A satellite composite image of Africa

Geography edit

Main article: Geography of Africa

Africa is the largest continent in the southern hemisphere. It has an estimated area of 30,360,288 km² including the surrounding islands.

Africa is seporated from Europe by the Mediterranean Sea, although it is joined to Asia by the Isthmus of Suez (crossed by the Suez Canel), 130km wide. From the most northern point (Cape Blanc in Tunisia) to the southern point (Cape Agulhas in South Africa) is aproxomatly 8,000 km.

Geographical Facts edit

Languages edit

 
Map showing the distribution of African language families and some major African languages. Afro-Asiatic extends into the Sahel and Southwest Asia. Niger-Congo is divided to show the size of the Bantu sub-family.

Main article: African languages

By most estimates Africa contains well over a thousand languages. There are four major language families native to Africa.

  • The Afro-Asiatic languages are a language family of about 240 languages.
  • The Nilo-Saharan language family consists of more than a hundred languages.
  • The Niger-Congo language family covers much of Sub-Saharan Africa and is probably the largest language family in the world in terms of different languages.
  • The Khoisan languages number about 50.

With a few notable exceptions in East Africa, nearly all African countries have adopted official languages that originated outside the continent and spread through colonialism or human migration. For example, in numerous countries English and French are used for communication in the public sphere such as government, commerce, education and the media.

Territories edit

 
Regions of Africa. Blue: North Africa, green: West Africa, , orange: Horn of Africa, magenta: East Africa, red: Southern Africa.
 
Political Map of Africa
Name of territory,
with flag
Area
(km²)
Population
(1 July 2002 est.)
Population density
(per km²)
Capital
Eastern Africa[1]:
  Burundi 27,830 6,373,002 229.0 Bujumbura
  Comoros 2,170 614,382 283.1 Moroni
  Djibouti 23,000 472,810 20.6 Djibouti
  Eritrea 121,320 4,465,651 36.8 Asmara
  Ethiopia 1,127,127 67,673,031 60.0 Addis Ababa
  Kenya 582,650 31,138,735 53.4 Nairobi
  Madagascar 587,040 16,473,477 28.1 Antananarivo
  Malawi 118,480 10,701,824 90.3 Lilongwe
  Mauritius 2,040 1,200,206 588.3 Port Louis
  Mayotte (France) 374 170,879 456.9 Mamoudzou
  Mozambique 801,590 19,607,519 24.5 Maputo
  Réunion (France) 2,512 743,981 296.2 Saint-Denis
  Rwanda 26,338 7,398,074 280.9 Kigali
  Seychelles 455 80,098 176.0 Victoria
  Somalia 637,657 7,753,310 12.2 Mogadishu
  Tanzania 945,087 37,187,939 39.3 Dodoma
  Uganda 236,040 24,699,073 104.6 Kampala
  Zambia 752,614 9,959,037 13.2 Lusaka
  Zimbabwe 390,580 11,376,676 29.1 Harare
Middle Africa:
  Angola 1,246,700 10,593,171 8.5 Luanda
  Cameroon 475,440 16,184,748 34.0 Yaoundé
  Central African Republic 622,984 3,642,739 5.8 Bangui
  Chad 1,284,000 8,997,237 7.0 N'Djamena
  Congo 342,000 2,958,448 8.7 Brazzaville
  Democratic Republic of the Congo 2,345,410 55,225,478 23.5 Kinshasa
  Equatorial Guinea 28,051 498,144 17.8 Malabo
  Gabon 267,667 1,233,353 4.6 Libreville
  São Tomé and Príncipe 1,001 170,372 170.2 São Tomé
Northern Africa:
  Algeria 2,381,740 32,277,942 13.6 Algiers
  Egypt[2] 1,001,450 70,712,345 70.6 Cairo
  Libya 1,759,540 5,368,585 3.1 Tripoli
  Morocco 446,550 31,167,783 69.8 Rabat
  Sudan 2,505,810 37,090,298 14.8 Khartoum
  Tunisia 163,610 9,815,644 60.0 Tunis
  Western Sahara (Morocco)[3] 266,000 256,177 1.0 El Aaiún
Southern Europe dependencies in Northern Africa:
  Canary Islands (Spain)[4] 7,492 1,694,477 226.2 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria,
Santa Cruz de Tenerife
  Ceuta (Spain)[5] 20 71,505 3,575.2
  Madeira Islands (Portugal)[6] 797 245,000 307.4 Funchal
  Melilla (Spain)[7] 12 66,411 5,534.2
Southern Africa:
  Botswana 600,370 1,591,232 2.7 Gaborone
  Lesotho 30,355 2,207,954 72.7 Maseru
  Namibia 825,418 1,820,916 2.2 Windhoek
  South Africa 1,219,912 43,647,658 35.8 Bloemfontein, Cape Town, Pretoria[8]
  Swaziland 17,363 1,123,605 64.7 Mbabane
Western Africa:
  Benin 112,620 6,787,625 60.3 Porto-Novo
  Burkina Faso 274,200 12,603,185 46.0 Ouagadougou
  Cape Verde 4,033 408,760 101.4 Praia
  Côte d'Ivoire 322,460 16,804,784 52.1 Abidjan, Yamoussoukro[9]
  Gambia 11,300 1,455,842 128.8 Banjul
  Ghana 239,460 20,244,154 84.5 Accra
  Guinea 245,857 7,775,065 31.6 Conakry
  Guinea-Bissau 36,120 1,345,479 37.3 Bissau
  Liberia 111,370 3,288,198 29.5 Monrovia
  Mali 1,240,000 11,340,480 9.1 Bamako
  Mauritania 1,030,700 2,828,858 2.7 Nouakchott
  Niger 1,267,000 10,639,744 8.4 Niamey
  Nigeria 923,768 129,934,911 140.7 Abuja
  Saint Helena (UK) 410 7,317 17.8 Jamestown
  Senegal 196,190 10,589,571 54.0 Dakar
  Sierra Leone 71,740 5,614,743 78.3 Freetown
  Togo 56,785 5,285,501 93.1 Lomé
Total 30,368,609 843,705,143 27.8

Dec, 2004 Tsunami edit

 
Affected Countries
Effect on Somalia
Villages and coastal communities in Somalia, as far as 4,500 km (2,800 mi) from the epicentre of the earthquake, were swept away and destroyed by the huge waves. 176 people were confirmed dead, 136 were missing and more than 50,000 have been displaced.
Kenya
Waves struck Kenya causing some minor damage. One person reported drowned at Watamu, near Mombasa ([10]).
South Africa
Casualties: Two reported dead: One boy dead after swimming in the Quinera River at Gonubie, close to East London; an adult dead at Blue Horizon Bay near Port Elizabeth,[11] the furthest point from the epicentre of the earthquake where a tsunami-related death was reported. General observations: Ocean level variance two to three meters outside normal reported in KwaZulu-Natal and Eastern Cape, and a surge of 1.5m was observed as far as Struisbaai in the Western Cape, 8500km from the epicentre of the earthquake. Some steps were taken in South Africa to warn ports and disaster management centres, although full details are not public.[12] Damage: Large concrete blocks were uprooted in East London harbour, where boats also broke from their moorings [13]. Boats and cars were submerged at the Algoa Bay Yacht Club in Port Elizabeth harbour. [14] Durban harbour, Africa's busiest general cargo port and home to the largest and busiest container terminal in the Southern Hemisphere, [15] was closed for some time on 27 December because of unusually strong surges across the entrance channel [16].
Tanzania
Ten killed, an unknown number of people missing. Oil tanker temporarily ran aground in Dar es Salaam harbour, damaging an oil pipeline.
Madagascar
Flooding in low-lying coastal districts. No reported casualties. Waves reported variously as being between 1.6 and 10 metres in height swept through southeastern coastal areas near the towns of Manakara, Sambava and Vohemar — over 1,000 reported homeless. Problems were exacerbated by the approach of Cyclone Chambo. [17]

HIV Epidemic edit

 
Map of HIV epidemic

HIV is most prominent in Southern Africa, where levels are between 15 and 50 percent of the adult population.

Name of territorys (with flag)
with 15-50% HIV adult population
  South Africa
  Namibia
  Botswana
  Zimbabwe
  Zambia
  Lesotho
  Swaziland