World geography africa

38
WORLD GEOGRAPHY WORLD GEOGRAPHY Africa

Transcript of World geography africa

Page 1: World geography africa

WORLD GEOGRAPHYWORLD GEOGRAPHYAfrica

Page 2: World geography africa
Page 3: World geography africa

Huge continent 1/5 of the total landmass of the Earth Dominated by extremes – huge deserts

and dense jungles Longest River – the Nile Great Rift Valley – center of original

human activity

Page 4: World geography africa

• Arab Africa • area north of the Sahara• Mostly Muslim today – strong ties to the Middle East• Small strip of land for development along the Med Sea

• Sahara Desert • largest desert in the world• Separates black Africa from Arab Africa• Largely impenetrable, except for area around the Nile River

West Africa• largely grasslands – best farming on the continent• Some jungle areas – especially south of the Equator• Heavily populated region• Long legacy of slavery and the slave trade

Page 5: World geography africa

• Great Rift Valley • 4000 mile long rip in the land where the continents

pulled apart millions of years ago• Includes the Red Sea and most of Africa’s major lakes• Area where first pre-humans appeared (Olduvai Gorge)

– oldest fossils may be 3.5 million years old• East Africa

• Stretches from Ethiopia to South Africa• Strong ties to the east (India and Indonesia) through

trade• Dominated by the Great Rift Valley

• Central and South Africa• Flat grasslands and deserts on a plateau• Heavy diamond mines in the region• Vast mineral resources (gold, silver, copper and uranium)• Legacy of legalized segregation (Apartheid) in South

Africa and brutal colonization by European powers in other parts of the region

Page 6: World geography africa

Nile river longest in the world (over 4000 miles) Runs from the mountains of Ethiopia north

to the Mediterranean Sea Very fertile delta – settlements along the

Nile may be as old as 6000 years River cuts through the boundary between

Black Africa and Arab Africa Congo River

Over 2750 miles long Drains the Congo Basin: an area of dense jungles

and rainforest Not fully navigable due to large waterfalls and

intense current No delta: current actually flows out to sea

Page 7: World geography africa

Most of Africa supports only subsistence farming (farming that only supports the nutritional needs of the farmer and his family with nothing left to sell)

Geographic factors such as climate and soil limit the ability of some regions in Africa to support wide scale agriculture

Page 8: World geography africa
Page 9: World geography africa

Egypt and Nubia settlements along the Nile may be 5000+ years old Carved out an empire by about 2500 BC (multiple

nations – river cuts across the line between Black Africa and Arab Africa)

Legacy of this volatile relationship can be seen in the Sudan today

Bantu Migrations About 4000 BC: black Africans from what is today

Nigeria begin to filter down throughout the continent

Today most of Black Africa is populated by people who are ethnically and linguistically related, yet are members of hundreds of different African tribes

Page 10: World geography africa
Page 11: World geography africa

Attraction as a religion of salvation after 650 AD

Berber traders crossed the Sahara Desert and into West Africa

Estimates of 25% conversion by 1500 AD

Timbuktu in Mali becomes a center of Islamic learning with a great library

Islamic proverb states that "Salt comes from the north, gold from the south, but the word of God and the treasures of wisdom come from Timbuktu.“

Mosque in Timbuktu

–To Black Africa

Page 12: World geography africa

Powerful west African kingdom in the bight of Africa – unknown to Europeans until the arrival of the Portuguese in the 1450s

Specialized in three major trading items Salt: used to preserve meat and milk Gold: Ghana still produces vast amounts of

gold Slaves: simply another commodity in all

ancient societies – slave trade was in effect across the Sahara and into the Islamic world for hundreds of years before the Portuguese arrive

Page 13: World geography africa
Page 14: World geography africa

Portugal took the lead in the slave trade

Most slaves went to work in the New World on Sugar plantations

Europeans tried to enslave the American Indians first, but 90% died within the first 100 years of colonization – mostly from smallpox

Africans had been exposed to the same diseases as Europeans and thus were largely immune to smallpox

Page 15: World geography africa
Page 16: World geography africa

Pre-19c European Trade with Africa

Page 17: World geography africa

IndustrialRevolutionIndustrialRevolution

Source forRawMaterials

Source forRawMaterials

Markets forFinishedGoods

Markets forFinishedGoods

EuropeanNationalismEuropeanNationalism

MissionaryActivityMissionaryActivity

Military& NavalBases

Military& NavalBases

EuropeanMotivesFor Colonization

EuropeanMotivesFor Colonization

Places toDumpUnwanted/Excess Popul.

Places toDumpUnwanted/Excess Popul.

Soc. & Eco.OpportunitiesSoc. & Eco.Opportunities

HumanitarianReasonsHumanitarianReasons

EuropeanRacismEuropeanRacism

“WhiteMan’sBurden”

“WhiteMan’sBurden”

SocialDarwinismSocialDarwinism

Page 18: World geography africa

Africa

in 1880

Page 19: World geography africa

Called by chancellor Bismarck of Germany to settle European issues regarding Africa

Major European powers divided Africa among themselves – most of the modern boundaries were actually drawn by the Europeans without regard to tribal loyalties and hatreds

Africans were seen as savages French and British got the most square miles, but

much of this area was either already under French or British control, or was in the Sahara desert

Only Liberia left alone (it was seen as a US protectorate)

Ethiopia will remain independent – they defeat the Italian army in 1896 – Italians will eventually take Ethiopia in 1935

Page 20: World geography africa
Page 21: World geography africa

Social Darwinism – accepted science in the 1880s

Page 22: World geography africa

The “White Man’s Burden”

Rudyard Kipling

• Poem written by British writer Kipling in 1899 that called on America to bring civilization to the “savages” of the third world

• Very paternalistic

• Kipling saw non-whites as lacking in sophistication

• Call for the expansion of Christianity to save souls as well – call will be heeded by missionaries around the world

Page 23: World geography africa

The “White Man’s Burden”?

Page 24: World geography africa

Harvesting Rubber

Page 25: World geography africa

Punishing “Lazy” Workers

Page 26: World geography africa

Cecil Rhodes (1853-1902)

“The Colossus of Rhodes”

Page 27: World geography africa

African Independence Movements

Page 28: World geography africa

Review Question

• Name two changes the Europeans brought to Africa

Page 29: World geography africa

Impact of Colonialism - Review

• Economic– Cash Crop economies– Money Economies

• Infrastructure– Roads, railroads and

ports were built– Communication

improved– Sewers

• Education– European style schools

taught Africans Western ideals

– European languages taught Africans a common language

– Africans w/ European Ed. Became the leaders of independence movements

Page 30: World geography africa

Pan African Movements

• African people began to reject European culture

• Africans tried to move toward the unity of African people and

• The celebration of African culture

Page 31: World geography africa

World War I and World War II

• European countries used African troops to help them fight the war

• Africans believed if they were good enough to fight—they should also have a say in their own government

• Africans provided resources for the war effort as well, showing that they could be useful to themselves

Page 32: World geography africa

World War II

• Africans saw Br. And Fr. lose battles

• Europeans were no longer seen as invincible

• Some military losses came at the hands of the Japanese—a non-European power

• WWII devastated the economies of imperialist powers

• They were no longer strong enough to maintain their empires

Page 33: World geography africa

Self Determination

• End of WWII saw the beginning of the UN

• The UN called for self-rule by all nations

• This increased the desire of Africans for freedom

Page 34: World geography africa

Methods of Achieving Independence

• Peaceful• Economic sanctions –

boycott and strike• Negotiated transition of

power—from Europeans to Africans

• Violent• War for independence• Guerrilla warfare

Page 35: World geography africa

Problems of Independence

• Tribalism Vs. Nationalism

• Tribes within African countries fight each other for control

• Single Party Rule• A strong leader would

emerge and ban other parties

• Often the military would seize power in a coup d’etat

• This led to tyranny

Page 36: World geography africa

Socialism and Land Redistribution

• White colonizers still held a majority of the businesses and land

• Land redistribution called for taking the land from the land owners

• Africans will distribute the land equally

• Socialism – Gov’t controls some of the economic resources

• Ideally the gov’t distributes those resources equally

• Gov’t takes away power of big business

Page 37: World geography africa

Cold War Pawns

• America and Russia tried to influence the independence movements in Africa

• Russians preferred socialist governments

• America preferred anything BUT socialist gov’ts

Page 38: World geography africa

Africa Today• Over 60 countries – mostly in black Africa• Tremendous growth and potential – especially in

Black Africa• Rapid industrialization – serious growing pains –

terrible poverty• Ethnic, religious and tribal issues have led to

terrible bloodshed over the years• AIDS – ravaging the continent – some countries

have up to 1/3 of the population infected with the HIV virus