homelands for
Asians or Coloreds.
82SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- The ethnic composition of the population of the
republic of South Africa (44,000,000) is given
below - Black 76.3 33,572,000
- White 12.7 5,588,000
- Colored mixed 8.5 3,740,000
- Cape Province
- Asian 2.5 1,100,000
- Durban and Natal
- Administrative Capital Pretoria
- Legislative Capital Cape Town
- Judicial Capital Bloemfontein
83SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- South Africa granted independence to
- Transkei in 1976 as a Xhosa homeland
- Bophuthatswana in 1977 as a Twana homeland
- Venda in 1979 as a Venda homeland
- Ciskei in 1980 as a western Xhosa homeland.
- No other country or the U.N. has recognized these
states. - The Zulus, the largest Black ethnic group,
rejected the offer for independence as the
Kwazulu homeland. - Kwazulu remains a collection of scattered
territorial units that comprise more than half of
the province of Natal. - The ten African homelands collectively comprise
13 of South Africa's land area. - More than half of South Africa's black population
lives and works on white farms or in urban areas.
84SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- Languages English, Afrikaans, nine Bantu
languages. - Religions
- Christian 66.4, of which Protestants account for
36.6, black independent churches 22.2, Roman
Catholic 7.6 - Hindu 1.3
- Muslim 1.1
- nonreligious 1.2
- other/traditional beliefs 30.0
- Urbanization 53
85SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- South Africa regions
- 1. Transvaal and Orange Free State
- 2. Natal
- 3. The Cape of Good Hope Province and South West
Africa
86SOUTHERN AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA
- Transvaal and the Orange Free State
- The interior of South Africa is a plateau lying
at a general elevation of 3,000 to 6,000 ft. It
is highest in the east and tapers off gradually
to the west. - The Orange River, with its large tributary, the
Vaal, and the Limpopo drain most of the plateau. - At the extreme end of the plateau is the High
Veld which is 4,500 to 6,000 feet. - It occupies most of the Orange Free State and the
southern third of Transvaal and extends into
Lesotho (formerly Basutoland). - The northern 2/3 of Transvaal is primarily an
area of woodlands and savanna grasses - the "Bush
Veld.
87SOUTHERN AFRICA NAMIBIA
- Namibia had 1,900,000 population in 2003
- It was formerly known as South West Africa.
- The major landforms
- 1. The Namib Desert
- 2. Arid and semiarid plateaus in the center
- 3. Kalahari Desert in the east extending into
Botswana
88SOUTHERN AFRICA NAMIBIA
- The N.E. receives sufficient precipitation to
support a transitional ecosystem between savanna
and steppe. - This region is home of the Orambo (500,000 in
population), the territory's most populous ethnic
group. - Other ethnic groups are the Okovango and the East
Caprivians. - The Caprivi Strip extends almost 483 km (300 mi.)
eastward to the Zambezi River.
89SOUTHERN AFRICA NAMIBIA
- Germany acquired South West Africa in 1884 but
lost it to South Africa as a mandate territory
following WWI. - In 1949, South Africa extended its sovereignty to
Namibia and in 1969 extended its apartheid policy
to the territory as well. - A white minority of more than 100,000 controlled
most of the economy. - In 1985, South Africa handed over limited powers
to a new multiracial administration while
insurgency continued from Angola. - Windhoek, on the central plateau (population
125,000) is the capital city.
90SOUTHERN AFRICA BOTSWANA
- Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland are nations that
were established at the end of the 19th century
when their people sought British protection from
the threat of annexation by the Boers. They are
landlocked and dependent on S. Africa. - Botswana -- the British protectorate of
Bechuanaland was granted independence in 1966.
About 98 of the country's 1,600,000 people are
ethnic Tswana. Gaborone (population 156,803) is
the capital city in the eastern semiarid steppe
lands near the S.African border.
91SOUTHERN AFRICA LESOTHO
- Lesotho, the British colony of Basutoland, was a
19th century refuge for southern Sotho speakers,
and it became independent in 1966. - The highest point in Southern Africa, Mt. Thabana
Ntlenyana (11,425 ft.), is located here. - Arable area is about 1/8 of total area.
- The capital city is Maseru (population 109,302).
- Total population of Lesotho is 1,800,000.
- About 200,000 residents migrate to South Africa
to work in mines and farms
92SOUTHERN AFRICA SWAZILAND
- Swaziland, resisting both Boer and Zulu
pressures, sought British protection in the
1840s, and again in the early 1880s. - It was brought under British rule in 1904.
- Independence was granted in 1968.
- The capital city is Mbabane with a population of
38,290 people.
93AFRICA