Nile
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nile |
River |
|
Countries |
Ethiopia, Sudan, Egypt, Uganda, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, South Sudan |
|
Cities |
Jinja, Juba, Khartoum, Cairo |
|
|
Primary source |
White Nile |
- elevation |
2,700 m (8,858 ft) |
- coordinates |
02°16′56″S 029°19′53″E |
Secondary source |
Blue Nile |
- location |
Lake Tana, Ethiopia |
- coordinates |
12°02′09″N 037°15′53″E |
Source confluence |
near Khartoum |
Mouth |
|
- location |
Mediterranean Sea, Egypt |
- elevation |
0 m (0 ft) |
- coordinates |
30°10′N 031°06′E [1] |
|
Length |
6,853 km (4,258 mi) |
Width |
2.8 km (2 mi) |
Basin |
3,400,000 km2 (1,312,747 sq mi) |
Discharge |
|
- average |
2,830 m3/s (99,941 cu ft/s) |
|
|
The
Nile (
Arabic:
النيل,
Eg. en-Nīl,
Std. an-Nīl;
Coptic:
ⲫⲓⲁⲣⲱ,
P(h)iaro;
Ancient Egyptian:
Ḥ'pī and
Iteru) is a major north-flowing river in northeastern Africa, generally regarded as the
longest river in the world.
[2]
It is 6,853 km (4,258 miles) long. The Nile is an "international" river
as its water resources are shared by eleven countries, namely,
Tanzania,
Uganda,
Rwanda,
Burundi,
Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Kenya,
Ethiopia,
Eritrea,
South Sudan,
Sudan and
Egypt.
[3] In particular, the Nile is the primary water source of
Egypt and
Sudan.
[4]
The Nile has two major
tributaries, the
White Nile and
Blue Nile.
The White Nile is considered to be the headwaters and primary stream of
the Nile itself. The Blue Nile, however, is the source of most of the
water and
fertile soil. The White Nile is longer and rises in the
Great Lakes region of central Africa, with the most distant source still undetermined but located in either
Rwanda or
Burundi. It flows north through
Tanzania,
Lake Victoria,
Uganda and
South Sudan. The Blue Nile (
Amharic:
ዓባይ?,
ʿĀbay[5][6]) begins at
Lake Tana in
Ethiopia[7] and flows into Sudan from the southeast. The two rivers meet near the Sudanese capital of
Khartoum.
The northern section of the river flows northwards almost entirely through the Sudanese
desert to
Egypt then ends in
a large delta that empties into the
Mediterranean Sea. Egyptian
civilization and Sudanese
kingdoms
have depended on the river since ancient times. Most of the population
and cities of Egypt lie along those parts of the Nile valley north of
Aswan, and nearly all the cultural and historical sites of
Ancient Egypt are found along riverbanks.
In the ancient
Egyptian language, the Nile is called
Ḥ'pī or
Iteru, meaning "river", represented by the
hieroglyphs shown on the left (literally
itrw, and '
waters'
determinative).
[8] In
Coptic, the words
piaro (Sahidic) or
phiaro (Bohairic) meaning "the river" (lit. p(h).iar-o "the.canal-great") come from the same ancient name.
The English name
Nile and the Arabic names
en-Nîl and
an-Nîl both derive from the
Latin Nilus and the
Ancient Greek Νεῖλος.
[9][10] Beyond that, however, the etymology is disputed.
[10][11] One possible etymology derives it from a
Semitic Nahal, meaning "river".
[12]
The standard English names "White Nile" and "Blue Nile" to refer to the
river's headwaters derive from Arabic names formerly applied only to
the
Sudanese stretches which meet at
Khartoum.
[10]
Course
Above
Khartoum the Nile is also known as the
White Nile, a term also used in a limited sense to describe the section between
Lake No and Khartoum. At Khartoum the river is joined by the
Blue Nile.
The White Nile starts in equatorial East Africa, and the Blue Nile
begins in Ethiopia. Both branches are on the western flanks of the
East African Rift.
The
drainage basin of the Nile covers 3,254,555 square kilometers (1,256,591 sq mi), about 10% of the area of Africa.
[14] The Nile basin is complex, and because of this, the discharge at any given point along the
mainstem depends on many factors including weather, diversions, evaporation and
evapotranspiration, and
groundwater flow.
Sources
The
source of the Nile is sometimes considered to be
Lake Victoria, but the lake has feeder rivers of considerable size. The
Kagera River, which flows into Lake Victoria near the Tanzanian town of
Bukoba,
is the longest feeder, although sources do not agree on which is the
longest tributary of the Kagera and hence the most distant source of the
Nile itself.
[15] It is either the
Ruvyironza, which emerges in
Bururi Province,
Burundi,
[16] or the
Nyabarongo, which flows from
Nyungwe Forest in Rwanda.
[17] The two feeder rivers meet near
Rusumo Falls on the Rwanda-Tanzania border.
In 2010, an exploration party
[18] went to a place described as the source of the
Rukarara tributary,
[19] and by hacking a path up steep jungle-choked mountain slopes in the Nyungwe forest found (in the
dry season)
an appreciable incoming surface flow for many kilometres upstream, and
found a new source, giving the Nile a length of 6,758 km (4,199 mi)
Gish Abay is reportedly the place where the "holy water" of the first drops of the Nile develop.
[20]
Lost headwaters
Formerly
Lake Tanganyika drained northwards along the
African Rift Valley into the
White Nile, making the Nile about 1,400 kilometers (870 mi) longer, until it was blocked in
Miocene times by the bulk of the
Virunga Volcanoes.
In Uganda
The Nile leaves Lake Victoria at
Ripon Falls near
Jinja, Uganda, as the
Victoria Nile. It flows north for some 130 kilometers (81 mi), to
Lake Kyoga.
The last part of the approximately 200 kilometers (120 mi) river
section starts from the western shores of the lake and flows at first to
the west until just south of
Masindi Port, where the river turns north, then makes a great half circle to the east and north until
Karuma Falls. For the remaining part it flows merely westernly through the
Murchison Falls until it reaches the very northern shores of
Lake Albert where it forms a significant
river delta. The lake it self is on the border of
DR Congo,
but the Nile is not a border river at this point. After leaving Lake
Albert, the river continues north through Uganda and is known as the
Albert Nile.
In South Sudan
The river flows into
South Sudan just south of
Nimule, where it is known as the
Bahr al Jabal ("Mountain River"
[21]). Just south of the town it has the
confluence with the
Achwa River. The
Bahr al Ghazal, itself 716 kilometers (445 mi) long, joins the Bahr al Jabal at a small lagoon called
Lake No, after which the Nile becomes known as the
Bahr al Abyad, or the
White Nile, from the whitish
clay suspended in its waters. When the
Nile floods it leaves a rich silty deposit which fertilizes the soil. The Nile no longer floods in Egypt since the completion of the
Aswan Dam in 1970. An
anabranch river, the
Bahr el Zeraf, flows out of the Nile's Bahr al Jabal section and rejoins the White Nile.
The flow rate of the Bahr al Jabal at
Mongalla, South Sudan is almost constant throughout the year and averages 1,048 m
3/s (37,000 cu ft/s). After Mongalla, the Bahr Al Jabal enters the enormous swamps of the
Sudd region of South Sudan. More than half of the Nile's water is lost in this swamp to
evaporation and
transpiration. The average flow rate of the White Nile at the tails of the swamps is about 510 m
3/s (18,000 cu ft/s). From here it soon meets with the
Sobat River at
Malakal.
On an annual basis, the White Nile upstream of Malakal contributes
about fifteen percent of the total outflow of the Nile River.
[22]
The average flow of the White Nile at Malakal, just below the Sobat River, is 924 m
3/s (32,600 cu ft/s); the peak flow is approximately 1,218 m
3/s (43,000 cu ft/s) in October and minimum flow is about 609 m
3/s
(21,500 cu ft/s) in April. This fluctuation is due the substantial
variation in the flow of the Sobat, which has a minimum flow of about
99 m
3/s (3,500 cu ft/s) in March and a peak flow of over 680 m
3/s (24,000 cu ft/s) in October.
[23]
During the dry season (January to June) the White Nile contributes
between 70 percent and 90 percent of the total discharge from the Nile.
In Sudan
Below
Renk the White Nile enters Sudan, it flows north to Khartoum and meets the Blue Nile.
The course of the Nile in Sudan is distinctive. It flows over
six groups of cataracts, from the first at
Aswan to the sixth at
Sabaloka
(just north of Khartoum) and then turns to flow southward before again
returning to flow north. One name for this is the "Great Bend".
[citation needed]
In the north of Sudan the river enters
Lake Nasser (known in Sudan as Lake Nubia), the larger part of which is in Egypt.
In Egypt
Below the
Aswan High Dam, at the northern limit of Lake Nasser, the Nile resumes its historic course.
North of
Cairo, the Nile splits into two branches (or
distributaries) that feed the Mediterranean: the
Rosetta Branch to the west and the
Damietta to the east, forming the
Nile Delta.
Tributaries
Atbara River
Below the confluence with the Blue Nile the only major tributary is the
Atbara River, roughly halfway to the sea, which originates in Ethiopia north of
Lake Tana,
and is around 800 kilometers (500 mi) long. The Atbara flows only while
there is rain in Ethiopia and dries very rapidly. During the dry period
of January to June, it typically dries up. It joins the Nile
approximately 300 kilometers (200 mi) north of Khartoum.
Blue Nile
Annotated view of the Nile and Red Sea, with a dust storm.
[24]
The
Blue Nile (
Ge'ez ጥቁር ዓባይ
Ṭiqūr ʿĀbbāy (Black
Abay) to
Ethiopians;
Arabic:
النيل الأزرق;
transliterated:
an-Nīl al-Azraq) springs from
Lake Tana
in the Ethiopian Highlands. The Blue Nile flows about 1,400 kilometres
to Khartoum, where the Blue Nile and White Nile join to form the Nile.
Ninety percent of the water and ninety-six percent of the transported
sediment carried by the Nile
[25] originates in Ethiopia, with fifty-nine percent of the water from the Blue Nile (the rest being from the
Tekezé, Atbarah,
Sobat,
and small tributaries). The erosion and transportation of silt only
occurs during the Ethiopian rainy season in the summer, however, when
rainfall is especially high on the
Ethiopian Plateau;
the rest of the year, the great rivers draining Ethiopia into the Nile
(Sobat, Blue Nile, Tekezé, and Atbarah) have a weaker flow.
The flow of the Blue Nile varies considerably over its yearly cycle
and is the main contribution to the large natural variation of the Nile
flow. During the dry season the natural discharge of the Blue Nile can
be as low as 113 m
3/s (4,000 cu ft/s), although upstream dams
regulate the flow of the river. During the wet season the peak flow of
the Blue Nile often exceeds 5,663 m
3/s (200,000 cu ft/s) in late August (a difference of a factor of 50).
Before the placement of dams on the river the yearly discharge varied by a factor of 15 at Aswan. Peak flows of over 8,212 m
3/s (290,000 cu ft/s) occurred during late August and early September, and minimum flows of about 552 m
3/s (19,500 cu ft/s) occurred during late April and early May.
Bahr el Ghazal and Sobat River
The
Bahr al Ghazal and the
Sobat River are the two most important tributaries of the White Nile in terms of discharge.
The Bahr al Ghazal's
drainage basin
is the largest of any of the Nile's sub-basins, measuring 520,000
square kilometers (200,000 sq mi) in size, but it contributes a
relatively small amount of water, about 2 m
3/s (71 cu ft/s) annually, due to tremendous volumes of water being lost in the Sudd wetlands.
The Sobat River, which joins the Nile a short distance below Lake No, drains about half as much land, 225,000 km
2 (86,900 sq mi), but contributes 412 cubic meters per second (14,500 cu ft/s) annually to the Nile.
[26] When in flood the Sobat carries a large amount of sediment, adding greatly to the White Nile's color.
[27]
Yellow Nile
The Yellow Nile is a former tributary that connected the
Ouaddaï Highlands of eastern
Chad to the Nile River Valley c. 8000 to c. 1000 BC.
[28] Its remains are known as the
Wadi Howar. The wadi passes through
Gharb Darfur near the northern border with Chad and meets up with the Nile near the southern point of the Great Bend.
History
Reconstruction of the
Oikoumene (inhabited world), an ancient map based on
Herodotus' description of the world, circa 450 BC.
The Nile (
iteru in
Ancient Egyptian) has been the lifeline of civilization in Egypt since the
Stone Age,
with most of the population and all of the cities of Egypt resting
along those parts of the Nile valley lying north of Aswan. Climate
change at the end of the
most recent ice age led to the formation of the
Sahara desert, possibly as long ago as 3400 BC.
The Eonile
The present Nile is at least the fifth river that has flowed north from the Ethiopian Highlands.
Satellite imagery
was used to identify dry watercourses in the desert to the west of the
Nile. An Eonile canyon, now filled by surface drift, represents an
ancestral Nile called the
Eonile that flowed during the later
Miocene (23–5.3 million years before present). The Eonile transported
clastic sediments to the Mediterranean; several natural gas fields have been discovered within these sediments.
During the late-Miocene
Messinian salinity crisis,
when the Mediterranean Sea was a closed basin and evaporated to the
point of being empty or nearly so, the Nile cut its course down to the
new base level until it was several hundred metres below world ocean
level at Aswan and 2,400 m (7,900 ft) below Cairo.
[29]
This created a very long and deep canyon which was filled with sediment
when the Mediterranean was recreated. At some point the sediments
raised the riverbed sufficiently for the river to overflow westward into
a depression to create
Lake Moeris.
Lake Tanganyika drained northwards into the Nile until the
Virunga Volcanoes blocked its course in Rwanda. The Nile was much longer at that time, with its furthest headwaters in northern
Zambia.
The integrated Nile
There are two theories about the age of the integrated Nile. One is
that the integrated drainage of the Nile is of young age, and that the
Nile basin was formerly broken into series of separate basins, only the
most northerly of which fed a river following the present course of the
Nile in Egypt and Sudan. Said postulated that Egypt itself supplied most
of the waters of the Nile during the early part of its history.
[30]
The other theory is that the drainage from Ethiopia via rivers equivalent to the Blue Nile and the Atbara and
Takazze flowed to the Mediterranean via the Egyptian Nile since well back into
Tertiary times.
[31]
Salama suggested that during the
Paleogene and
Neogene
Periods (66 million to 2.588 million years ago) a series of separate
closed continental basins each occupied one of the major parts of the
Sudanese Rift System:
Mellut rift,
White Nile rift,
Blue Nile rift,
Atbara rift and
Sag El Naam rift.
[32]
The Mellut Rift Basin is nearly 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) deep at its
central part. This rift is possibly still active, with reported
tectonic activity in its northern and southern boundaries. The
Sudd swamps which form the central part of the basin may still be subsiding. The White Nile Rift System, although shallower than the
Bahr el Arab rift,
is about 9 kilometers (5.6 mi) deep. Geophysical exploration of the
Blue Nile Rift System estimated the depth of the sediments to be 5–9
kilometers (3.1–5.6 mi). These basins were not interconnected until
their subsidence ceased, and the rate of sediment deposition was enough
to fill and connect them. The Egyptian Nile connected to the Sudanese
Nile, which captures the Ethiopian and Equatorial
headwaters during the current stages of tectonic activity in the Eastern, Central and Sudanese Rift Systems.
[33]
The connection of the different Niles occurred during cyclic wet
periods. The River Atbara overflowed its closed basin during the wet
periods that occurred about 100,000 to 120,000 years ago. The Blue Nile
connected to the main Nile during the 70,000–80,000 years B.P. wet
period. The White Nile system in Bahr El Arab and White Nile Rifts
remained a closed lake until the connection of the Victoria Nile to the
main system some 12,500 years ago.
Role in the founding of Egyptian civilization
A
felucca traversing the Nile near Aswan.
The Greek historian
Herodotus
wrote that "Egypt was the gift of the Nile". An unending source of
sustenance, it provided a crucial role in the development of Egyptian
civilization. Silt deposits from the Nile made the surrounding land
fertile because the river overflowed its banks annually. The
Ancient Egyptians cultivated and traded
wheat,
flax,
papyrus
and other crops around the Nile. Wheat was a crucial crop in the
famine-plagued Middle East. This trading system secured Egypt's
diplomatic relationships with other countries, and contributed to
economic stability. Far-reaching trade has been carried on along the
Nile since ancient times. The
Ishango bone
is probably an early tally stick. It has been suggested that this shows
prime numbers and multiplication, but this is disputed. In the book
How Mathematics Happened: The First 50,000 Years,
Peter Rudman argues that the development of the concept of prime
numbers could only have come about after the concept of division, which
he dates to after 10,000 BC, with prime numbers probably not being
understood until about 500 BC. He also writes that "no attempt has been
made to explain why a tally of something should exhibit multiples of
two, prime numbers between 10 and 20, and some numbers that are almost
multiples of 10."
[34] It was discovered along the headwaters of the Nile (near
Lake Edward, in northeastern
Congo) and was carbon-dated to
20,000 BC.
Water buffalo were introduced from Asia, and Assyrians introduced
camels
in the 7th century BC. These animals were killed for meat, and were
domesticated and used for ploughing—or in the camels' case, carriage.
Water was vital to both people and livestock. The Nile was also a
convenient and efficient means of transportation for people and goods.
The Nile was an important part of ancient Egyptian spiritual life.
Hapy was the god of the annual floods, and both he and the
pharaoh
were thought to control the flooding. The Nile was considered to be a
causeway from life to death and the afterlife. The east was thought of
as a place of birth and growth, and the west was considered the place of
death, as the god
Ra,
the Sun, underwent birth, death, and resurrection each day as he
crossed the sky. Thus, all tombs were west of the Nile, because the
Egyptians believed that in order to enter the afterlife, they had to be
buried on the side that symbolized death.
As the Nile was such an important factor in Egyptian life, the
ancient calendar was even based on the 3 cycles of the Nile. These
seasons, each consisting of four months of thirty days each, were called
Akhet,
Peret, and
Shemu.
Akhet, which means inundation, was the time of the year when the Nile
flooded, leaving several layers of fertile soil behind, aiding in
agricultural growth.
[35]
Peret was the growing season, and Shemu, the last season, was the harvest season when there were no rains.
[35]
The search for the source of the Nile
Owing to their failure to penetrate the
sudd wetlands of
South Sudan, the upper reaches of the Nile remained largely unknown to the
ancient Greeks and
Romans. Various expeditions failed to determine the river's
source.
Agatharcides records that in the time of
Ptolemy II Philadelphus,
a military expedition had penetrated far enough along the course of the
Blue Nile to determine that the summer floods were caused by heavy
seasonal rainstorms in the
Ethiopian Highlands, but no European of antiquity is known to have reached
Lake Tana.
The
Tabula Rogeriana depicted the source as three lakes in 1154.
Europeans began to learn about the origins of the Nile in the 15th
and 16th centuries, when travelers to Ethiopia visited Lake Tana and the
source of the Blue Nile in the mountains south of the lake. Although
James Bruce claimed to be the first European to have visited the headwaters,
[36] modern writers give the credit to the
Jesuit Pedro Páez. Páez's account of the source of the Nile
[37]
is a long and vivid account of Ethiopia. It was published in full only
in the early 20th century, although it was featured in works of Páez's
contemporaries, including Baltazar Téllez,
[38] Athanasius Kircher[39] and by
Johann Michael Vansleb.
[40]
Europeans had been resident in Ethiopia since the late 15th century,
and one of them may have visited the headwaters even earlier without
leaving a written trace. The Portuguese João Bermudes published the
first description of the
Tis Issat Falls in his 1565 memoirs, compared them to the Nile Falls alluded to in
Cicero's
De Republica.
[41] Jerónimo Lobo describes the source of the Blue Nile, visiting shortly after Pedro Páez. Telles also used his account.
The White Nile was even less understood. The ancients mistakenly believed that the
Niger River represented the upper reaches of the White Nile. For example,
Pliny the Elder wrote that the Nile had its origins "in a mountain of lower
Mauretania", flowed above ground for "many days" distance, then went underground, reappeared as a large lake in the territories of the
Masaesyli,
then sank again below the desert to flow underground "for a distance of
20 days' journey till it reaches the nearest Ethiopians."
[42] A merchant named Diogenes reported that the Nile's water attracted game such as water buffalo.
A map of the Nile c.
1911, a time when its entire primary course ran through British occupations, condominiums, colonies, and protectorates.
[10]
Lake Victoria was first sighted by Europeans in 1858 when the British
explorer John Hanning Speke reached its southern shore while traveling with
Richard Francis Burton
to explore central Africa and locate the great lakes. Believing he had
found the source of the Nile on seeing this "vast expanse of open water"
for the first time, Speke named the lake after the then
Queen of the United Kingdom.
Burton, recovering from illness and resting further south on the shores
of Lake Tanganyika, was outraged that Speke claimed to have proved his
discovery to be the true source of the Nile when Burton regarded this as
still unsettled. A very public quarrel ensued, which sparked a great
deal of intense debate within the scientific community and interest by
other explorers keen to either confirm or refute Speke's discovery.
British explorer and missionary
David Livingstone pushed too far west and entered the
Congo River system instead. It was ultimately Welsh-American explorer
Henry Morton Stanley who confirmed Speke's discovery, circumnavigating Lake Victoria and reporting the great outflow at
Ripon Falls on the Lake's northern shore.
European involvement in Egypt goes back to the time of
Napoleon.
Laird Shipyard of
Liverpool sent an iron steamer to the Nile in the 1830s. With the completion of the
Suez Canal and the British takeover of Egypt in the 1870s, more British river steamers followed.
The Nile is the area's natural navigation channel, giving access to Khartoum and Sudan by steamer. The
Siege of Khartoum was broken with purpose-built
sternwheelers
shipped from England and steamed up the river to retake the city. After
this came regular steam navigation of the river. With British Forces in
Egypt in the First World War and the inter-war years, river steamers
provided both security and sightseeing to the
Pyramids and
Thebes.
Steam navigation remained integral to the two countries as late as
1962. Sudan steamer traffic was a lifeline as few railways or roads were
built in that country. Most paddle steamers have been retired to
shorefront service, but modern diesel tourist boats remain on the river.
Village on the Nile, 1891
The modern era
Dhows on the Nile
The Nile passes through Cairo, Egypt's capital city
The Nile has long been used to transport goods along its length.
Winter winds blow south, up river, so ships could sail up river, and
down river using the flow of the river. While most Egyptians still live
in the Nile valley, the 1970 completion of the
Aswan High Dam
ended the summer floods and their renewal of the fertile soil,
fundamentally changing farming practices. The Nile supports much of the
population living along its banks, enabling Egyptians to live in
otherwise inhospitable regions of the Sahara. The rivers's flow is
disturbed at several points by the
Cataracts of the Nile,
which are sections of faster-flowing water with many small islands,
shallow water, and rocks, which form an obstacle to navigation by boats.
The
Sudd
wetlands in Sudan also forms a formidable navigation obstacle and impede
water flow, to the extent that Sudan had once attempted to canalize
(the
Jonglei Canal) to bypass the swamps.
[43][44]
Nile cities include Khartoum, Aswan,
Luxor (
Thebes), and the
Giza –
Cairo
conurbation. The first cataract, the closest to the mouth of the river,
is at Aswan, north of the Aswan Dam. This part of the river is a
regular tourist route, with cruise ships and traditional wooden sailing
boats known as
feluccas. Many cruise ships ply the route between Luxor and Aswan, stopping at
Edfu and
Kom Ombo along the way. Security concerns have limited cruising on the northernmost portion for many years.
A computer simulation study to plan the economic development of the
Nile was directed by H.A.W. Morrice and W.N. Allan, for the Ministry of
Hydro-power of the Republic of the Sudan, during 1955–1957
[45][46][47]
Morrice was their Hydrological Adviser, and Allan his predecessor. M.P.
Barnett directed the software development and computer operations. The
calculations were enabled by accurate monthly inflow data collected for
50 years. The underlying principle was the use of over-year storage, to
conserve water from rainy years for use in dry years. Irrigation,
navigation and other needs were considered. Each computer run postulated
a set of reservoirs and operating equations for the release of water as
a function of the month and the levels upstream. The behavior that
would have resulted given the inflow data was modeled. Over 600 models
were run. Recommendations were made to the Sudanese authorities. The
calculations were run on an IBM 650 computer. Simulation studies to
design water resources are discussed further in the article on
Hydrology transport models, that have been used since the 1980s to analyze water quality.
Despite the development of many reservoirs, drought during the 1980s
led to widespread starvation in Ethiopia and Sudan, but Egypt was
nourished by water impounded in
Lake Nasser.
Drought has proven to be a major cause of fatality in the Nile River
basin. According to a report by the Strategic Foresight Group around 170
million people have been affected by droughts in the last century with
half a million lives lost.
[48]
From the 70 incidents of drought which took place between 1900 and
2012, 55 incidents took place in Ethiopia, Sudan, South Sudan, Kenya and
Tanzania.
[48]
Water sharing dispute
The Nile's water has affected the politics of East Africa and the
Horn of Africa
for many decades. Countries including Uganda, Sudan, Ethiopia and Kenya
have complained about Egyptian domination of its water resources. The
Nile Basin Initiative promotes a peaceful cooperation among those states.
[49][50]
Several attempts have been made to establish agreements between the
countries sharing the Nile waters. It is very difficult to have all
these countries agree with each other given the self-interest of each
country and their political, strategic, and social differences. On 14
May 2010 at
Entebbe,
Uganda,
Ethiopia,
Rwanda,
Tanzania and
Uganda
signed a new agreement on sharing the Nile water even though this
agreement raised strong opposition from Egypt and Sudan. Ideally, such
international agreements should promote equitable and efficient usage of
the Nile basin's water resources. Without a better understanding about
the availability of the future water resources of the Nile River, we
could expect more conflicts between these countries relying on the Nile
for their water supply, economic and social developments.
[4]
Modern achievements and exploration
The White Nile Expedition, led by
South African national
Hendrik Coetzee,
became the first to navigate the Nile's entire length. The expedition
began at the source of the Nile in Uganda on January 17, 2004 and
arrived safely at the Mediterranean in
Rosetta, four and a half months later.
[51]
On April 28, 2004, geologist Pasquale Scaturro and his partner,
kayaker and documentary filmmaker Gordon Brown became the first people
to navigate the Blue Nile, from Lake Tana in Ethiopia to the beaches of
Alexandria
on the Mediterranean. Though their expedition included others, Brown
and Scaturro were the only ones to complete the entire journey.
[52] The team used
outboard motors
for most of their journey. On January 29, 2005 Canadian Les Jickling
and New Zealander Mark Tanner completed the first human powered transit.
A team led by South Africans Peter Meredith and Hendrik Coetzee on
April 30, 2005, became the first to navigate the major remote source of
the Nile, the
Akagera river, which starts as the
Ruvyironza in
Bururi Province, Burundi.
Crossings
Crossings from Khartoum to the Mediterranean Sea
[clarification needed] The following bridges cross the Blue Nile and connect Khartoum to Khartoum North:
The following bridges cross the White Nile and connect Khartoum to Omdurman:
the following bridges cross from Omdurman: to Khartoum North:
The following bridges cross to Tuti from Khartoum states three cities
Other bridges
- Shandi Bridge, Shendi
- Atbarah Bridge, Atbarah
- Merowe Dam, Merowe
- Merowe Bridge, Merowe
- Aswan Bridge, Aswan
- Luxor Bridge, Luxor
- Suhag Bridge, Suhag
- Assiut Bridge, Assiut
- Al Minya Bridge, Minya
- Al Marazeek Bridge, Helwan
- First Ring Road Bridge (Moneeb Crossing), Cairo
- Abbas Bridge, Cairo
- University Bridge, Cairo
- Qasr al-Nil Bridge, Cairo
- 6th October Bridge, Cairo
- Abu El Ela Bridge, Cairo (removed in 1998)
- New Abu El Ela Bridge, Cairo
- Imbaba Bridge, Cairo
- Rod Elfarag Bridge, Cairo
- Second Ring Road Bridge, Cairo
- Banha Bridge, Banha
- Samanoud Bridge, Samanoud
- Mansoura 2 Bridges, Mansoura
- Talkha Bridge, Talkha
- Shirbine high Bridge
- Shirbine Bridge
- Kafr Sad - Farscor Bridge
- International Coastal Road Bridge
- Damietta high Bridge, Damietta
- Damietta Bridge, Damietta
- Kafr El Zayat Bridges, Kafr El Zayat
- Zefta Bridge, Zefta
Crossings from Rwanda to Khartoum
Images and media of the Nile
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Riverboat on the Nile, Egypt 1900
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View of the Nile from a cruiseboat, between Luxor and Aswan in Egypt
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A river boat crossing the Nile in Uganda
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City lights define the river valley as it snakes across the desert
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Valley of the Nile near
Luxor, Egypt
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The river Nile flows through Cairo, here contrasting ancient customs of daily life with the modern city of today.
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River and mountain scenery on the Nile
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People living on the banks of the Nile