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Geographic Features of Africa

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Presentation on theme: "Geographic Features of Africa"— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Geographic Features of Africa
Objective: Identify and describe how has the geography of Africa influenced the lifestyle of Africans? Warm up: State at least three things that you know about the country of Africa. How do you think geography influenced the way people live in Africa. Two things you would like to learn.

3 A Satellite View

4 Based on the map… What can you tell about the Northern Region, Central Region and Southern region of Africa? What about the Coastal area?

5 Africa’s Size Second largest continent  11,700,000 sq. mi.
M I L E S M I L E S Second largest continent  11,700,000 sq. mi. 10% of the world’s population. 2 ½ times the size of the U. S.

6 Bodies Of Water Mediterranean Sea Red Sea Nile River Niger River
L. Chad--> <--Gulf of Aden L. Albert--> Congo River L. Victoria L. Tanganyika-> Indian Ocean Atlantic Ocean Zambezi River Limpopo River Orange River Pacific Ocean

7 The Mighty Nile River: “Longest River in the World”

8 The Congo River Basin Covers 12% of the continent.
Extends over 9 countries. 2,720 miles long. 99% of the country of Zaire is in the Congo River basin.

9 The Niger River Basin Covers 7.5% of the continent.
Extends over 10 countries. 2,600 miles long.

10 Hydroelectric Power

11 Mountains & Peaks Atlas Mts. Δ Mt. Kenya Δ Mt. Kilimanjaro
Ruwenzori Mts. Drajensburg Mts.

12 The African Plateau

13 Libyan Desert Deserts Sahara Desert Sahel Namib Desert Kalahari Desert

14 The Sahara Desert

15 Interesting Facts Sahara desert is the second largest desert in the world, after Antarctica, and the largest hot desert in the world. The desert extensively covers almost all the parts of Northern Africa. Sahara desert receives only 8 inches of rainfall per year It stretches from the Red Sea and includes parts of the Mediterranean coasts to the outskirts of the Atlantic Ocean. In the southward region, it is limited by the Sahel

16 Desertification

17 Definition.. Desertification is the degradation of land in drylands.[2] Caused by a variety of factors, such as climate change and human activities, desertification is one of the most significant global environmental problems.[3]

18 Warm-ups Week of 10/ What is desertification and how has it impacted Africa? How are rifts formed ? 10/ PSAT Day 10/ What is the difference between the Sahara and the Sahel 10/

19 Desertification has its greatest impact in Africa.
Two thirds of the continent is desert or drylands. There are extensive agricultural drylands, almost three quarters of which are already degraded to some degree. The region is afflicted by frequent and severe droughts. Many African countries are landlocked, have widespread poverty, need external assistance, and depend heavily on natural resources for subsistence”.

20 They have difficult socio-economic conditions,
insufficient institutional and legal frameworks, incomplete infrastructure, weak scientific, technical, and educational capacities. African countries have had to convince the international community of the need to Combat Desertification in Countries Experiencing Serious Drought and/or Desertification, Particularly in Africa

21 The Sahel

22 The Sahel Located In the southward region,
The Sahara is limited by the Sahel, a belt of semi-arid tropical savanna separating it from Sub-Saharan Africa. Timbuktu. Djenné. Koumbi Saleh. For centuries, the Sahel boasted some of Africa's most influential civilizations. A narrow band of semi-arid land south of the Sahara.

23 the Sahel attracted both Arabs looking for gold from Sudan and Europeans looking for slaves from West Africa. The two influences merged with native ones, creating a culturally complex area. The Sahel is widely French-speaking, Islamic and takes its name ("shore") from Arabic.

24 The region, one of the poorest and most environmentally damaged places on earth, has deep troubles. In the 1970s, the Sahel captured international attention when drought and famine killed nearly 200,000 people.

25 Valleys & Plains Great Rift Valley

26 Great Rift 6,000-mile crack (fissure) in the earth's crust, stretching from Lebanon to Mozambique. One of its most dramatic sections slices through East Africa, dividing Kenya into two segments. Geologists know that the Rift Valley was formed by violent subterranean forces that tore apart the earth's crust. These forces caused huge chunks of the crust to sink.

27 between parallel fault lines and force up molten rock in volcanic eruptions. Evidence that this process, called rifting, is still in progress comes from the many active and semi-active volcanoes, located along the Rift. Evidence of volcanic activity along the rift is provided by the presence of numerous boiling hot springs

28 Great Rift Valley 3,000 miles long

29 Seismic Activity in Africa

30 Africa: The “Tropical” Continent
Tropic of Cancer 20° N Africa: The “Tropical” Continent Equator 0° Tropic of Capricorn 20° S

31 West Africa: Home of our Hurricanes

32 Vegetation Zones

33 The African Savannah: 13 million sq. mi.

34 African Savannah: 13 million sq. mi.
Of Africa's great plains regions, the Serengeti is the most famous. Straddling Kenya and Tanzania, it is the only part of Africa where vast, annual migrations of animals -- wildebeest and zebras -- still occur. Early man first appeared in the Serengeti region's Olduvai Gorge some 2 million years ago

35 Today, the plains boast a wide range of cultures, from Maasai nomads to Kikuyu farmers and Dorobo hunter-gatherers. For thousands of years, the region's rhythm of life remained unchanged. But now, sporadic droughts, soil erosion and overgrazing are tiring the land out, while demands on it from impoverished human populations continue to grow.

36 African Rain Forest Annual rainfall of up to 17 ft.
Rapid decomposition (very humid). Covers 37 countries. 15% of the land surface of Africa.

37 Mt. Kilimanjaro: Snow on the Equator?

38 Kilimanjaro, with its three volcanic cones, Kibo, Mawenzi, and Shira, is a dormant volcano in Tanzania and the highest mountain in Africa at 5,895 metres or 19,341 feet above sea level

39 The Complete Topography Of AFRICA
Mediterranean Sea Atlas Mts. Libyan Desert The Complete Topography Of AFRICA Tropic of Cancer 20° N Sahara Desert Red Sea Sahel Nile River Niger River L. Chad--> Great Rift Valley <--Gulf of Aden L. Albert--> Equator 0° Δ Mt. Kenya Congo River L. Victoria Δ Mt. Kilimanjaro L. Tanganyika-> Indian Ocean Ruwenzori Mts. Atlantic Ocean Zambezi River Namib Desert Kalahari Desert Limpopo River Tropic of Capricorn 20° S Orange River Drajensburg Mts. Pacific Ocean

40 Natural Resources

41 Activity Using your desk top map, fill in the geographic features of Africa.


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