Human Geography of Africa

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Transcript Human Geography of Africa

Chapter 19
“Cradle of Humanity”
 Olduvai Gorge – northern Tanzania
 Most continuous known record of
humanity
 Gorge has yielded fossils from 65
individual hominids, or humans
 Louis and Mary Leakey
 Discovery of “Lucy”
Ethiopia: A Successful Resistance
Successfully resisted Europeans
Menelik II – played Italians, French,
and British against each other
1896 – Battle of Adowa – Ethiopian
forces successfully defeated the
Italians and kept their nation
independent
 1970s – most of East Africa had regained its independence
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from Europe
Internal disputes and civil wars
Ex: colonialism inflamed the peoples of Rwanda and
helped to cause a bloody conflict in the 1990s.
Causes: European colonial powers had not prepared East
African nations for independence
Ethnic boundaries created by the Europeans forced cultural
divisions that had not existed before colonialism.
Cultural divisions = internal conflicts among native groups.
 Agriculture – economic foundation of East Africa
 Raw Materials – economic base of most African nations
 World-famous wildlife parks generate millions of dollars of
revenue
 70% rural
 Relied on cash crops – coffee, tea, and sugar, which are
grown for direct sale
 Wildlife parks – Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania
 AIDS – has become a pandemic
 Pandemic – an uncontrollable outbreak of a disease
affecting a large population over a wide geographic
area
 AIDS – caused by the human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV)
 Decline in population by 10 to 20%
 Goree Island – busy point for exporting slaves during
the slave trade
 Mid 1500s to the mid 1800s – 20 millions Africans were
transported through Goree Island
 Stateless Society – people rely on family lineages to
govern themselves, rather than an elected government
or monarch
 Members of a stateless society work through their
differences to cooperate and share power
 Example: Igbo of SE Nigeria
 Trade is important
 Economic well-being is based on the sale of its products to
industrialized countries in Europe, North America and
Asia
 Ghana’s Stabile Economy
 Export of gold, diamonds, magnesium, and bauxite
 Problems in Sierra Leone
 Worst economic conditions
 Once produced some of the world’s highest-quality diamonds
 Years of political instability and civil wars have left the
economy in shambles
 Uneducated population
 Poor infrastructure (800 miles of roads)
 Bantu Migrations
 2000 B.C. Bantu people moved southward throughout
Africa. On the way they spread their languages and
cultures.
 Key event in Africa’s history
 Great diversity of cultures
 120 million Africans speak one of the hundreds of Bantu
languages
 15th century, Portuguese established the island of Sao
Tome off the coast of what is now Gabon as the initial
base for trade in African captives
 Slave trade ended in 1870s
 1800s – Central Africa consisted of
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hundreds of different ethnic groups
King Leopold II of Belgium –
controlled area by 1884
Wanted to open the African interior
to European trade along the Congo
River
This paved the way for the Berlin
Conference
Berlin Conference – 14 European
nations divided Africa between 18841885
 No African ruler invited to attend
 Only Liberia and Ethiopia remained
free
 Belgians and French colonized Central Africa
 Most gained independence in the 1960s, but borders
imposed during colonialism posed problems
 Ethnic regions and traditional enemies were not
considered
 Countries suffer from a lack of
infrastructure
 Rely on export of raw materials
 Congo:
 Huge amounts of natural
resources (gold, copper,
diamonds)
 Mobutu Sese Seko – leader of
Democratic Republic of the
Congo from 1967 to 1997
 Brought country’s business under
national control
 Began taking kickbacks in order
to profit from reorganization
Zulus Fight the British
Shaka – Zulu chief – creates centralized
state around 1816
British defeat Zulus and gain control of
Zulu nation in 1887
Boers and British Settle in the Cape
Boers, or Dutch farmers, Afrikaners,
take Africans’ land, establish large
farms
Boers clash with British over land, slaves
Great Trek (1835-37) moved north to
escape British
The Boer War
Boer War between British, Boers begins in 1899
British win; Boer republics united in Union of South
Africa (1910)
 1948 – policy of apartheid – complete separation of the races
 Banned social contact between blacks and whites and
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established segregated schools, hospitals, and neighborhoods
Blacks 75%
Whites 15%
Whites received the best land
1912 – African National Congress (ANC) Nelson Mandela
emerged as one of the leader of the ANC
 http://www.biography.com/people/nelson-mandela-
9397017?page=2
Chapter 20
 Building Industries
 Economy of many African nations is based on the export
of raw materials
 “One-commodity” countries
 Commodity – an agricultural or mining product that can be
sold
 Example: Diamonds
 “One-Commodity” nations are unstable
 Serious Diseases
 Cholera – inadequate sanitation and lack of a clean
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water supply
Malaria – infectious disease carried by mosquitos
AIDS – often accompanied by tuberculosis (respiratory
infection spread between humans
70% of the world’s adult AIDS cases
80% of the world’s children AIDS cases
 Uganda and Senegal have had success in reducing the
spread of HIV