The great diversity of
the African environment makes it difficult to generalize about the continent.
While much of the continent consists of vast plains with little relief, there
are also towering volcanic peaks and the largest rift valley system in the
world. The climate ranges from the year-round heat and humidity of equatorial
regions to the dryness of the world’s largest desert to mountaintop conditions
cold enough to support glaciers. It contains regions of biological significance
due to their biodiversity and huge numbers of species found nowhere else.
The African environment
has long been mistakenly seen as hostile, foreboding, and tragically in
decline. Popular descriptions of Africa such as “the dark continent,” images of
untamed wilderness in nature publications, and sensationalized press coverage
of disasters such as droughts and famines have shaped these perceptions of
Africa. Geographers’ accounts of Africa used to attribute the underdevelopment
of the continent to its unfavorable environment—its oppressive climate,
infertile soil, polluted water, and exotic diseases.
These days have begun
to wane. Increased scientific research on the African environment has done much
to dispel old misconceptions and to provide insights into the physical
processes that give shape to the landscape. The relationship of African
societies to the environment is also much better understood. Yet much remains
to be done before this huge and complex continent is well known and
appreciated, especially by the general public.
The African Landscape
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The African continent
covers 30 million sq km (12 million sq mi), including its adjacent islands. It
stretches 8,000 km (5,000 mi) from its northernmost point, Ra’s al Abyaḑ in Tunisia, to its
southernmost tip, Cape Agulhas in South Africa. The maximum width of the
continent, measured from the tip of Cap Vert in Senegal, in the west, to Raas
Xaafuun (Ras Hafun) in Somalia, in the east, is 7,500 km (4,700 mi). The
highest point on the continent is the perpetually snowcapped Kilimanjaro (5,895
m/19,341 ft) in Tanzania, and the lowest is Lake ‘Asal (153 m/502 ft below sea
level) in Djibouti.
Africa is surrounded by
oceans and seas: the Atlantic Ocean on the west, the Indian Ocean on the east,
the Red Sea on the northeast, and the Mediterranean Sea on the north.
Madagascar, the fourth largest island in the world, lies off the southeastern
coast. Other offshore islands include the Madeira Islands, Canary Islands, Cape
Verde Islands, São Tomé, Príncipe, and Bioko, off the western coast; and the
Comoros Islands, Seychelles, Mascarene Islands, and Socotra, off the eastern
coast.
Surface Features
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Africa generally consists
of a series of flat and gently undulating plateaus occurring at different
levels, broken by a few mountainous areas and by the rift valleys of East
Africa. With a mean elevation of approximately 650 m (2,100 ft) above sea
level, Africa is high compared to other continents. The southern and eastern
section of the continent, often called High Africa, consists primarily of a
high plateau with elevations between 1,000 and 2,000 m (3,000 and 7,000 ft)
above sea level. Northern and western Africa, widely known as Low Africa, has
much lower mean elevations. Most of the continent’s surface has been warped
into a series of large, saucer-like basins separated by highlands. The major
basins of Africa are El Djouf, now occupied by the Niger River Basin in West
Africa; the Chad Basin, surrounding Lake Chad in west central Africa; the Sudan
(or Nile River) Basin in northeast Africa; the Congo River Basin of Central
Africa; and the Kalahari (or Okavango) Basin of southern Africa.
Highlands
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The highest elevations
in Africa are found in the various ranges of East Africa. After Kilimanjaro,
the next highest peaks are Mount Kenya (5,199 m/17,057 ft), north of
Kilimanjaro in central Kenya; Margherita Peak (5,109 m/ 16,762 ft) in the Ruwenzori
Range on the border between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo
(DRC); Ras Dashen (4,620 m/ 15,157 ft) in the Ethiopian Highlands of northern
Ethiopia; Mount Meru (4,565 m/ 14,977 ft), close to Kilimanjaro in Tanzania;
and Mount Elgon (4,321 m/ 14,177 ft) on the Uganda-Kenya border.
Africa’s other major mountainous
regions occur at the northern and southern fringes of the continent. The Atlas
Mountains, a system of high ranges, extend for 2,200 km (1,400 mi) across
Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, roughly parallel to the northern coast. These
ranges enclose a number of broad inland basins and plateaus. In the west, the
High (or Grand) Atlas contains Toubkal (4,165 m/ 13,665 ft), the highest peak
of the system. Toward the east, the Atlas consists of two parallel ranges: the
Tell Atlas to the north and the Saharan Atlas to the south.
In southern Africa, the
U-shaped Great Escarpment extends 5,000 km (3,000 mi) along the coast from
Angola to Mozambique (an escarpment is a ridge that is steep on one side
and slopes down gently on the other). The Drakensberg Mountains form the most
pronounced relief of the Great Escarpment, rising to 3,482 m (11,424 ft) at
Thabana Ntlenyana in Lesotho.
Cameroon Mountain is the
highest peak in West Africa at 4,095 m (13,435 ft). To the north, isolated
highlands occur in the desert land of the Sahara, including the Ahaggar
Mountains in southern Algeria and the Tibesti in northern Chad.
Great Rift Valley
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The Great Rift Valley
is one of the most distinctive features of African topography. Formed where
Earth’s crust is being pulled apart by the action of convection currents
beneath the surface, rift valleys are long, deep valleys bounded by parallel
faults, or fractures, in Earth’s crust. The Great Rift Valley system begins in
Syria, in the Middle East, and extends southward, down the length of the Red
Sea. It enters Africa at the Afar Depression on the coast of Eritrea and
Djibouti, and winds some 5,600 km (3,500 mi) to the coast of southern
Mozambique. In its middle section, it breaks into two major branches, the
Eastern Rift Valley and the Western Rift Valley. The rift valley is flanked by
towering escarpments of up to 1,000 m (3,000 ft) in southern Ethiopia, 1,500 m
(4,900 ft) along the Eastern Rift in central Kenya, and 1,300 m (4,300 ft) in
the northern part of the Western Rift, along the DRC’s border with Uganda,
Rwanda, and Burundi. The southern extremities of the rift system are much less
spectacular in size and appearance. For more information, see the Faulting
and Rift Valleys section of this article.
Several major lakes, typically
long and narrow, are located on the floors of the Western and Eastern rift
valleys. The Western Rift contains Lake Albert, Lake Edward, and Lake Kivu to
the north, Lake Tanganyika in the middle, and Lake Malawi (Lake Nyasa) to the
south. The lakes of the Eastern Rift tend to be smaller and include Lake
Naivasha, Lake Natron, and the southern part of Lake Turkana.
Deserts
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The Sahara is the world’s
largest desert. It stretches from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea, and from
the Mediterranean Sea and Atlas Mountains southward for 2,000 km (1,000 mi)
until it merges imperceptibly into the semidesert Sahel region. Most of the
desert consists of extensive plains covered with loose gravel and boulders,
called reg. The rest of the desert is made up of areas of shifting sand
dunes, called erg, interspersed with stretches of bare, rocky areas
called hamada.
The Namib and Kalahari
deserts of southern Africa are much smaller than the Sahara. The Namib Desert
stretches along the Atlantic coast for 1,500 km (930 mi) from southern Angola
along the entire length of Namibia, and into western South Africa. The nearby
Kalahari Desert, in Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa, is a semiarid region
in the center of the Kalahari Basin.
Coastline
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Generally, Africa’s coastline
is very even, with few good natural harbors. The coastal plain is narrow around
much of the continent, particularly
in the south and east. Major escarpments
run parallel to the coast in several areas. Most of the Red Sea and Indian
Ocean coastline is fringed by coral reefs, which are an obstacle to ships. On
the Atlantic coast, waters are generally too cold for coral development.
Africa’s best natural harbors are found in the many deep coastal inlets between
Senegal and Liberia, especially at the mouths of rivers. Lagoon coasts, with a
coastal barrier beach backed by lagoons, are common between Liberia and
Nigeria.
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