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   » » Wiki: Luangwa River
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The Luangwa River is one of the major of the River, and one of the four biggest rivers of . The river generally floods in the rainy season (December to March) and then falls considerably in the dry season. It is one of the biggest unaltered rivers in and the that make up the surrounding valley are home to abundant wildlife.


Source and upper-middle course
Note: distances stated are approximate straight-line distances from source. The Luangwa rises in the Lilonda and in north-east Zambia at an elevation of around , near the border with and , and flows in a southwesterly direction through a broad valley. About from its source it has dropped to an elevation of about and becomes a meandering river with a several kilometres wide. Over the next the meanders increase, with many and abandoned meanders. Near , the river's elevation has dropped to about , the floodplain is about wide and the valley reaches about wide, with a north-west escarpment (Muchinga Escarpment) about high, and a south-western about high. In the dry season some sections, especially in the upper reaches, dry out completely, leaving isolated pools.

The upper and middle parts of the valley contain the North Luangwa National Park and South Luangwa National Parks of . The river itself is home to large populations of and . The world's largest concentration of hippos lives in the Luangwa Valley. In the dry season they are restricted by the shrinking river and pools, and are easily seen especially in isolated pools. In addition to being a source of water, the oxbow lakes and pools increase the biodiversity of the valley in other ways. The hippopotami which live in them feed on land vegetation at night. Their dung feeds some fish and fertilises the pools, increasing fish life which in turn feed crocodiles and birds.

In the dry season, the grazing land animals and their predators congregate near the river and pools, and are easily seen. In the rainy season they graze further afield and are more easily hidden in the growth of new vegetation.

At about the valley narrows to about and becomes divided by a ridge into two parallel valleys, with a tributary, the in a wide valley to the northwest, and the Luangwa in a wide valley to the southeast. The river meanders less, and the floodplain narrows.

The principal settlement in the Middle and Upper Luangwa Valley is Mfuwe which serves the tourism industry and has an . Very few humans otherwise inhabit the valley.


Lower course
At the river abruptly enters a narrow valley between hills rising some from the broader valley floor, becoming almost a gorge. About from its source the Luangwa merges with its , the Lukusashi, after the latter has merged with the coming from the opposite direction, and turns due south through a steep narrow valley: this is its exit from the Luangwa . After only it emerges from the hills into the broad valley of the Zambezi and meanders over sandy flats about wide in a floodplain in width. It merges with the deeper Zambezi at Luangwa town. The lower section of the river forms the border between Zambia and .


Rift valley
The Luangwa Valley is a or forming a south-west extension of the east African Rift, branching off its - southern section, and reaching almost as far as . The junction is not obvious because it filled with material spewed out from an ancient, extinct volcano. There are at least 20 hot springs, characteristic of a rift valley, in the valley or on its .

The Luangwa flows along four-fifths of the Luangwa Rift Valley to the point where it meets the Lukusashi and the Lunsemfwa which has come from the opposite direction. At one time, millions of years ago, there was no way out and the Luangwa Rift filled with a Rift Valley Lake called the , which rivalled Lake Malawi in size. The water of the lake overflowed in a river to the south-west, towards what is now the , where it combined with the , , and rivers, emptying into the and flowing to the .

Several geological events combined to produce the current river systems. Faulting produced another graben just to the south of the Luangwa Rift, and running east–west: the Zambezi Rift Valley and the . A tributary of the at the south end of the Great Rift Valley then cut back eastwards through the Chicao Trough and Zambezi Valley, capturing the southerly overspill of the Madumabisa Lake. This tributary became the Zambezi, which over millions of years captured the Kafue, and the upper . Faulting lowered the land between the Luangwa Rift and the Zambezi Rift allowing Madumabisa Lake to drain out into the Zambezi in a channel which became the lower Luangwa River.


Natural barrier
The Luangwa Rift Valley and rivers within it form a natural barrier, with a very low population density. This, the steepness of the terrain, and the existence of the wildlife reserves have resulted in no highways crossing the valley between the Lusaka-Kabwe roads in the west and the road in the north, a distance of about . The lower Luangwa Valley is crossed by just one road, the Great East Road at the , about south of the Luangwa-Lunsemfwa confluence.


Further reading
  • Camerapix: Spectrum Guide to Zambia, Camerapix International Publishing, Nairobi, 1996.
  • Terracarta: Zambia, 2nd edition, International Travel Maps, Vancouver, Canada, 2000.
  • Jean-Jacques Tiercelin et al., "Source Rocks and Reservoirs in Rift Lake Basins over the Past 300 Ma in Central and Eastern Africa", AAPG Annual Meeting, Houston, 2002. Accessed 18 February 2007.
  • A.E. Moore: '"Drainage evolution in south-central Africa since the breakup of Gondwana". South African Journal of Geology, March 2001, v. 104; no. 1; p. 47–68.
  • J.H. Dumisani: "Seismotectonics of Zimbabwe." African Journal of Science and Technology (AJST), Science and Engineering Series Vol. 1, No.4, pp. 22–28
  • "Hot springs in the Luangwa Valley". The Northern Rhodesia Journal, Vol 2 No 3 (1954) pp. 65–66. Accessed 26 February 2007.

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