Title: Sub-Saharan Africa
1Sub-SaharanAfrica
2Sub-Saharan Africa
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4Geography
- The worlds second largest continent
- most nations of any continent
- Newest country South Sudan
- Location and Effects
- Above and below equator
- Between two oceans Atlantic Indian linked
and isolated - Part of major trade routes since ancient times
5Newest country South Sudan Capital Juba
6Regions
- North Africa above the Sahara Desert
- Linked to the Middle East culturally
- Sub-Saharan Africa
- West Africa extends into Atlantic
- Part of major slave trade routes to new world
- Central Africa home to Africas tropical rain
forests - Southern Africa crucial to trade b/w oceans
- East Africa Great Rift Valley, fertile land
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8Landforms
- The land made exploration difficult for Europeans
natural barriers - Africa is a continent of Plateaus
- Escarpments steep cliffs basins, swamps, lakes
- Mountains edges Atlas Mts, Drakensberg
Range,Mt. Kilimanjaro highest mountain in
Africa - Great Rift Valley a giant fault Red Sea to
Zambezi River - Series of mountain, valleys, lakes
- Rich in natural resources, fertile soil
- Hard to mine and transport because of the rough
terrain - Olduvai Gorge bone that belonged to the
ancestors of modern people - Deserts Sahara (largest), Kalahari
- Coastal Plains
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11First discovered by anthropologist Mary Leakey on
July 17, 1959
12Rivers
- Provide food, transportation, irrigation and
hydroelectric power - Cataracts waterfalls river rapids
- Major Rivers
- Nile, Congo (Zaire), Niger, Zambezi
13Nile River East Africa
- Longest flowing river in the world 4,160 miles
flows north - Home to early civilizations
- Predictable floods supported huge population
- Aswan High Dam
- Pros Hydroelectric Power, Irrigation
- Cons Farmers upstream now need to purchase
fertilizers
14- Nile River Route and its tributaries
15- Zaire (Congo) River
- Central Africa
- Provides hydroelectric power
- Cannot be navigated with boats
- Poor for trade
- Niger River
- West Africa
- Provides water for irrigation
- Floods predictably
16Zaire (Congo) River
17Niger River
18Zambezi River
- Southern Africa
- Creates Victoria Falls (largest), 1 mile wide and
420 ft. high, between Zambia and Zimbabwe - The Kariba Dam provides hydroelectric power
19Victoria Falls (Zambezi River)
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21"The smoke that thunders" is a local name for
Africa's most famous waterfall thundering (play
Thundering) over a 100m-high cliff.
Mosi-O-Tunya
How Stuff Works Video 500 Natural Wonders Video
100 PBS Video 30
22Devils Pool and Armchair
- A famous feature is the naturally formed
"Armchair" (now sometimes called "Devil's Pool"),
near the edge of the falls on Livingstone Island
on the Zambian side. When the river flow is at a
certain level, usually between September and
December, a rock barrier forms an eddy with
minimal current, allowing adventurous swimmers to
splash around in relative safety a few feet from
the point where the water cascades over the falls
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24Africas Natural Resources
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26Rich source of resources
- Mineral Resources (see map)
- Resources unevenly distributed
- Gold and Diamonds
- Profits from African nations often end up in
foreign countries - Europeans mined much of their gold from west
Africa beginning in the Age of Discovery - Power-Wealth-Trade
27Back
28Africas Resources Today
- Gold and Diamonds South Africa, D.R. Congo
- Copper Zaire and Zambia
- Platinum and Cobalt S. Africa, Zaire, and
Botswana - Oil Nigeria, Botswana, Libya, Algeria, and
Gabon - Profits from African nations often end up in
foreign countries
29Adapting to the Land
- Societies developed near sources of water
- hunting and gathering
- farming
- herding
- fishing
- urban
- Major urban areas developed on the Mediterranean
Coast, western savannas, and East Coast
30Language
- More than 1,000 languages
- Groups only a few miles apart often speak
different languages - Small tribes migrated constantly and used their
own language - Scholars group African Languages into large
families - Trade and diffusion created new languages
- Swahili Bantu and Arabic
31Section 1 Quiz Answers
- E Hydroelectric Power
- D cataract
- A escarpment
- C Nile
- B Aswan Dam
- 6. B the Pacific Ocean
- 7. A mountains
- 8. C 4,000 mile fault line that splits the
continent - 9. B halted annual flooding of the Nile
- 10. B seize a share of Africas gold and diamonds
32Climate and Diversity
33Climate Facts
- Latitude and Elevation climate
- Most tropics area between Tropic of Cancer and
Capricorn of all the continents - Temperature is warm to hot
- Colder temperatures seen in higher elevations
- Therefore, rainfall distinguishes the climate in
Africa not temperature - Precipitation Less than an inch to more than 80
inches
34Climate Zones
- Tropical Wet
- Tropical Wet and Dry
- Desert
- Mediterranean
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38Tropical Wet 8 of Africa
- Narrow strip along equator
- Home of the rainforests
- Average Temp 80 F
- Average Rain 60-120 inches per year
- Hard to settle
- Leaching rain washes away nutrients and destroys
soil, unsuitable for farming - Moisture feeds disease and destroys daily items
- Concrete and steel are expensive fixes
- Disease from insects sleeping sickness, malaria
(Nothing But Nets)
39Sleeping Sickness
- It is caused by parasites
- organism that lives on or in a host and gets its
food from or at the expense of its host - cause disease in humans
- First stage entails bouts of fever, headaches,
joint pains and itching - Second stage the parasites cross the blood-brain
barrier to infect the central nervous system - changes of behavior, confusion, sensory
disturbances and poor coordination - Disturbance of the sleep cycle, which gives the
disease its name, is an important feature of the
second stage of the disease. - Without treatment, sleeping sickness is
considered fatal.
- Trypanosomiasis
- Sleeping sickness occurs only in 36 sub-Saharan
Africa countries where there are tsetse flies
that transmit the disease. - The people most exposed to the tsetse fly and
therefore the disease live in rural areas and
depend on agriculture, fishing, animal husbandry
or hunting. - Drugs to treat
40Sleeping Sickness
41Tropical Wet and Dry 50 of Africa
- Either side of tropical wet climate to the
tropics - Rainfall varies by season
- Summer Hot temps Rainy Season
- Winter Warm temps Dry Season
- Major Feature
- Savanna most people - grasslands that cover
half the continent. More rain near the equator
support plant and wild life - Sahel semi-arid separates Sahara from savanna
- Unpredictable rainfall makes daily life difficult
- Drought
- Desertification land turning into deserts
causes over grazing and drought
42Deserts and Desertification
43Deserts 40 of Africa
- Sahara Means desert in Arabic Northern
Africa - Larger than the continental United States
- Rain rarely falls, less than 10 inches a year
- Temperatures reach as high as 130 F
- Traders traveled across the Sahara
- Diffusion of European, Asian, and African
cultures - Kalahari Southern Africa
- More rain than the Sahara allows food to grow
- Namib Southern Africa
44 45 46Deserts 40 of Africa
- Namib Desert one of the driest places on Earth
- One of the oldest deserts in the world 80
million years - Averages less than .4 inches of rain a year
- Dune 7 the highest sand dune in the world, 383
meters 1200 feet
47 48Mediterranean - 2
- The Southern Tip and the Northern Coast
- Climate similar to LA
- Hot, Dry Summer
- Cool, Wet Winter
- Fertile soil good for farming
- Major travel destination
49- Mediterranean Zones are in Purple
50Section 2 Quiz Answers
- C Kalahari
- E Sahel
- A Sahara
- D Tropic of Capricorn
- B Tropic of Cancer
- 6. C Desert
- 7. A tropical Wet
- 8. D Savanna
- 9. D all languages spoken in Africa belong to one
language family - 10. B they carry diseases that are fatal to human
beings
51Early Civilizations of the Nile Valley
52Egypt
- I. Religion
- -played a major role in daily life
- -polytheistic
- -Gods controlled forces of nature
- -life after death
- -priests and pyramids
- -pharaoh
- ruler of Ancient Egypt considered a god
- II. Economic Activities
- -farming
- -trade
- III. Achievements
- -hieroglyphics
- -365 day calendar
- -math
- -medicine
- -art
- Crash Course Egypt
Kush
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56Kush (Nubia)
- I. Achievements
- - 750BC
- King Kashta conquers Nile Valley for short time
- -Meroe capital city
- -adapted hieroglyphics
- II. Historical Importance
- -Egyptian Influence
- -polytheistic
- -grew rich and powerful from iron industry
(learned from Assyrians) - -traded with Egypt and Mediterranean world
- -weakened by trade shifted, invasion and internal
rivalries
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58Nubia Land of Gold
- Nubia was a land of natural wealth. They had gold
mines, ivory, incense, copper and iron ore.
59Kush Becomes the Iron Capital of the Ancient World
- Meroe is an area full of rich iron ore deposits
- This is the place where AFRICAs first iron
industry begins - People need iron to make weapons
- To create iron there was a need for wood to burn
in furnaces to melt down the iron ore
60The Kush Capital of Meroë
- Meroë became the center of Kushite civilization.
- At its height, the city thrived as a great center
of industry and culture. - Meroë was well known for producing iron.
- It had everything needed to make iron
- Rich supply of iron deposits
- Forests (wood made charcoal)
- Charcoal was used to heat the iron
deposits - Once the hot iron separated from the rock,
it was cooled in the Niles
waters. - Ironworkers in Kush made a variety of
things. - spears
- arrows
- swords
- axes
- hoes
61Meroe Pyramids
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63Trade Networks
- Exports
- Gold
- Pottery
- Iron tools
- Slaves
- Ivory
- Leopard skins
- Ostrich Feathers
- Elephants
- Imports
- Fine jewelry
- Luxury items
64The Demise of Kush
- To make iron, they needed to wood to burn. They
had used up much of their wood. Their resources
were dwindling. - Kush could not produce as much iron as they had
in the past, yet demand for iron was growing.
Traders began to look elsewhere for iron. - By 300s AD Kush lost its wealth a
- military might
- The Kingdom of Axum conquers Kush
65Axum
- I. Achievements
- - 350 AD
- -King Ezana conquered Kush
- -sacred writing (geez)
- -controlled port cities (ivory trade)
- II. Historical Importance
- -present day Ethiopia
- -center of trade
- - King Ezana Conversion to Christianity
- -Ethiopic Church (one of the oldest forms of
Christianity) - -lost power to Muslim empires
66Stele, Ezanas Royal Tomb,Axum (4c)
67Christian Church, LalibelaEthiopia
68Though Axum faded, its culture did not disappear.
Rather, its legacy survived in medieval Ethiopia.
- King Lalibela came to power in Ethiopia in the
early 1200s. - He directed the building of Christian churches,
carved down into solid rock.
69Closure
- What were the results of the interaction between
civilization? - exchange of knowledge and ideas
- diffusion
70Section 3 Quiz Answers
- E Ezana
- A Pharaoh
- C Hieroglyphics
- D Kashta
- B Olduvai Gorge
- 6. A too dry to support crops
- 7. B Nile River Flowed North
- 8. A built pyramids/ buried w/ valuable things
- 9. A Assyrians invaded Egypt
- 10. B destruction
71Africa Geography and Early History
72What is a key factor in differentiating between
Africas climates because temperatures do not
vary greatly from place to place?
73List 5 types of societies of Africa
- Hunting and gathering
- Farming
- Fishing
- Herding
- Urban
74Factors that influences where people live in
Africa.
- Environment
- Climate
- Geography
- Availability of water and resources
75Identify Africas climate regions and describe
ways in which that climate has affected the ways
of life of the African people.
- Tropical Wet
- Hard to settle because of leaching, insects,
disease, mold and rot - Tropical Wet and Dry
- Unpredictable/unreliable rainfall difficult on
farmers/herders, desertification caused by people
but still home to most Africans - Desert
- Few areas have grasses to support herding, not
enough rain for farming - Mediterranean
- Supports farming and herdinglarge population
76Describe ancient Egypt in terms in terms of
religion, economy activities, and achievements.
- Religion
- polytheistic, connected to nature, life after
death, Pharaoh - Economic Activities
- trade, farming
- Achievements
- hieroglyphics, 365 day calendar, math, medicine,
art, architecture
77Bonus InfoCivilization of the Nile Valley
- Kush
- Rich from iron industry
- Meroe capital city, center of trade
- Axum
- King Ezana convert to Christianity
- Ethiopic Church
- Center for trade