-
Random Facts
- Where Does Liquor Come From?
- Why Is the Matterhorn In Switzerland Famous?
- Where Is the World’s Largest Swamp?
- Where Is the World’s Largest College?
- What Fish Has Both Eyes on the Same Side of Its Head?
- Why Do Some Prey Live Close to Their Predators?
- Who Survived for 133 Days Aboard a Raft?
- How Does an Oyster Make a Pearl?
- How can a Hawaiian volcanic eruption be described?
- How did mammals evolve after the extinction of dinosaurs?
-
Recent Comments
- vicktorya wright on Why Do Elephants Have Trunks?
- genessia on Who Invented the First Computer?
- Pop on Which Country Makes The Most Movies?
- Deedee on Why Did the Indians Sell Manhattan Island for Only $24?
- maggie on What Is Color Blindness?
- lilly on Can Any Plants Move from Place to Place?
- khari walker on Why Does Your Body Need Water?
- Az on How Is Paper Made?
- johnny on Who Invented Chewing Gum?
- yazeed on Can We Build Cities on the Moon?
Tags
-
Pages

What Are the Great Lakes of Africa?
North America has its Great Lakes, the five big lakes on the American-Canadian border.
There’s also a group of big lakes in Central Africa that might be called the “Great Lakes” of that continent. The largest of these lakes is Lake Victoria, the second largest freshwater lake on earth.
Another is Lake Tanganyika, the seventh largest lake on earth. Lake Tanganyika is also the longest freshwater lake on earth, 420 miles, and the second deepest lake on earth. Parts of this long, narrow lake are 4,700 feet deep! The nation of Tanzania, which borders’ on Lake Tanganyika, was formerly called Tanganyika after the lake.
Not far away is another long, narrow lake, Lake Nyasa, the tenth largest lake in the world. Other large lakes in this “Great Lakes” region include Lakes Albert, Kivu, Mweru, Edward, and Turkana.
Some of the lakes in this part of Africa lie in a valley called the Great Rift Valley. This long rift, or crack, in the earth is filled in parts by Lake Nyasa, Lake Tanganyika, and some other African lakes. Other parts are filled by the Red Sea, the Jordan River, and the Dead Sea, thou¬sands of miles to the north!
One lake near Africa’s “Great Lakes” region that is definitely not part of’ the Rift Valley is Lake Kariba, on the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe.
This lake was formed behind a huge dam built on the Zambezi River in 1959. Lake Kariba, with an area of 2,000 square miles, is the fourth largest man-made lake on earth.