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im doing a project and i need help......its on biomes.....i need to know where "the congo basin rainforest" is located.....info about the animals,food chains,temperature/rainfall ammounts,endangered species in that area,why they are endangered,and total population of them......can anyone help me with some good sources of information?? please and i would really appriciate it!!! thanx

2007-02-24 14:12:04 · 8 answers · asked by [Caves] 3 in Science & Mathematics Geography

8 answers

for all eference information search on:

wikipedia wherein you get details at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congo_River

http://www.answers.com
..these are HUGE information repositories...so check it out...

2007-02-24 14:16:36 · answer #1 · answered by s_d_sondhi 2 · 0 0

In Africa

Known as the heart of darkness by Joseph Conrad, the Congo region has long conjured up thoughts of pygmies, mythical beasts, dreadful plagues, and cannibals. It is a land made famous by the adventures of Stanley and Livingstone and known as a place of brutality and violence for its past -- the days of the Arab slave and ivory trade, its long history of tribal warfare -- and its present -- the ethnic violence and massacres of today.

The Congo is the Earth's second largest river by volume and has the world's second largest rainforest (18% of the planet's remaining tropical rainforest). The Congo Basin represents 70% of the African continent's plant cover and makes up a large portion of Africa's biodiversity with over 600 tree species and 10 000 animal species. Six nations -- Cameroon, the Central African Republic, the Republic of Congo, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon -- share the 1.5 million square mile Congo basin.

The Congo is one of the world's most threatened ecosystems. Commercial logging, clearing for subsistence agriculture, and widespread civil strife has devastated forests, displaced forest dwellers, and resulted in the expansion of the "bushmeat" trade. Since the 1980s, Africa has had the highest deforestation rates of any region on the globe.

2007-02-24 14:42:42 · answer #2 · answered by Carlene W 5 · 0 0

The Congo River -- formerly the Zaire River -- is Africa's most powerful river and the second most voluminous river in the world with a discharge of 1,500,000 cubic feet of water per second. It is the fifth longest river in the world, draining a basin of nearly 1.5 million square miles.

The river is best known for its role in history. Called the heart of darkness by Joseph Conrad, the river and surrounding rainforest have long been known as the mysterious land of pygmies, mythical beasts, dreadful plagues, and cannibals. It is a land made famous by the rigorous adventures of Stanley and Livingstone, and known as a place of brutality and violence for its past: the days of the Arab slave and ivory trade, its long history of tribal warfare; and its present: the ethnic violence and massacres of today.

The river itself is as turbulent as its history, though it begins peacefully enough in the savannas just south of Lake Tanganyika. Gradually the river widens and picks up speed until it enters the "Gates of Hell," a 75-miles long canyon of impassable rapids. The river emerges again, surrounded by lush tropical rainforest as the Lualaba or Upper Congo. During the course its journey through the foreboding rainforest, the river crosses the equator twice. Because the watershed of the Congo drains from both the Northern and Southern Hemisphere it does not have the great seasonal fluctuations in water level as other great rivers. Its flow is relatively stable because part of its watershed is always in the zone of rain. The Upper Congo abruptly ends with Stanley Falls, a 60 mile stretch of rapids.

Stanley Falls gives way to the Middle Congo, a 1000 mile stretch of navigable river, nine miles wide in some parts. Along this quiet stretch of river is the city of Kinsangani, a city known for violence since Belgian colonial days. Near the end of the Middle Congo, the river slows to a virtual stand-still for 20 miles, a section known as Stanley or Malebo Pool. Here the river is 15 miles wide and flanked by the capital cities of Kinshasa and Brazzaville. The peace of the pool is suddenly shattered by Livingstone Falls, a series of rapids and cataracts 220 miles long. There are some 32 cataracts, having as much power as all the river and falls in the United States combined. The final 100 miles to the Atlantic ocean from the end of the falls is fully navigable.

2007-02-24 14:38:09 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Congo Rainforest is in The Congo.

2007-02-24 14:19:20 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The largest rainforests are located in the amazon river basin (South America) Check web site: www.zoomschool.com/subjects/rainforests

2007-02-24 14:26:58 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it rather is in substantial no longer South Africa. they are one interior a similar. President Mobutu went with the aid of an Africanisation section and renamed each little thing, which incorporate him self. So it went from the Congo to the Zaire and returned returned.

2016-11-25 21:41:54 · answer #6 · answered by loveall 4 · 0 0

Well, you could probably use Google to find "congo", and that would get you close.
Or maybe a good atlas?
Hint: the Congo is in central Africa (that big continent south of Europe).

2007-02-24 14:15:05 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

have you ever heard of an Okapi? They only live in Congo... very intersting looking animals... you should google 'okapi' and see.

2007-02-27 05:56:17 · answer #8 · answered by whiteafrican01 3 · 0 0

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