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West and Central Africa Ch. 22- Holt
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Landforms and Rivers Plains and low hills: a few highlands Broad depressions- El Djouf (desert), Lake Chad, Congo Basin Key rivers- Niger and Congo Coastal plain, with few natural harbors
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19721987 Niger River, Mali Congo River
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Climates and biomes: All within the tropics: climate bands run east-west Arid- Sahel region, bordering Sahara, scattered trees, shrubs, grasses Tropical wet and dry-south of Sahel: open grasslands: once home to many large animals (zebras, elephants) Tropical humid- near equator: dense forest many birds and insects, primates
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Sahel Region
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Key resource include tropical timber, good soils and minerals. Oil- Niger is is Africa’s leading producer Minerals- copper, diamonds, cobalt in DRC Cacao- world’s main source Other crops – coffee, coconuts, peanuts
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Cacao- pod and map Cobalt- used in magnets/color
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Historical eras: Pre-colonial- this era saw the rise of great empires, including Ghana and Mali, along with smaller groups of forest peoples. European contact began in the late 1400s with the slave trade.
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1050ad 1400-1500’s 1337 These great empires gained their wealth through the trans-Sahara trade.
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Colonial- European powers took control of the region, establishing plantations, mines and coastal cities. 1884 Berlin Conference
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Post colonial Ghana was the first to win independence, in1957: others followed. Colonialism created dependence on commodity exports, many political and economic problems.
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Cultural features: Great diversity- reflecting African, Muslim, European influences Most languages in Niger-Congo family: Arabic and European languages also used Mainly rural residents, but urban population growing rapidly Religions- Islam in the Sahel: Christians to the south: African spirit religions
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Low literacy rates, high poverty Staple crops- cassava, corn, yams, millet, sorghum Societies based on extended family –It takes a village to raise a child.
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Levels of development Developing countries- poverty, low levels of education Dual economies- for export market and local market Plantation agriculture hurt subsistence farming and grazing Dependence on export of a few key primary products
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Challenges Economic development Population growth – crowding, hunger Political problems – war and conflict Environmental destruction- deforestation, species extinction, desertification Disease- HIV
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HIV 2004 HIV Prevalence trends in South Africa 1990-1999
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