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Chad Basin

The Chad Basin is the largest endorheic basin in Africa, centered approximately on Lake Chad. It has no outlet to the sea and contains large areas of semi-arid desert and savanna. The drainage basin is approximately coterminous with the sedimentary basin of the same name, but extends further to the northeast and east.

Chad Basin outline

The basin spans four modern nations, including most of Chad and a large part of Niger, Nigeria and Cameroon.[1] A combination of dams, increased irrigation, climate change, and reduced rainfall are causing water shortages. Lake Chad continues to shrink.

Geology edit

 
Benue trough. The northwest and east extensions lie below the Chad Basin. ("Tibesti-Cameroon Trough" is not shown.)

The geological basin, which is smaller than the drainage basin, is a Phanerozoic sedimentary basin formed during the plate divergence that opened the South Atlantic Ocean. The basin lies between the West African Craton and Congo Craton, and formed about the same time as the Benue Trough. It covers an area of about 2,335,000 square kilometres (902,000 sq mi).[2] It merges into the Iullemmeden Basin to the west at the Damergou gap between the Aïr and Zinder massifs.[3] The floor of the basin is made of Precambrian bedrock covered by more than 3,600 metres (11,800 ft) of sedimentary deposits.[2]

The basin may have resulted from the intersection of an "Aïr-Chad Trough" running NW-SE and a "Tibesti-Cameroon Trough" running NE-SW.[2] That is, the two deepest parts are an extension of the Benue Trough that runs northeast to the margin of the basin, and another extension running from below the present lake to below the Ténéré rift structure to the east of the Aïr massif. The southern part of the basin is underlain by another elongated depression.[3] This runs in an ENE direction and extends from the Yola arm of the Benue trough.[4]

At times, parts of the basin were below the sea. In the northeastern part of the Benue Trough where it enters the Chad Basin there are marine sediments from the Late Cretaceous (100.5–66 Ma[a]). These sediments seem to be considerably thicker towards the northeast. Boreholes under Maiduguri have found marine sediments 400 metres (1,300 ft) deep, lying over continental sediments 600 metres (2,000 ft) deep.[4] The sea seems to have retreated from the western part of the basin in the Turonian (93.5–89.3 Ma). In the Maastrichtian (72.1–66 Ma) the west was non-marine, but the southeast probably was still marine. No marine sediments have been found from the Paleocene (66–56 Ma).[4]

 
The eastern part of the basin, showing the Holocene "Mega Chad" lake (blue area) at its maximum size with the Chari in the south and the Benue in the south west. The modern Lake Chad is in the centre of this map, in green.

For most of the Quaternary, from 2.6 million years ago to the present, the basin seems to have been a huge, well-watered plain, with many rivers and water bodies, probably rich in plant and animal life. Towards the end of this period the climate became drier. Around 20,000-40,000 years ago, eolianite sand dunes began to form in the north of the basin.[4] During the Holocene, from 11,000 years ago until recently, a giant "Lake Mega-Chad" covered an area of more than 350,000 square kilometres (140,000 sq mi) in the basin.[5] It would have drained to the Atlantic Ocean via the Benue River. Stratigraphic records show that "Mega-Chad" varied in size as the climate changed, with a maximum about 2,300 years ago. The remains of fish and molluscs from this period are found in what are now desert regions.[6]

Drainage basin extent edit

The Chad Basin covers almost 8% of the African continent, with an area of about 2,434,000 square kilometres (940,000 sq mi). It is surrounded by mountains. The Aïr Mountains and the Termit Massif in Niger form the western boundary. To the northwest, in Algeria, are the Tassili n'Ajjer mountains, including the 2,158 metres (7,080 ft) Jebel Azao. The Tibesti Mountains to the north of the basin include Emi Koussi, the highest mountain in the Sahara at 3,415 metres (11,204 ft). The Ennedi Plateau lies to the northeast, rising to 1,450 metres (4,760 ft).[7] The Ouaddaï highlands lies the east.[6] They include the Marrah Mountains in Darfur at up to 3,088 metres (10,131 ft) in height. The Adamawa Plateau, Jos Plateau, Biu Plateau, and Mandara Mountains lie to the south.[7]

To the west the basin is separated by a watershed from the Niger River, and to the south it is separated by a basement dome from the Benue River.[8] Further east, watersheds separate it from the Congo Basin and the river Nile.

The lowest part of the basin is not Lake Chad, but the Bodélé Depression, at a distance of 480 kilometres (300 mi) to the northeast of the lake. The Bodélé Depression is just 155 metres (509 ft) above sea level in its deepest portion, while the surface of Lake Chad is 275 metres (902 ft) above sea level.[7]

The basin spans parts of eight countries. These are:[9]

Country Independent Area within basin (km2) % of total area of basin % of country in basin
Algeria 1962 93,451 3.9% 3.9%
Cameroon 1960 50,775 2.1% 10.7%
Central African Republic 1960 219,410 9.2% 35.2%
Chad 1960 1,046,196 43.9% 81.5%
Libya 1947 - <1% <1%
Niger 1960 691,473 29.0% 54.6%
Nigeria 1960 179,282 7.5% 19.4%
Sudan 1956 101,048 4.2% 4.0%
Total 2,381,635 100%

Climate and ecology edit

 
Dunes in the Erg of Bilma.

The northern half of the basin is desert, containing the Ténéré desert, Erg of Bilma and Djurab Desert. South of that is the Sahel zone, dry savanna and thorny shrub savanna. The main rivers include riparian forests, flooding savannas and wetland areas. In the far south there are dry forests.[7] Rainfall varies widely from year to year. The amount of annual rainfall is very slight in the north of the basin, increasing to 1,200 millimetres (47 in) in the south.[10]

As late as 2000, the basin has remained home to large populations of wildlife. In the Sahel these include antelopes such as the addax and dama gazelle, and in the savanna there are korrigum and red-fronted gazelle. The black crowned crane and other waterbirds are found in the wetlands. There are populations of elephants, giraffes, and lions. The western black rhinoceros was once common but is now extinct. Elephants almost became extinct by the end of the nineteenth century due to European and American demand for ivory, but stocks have since recovered.[11]

Water resources edit

Rivers edit

 
Yobe River catchment area showing location of the Hadejia-Nguru wetlands.

The seasonal Korama River in the south of Niger does not reach Lake Chad. Nigeria includes two sub-basins that drain into Lake Chad. The Hadejia - Jama'are - Yobe sub-basin in the north contains the Hadejia and Jama'are rivers, which supply the 6,000 square kilometres (2,300 sq mi) Hadejia-Nguru wetlands. They converge to form the Yobe, which defines the border between Niger and Nigeria for 300 kilometres (190 mi), flowing into Lake Chad. About .5 cubic kilometres (0.12 cu mi) of water reaches Lake Chad annually. Construction of upstream dams and growth in irrigation have reduced water flow, and the floodplains are drying. The Yedseram - Ngadda sub-basin further south is fed by the Yedseram River and Ngadda River, which join to form an 80 square kilometres (31 sq mi) swamp to the southwest of the lake. There is not any significant water flow from the swamp to the lake.[9]

 
Chari River basin.

The Central African Republic (CAR) contains the sources of the rivers Chari and Logone, which flow north into the lake. The volume of water entering Chad annually from the CAR has decreased from about 33 cubic kilometres (7.9 cu mi) before the 1970s to 17 cubic kilometres (4.1 cu mi) during the 1980s. A further 3 cubic kilometres (0.72 cu mi) to 7 cubic kilometres (1.7 cu mi) of water annually flows from Cameroon into Chad via the Logone River. The Chari-Logone system accounts for about 95% of the water entering Lake Chad.[9]

Aquifers edit

The basin in the Nigerian section contains an upper aquifer of Early Pleistocene alluvial deposits that are often covered by recent sand dunes, varying in thickness from 15 to 100 metres (49 to 328 ft). It consists of interbedded sands, clays and silts, with discontinuous clay lenses. The aquifer recharges from run-off and rainfall. The local people access the water with hand-dug wells and shallow boreholes, and use it for domestic use, growing vegetables and watering their livestock. Below this aquifer, separated from it by a sequence of grey to bluish-grey clays from the Zanclean, is a second aquifer at a depth of 240 to 380 metres (790 to 1,250 ft). Due to intensive pumping, since the start of the 1980s the water levels in both aquifers has been lowered, and some wells no longer function.[12] There is a third, much lower, aquifer in Bima Sandstones that lies at a depth of 2,700 to 4,600 metres (8,900 to 15,100 ft).[13]

Oil and gas resources edit

Both the current and historical areas of the basin and the mega-basin contain concentrations of fossils. Fossil-fuels deposits in the area are estimated to exceed a trillion barrels of reserves.

Management edit

The Lake Chad Basin Commission was established in 1964 by Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria, the four countries that contain parts of Lake Chad.[10][14] About 20% of the basin, lying in these countries, is termed the Conventional Basin. The Lake Chad Basin Commission manages use of water and other natural resources in this area.[9] Although the lake fluctuates considerably in size from one year to another, the general trend has been for water levels to decrease. There has been a proposal to supply water from the Congo Basin via a canal 2,400 kilometres (1,500 mi) long, but major political, technical, and economic challenges would have to be overcome to make this practical.[9]

People edit

History edit

 
States in the Sahel / Savanna about 1750.

Humans have lived in the inner Chad Basin from at least eight thousand years ago, and were engaging in agriculture and livestock management around the lake by 1000 BC. Permanent villages were established to the south of the lake by 500 BC at the start of the Iron Age.[15] The Chad Basin contained important trade routes to the east and to the north across the Sahara.[9] By the 5th century AD camels were being used for trans-Saharan trade via the Fezzan, or to the east via Darfur, where slaves and ivory were exchanged for salt, horses, glass beads, and, later, firearms.[16] After the Arabs conquered North Africa during the 7th and 8th centuries, the Chad Basin became increasingly linked to the Muslim countries.[15]

Trade and improved agricultural techniques enabled more sophisticated societies, resulting in the early kingdoms of the Kanem Empire, the Wadai Empire, and the Sultanate of Bagirmi.[16] Kanem developed during the 8th century in the region to the north and east of Lake Chad. The Sayfuwa dynasty that ruled this kingdom had adopted Islam by the 12th century.[15] The Kanem empire went into decline, shrank, and during the 14th century was defeated by Bilala invaders from the Lake Fitri region.[17] The Kanuri people commanded by the Sayfuwa migrated to the west and south of the lake, where they established the Bornu Empire. By the late 16th century the Bornu empire had expanded and recaptured the parts of Kanem that had been conquered by the Bilala.[18] Satellite states of Bornu included the Sultanate of Damagaram in the west and Baguirmi to the southeast of Lake Chad.

 
Abéché, capital of Wadai, in 1918 after the French had acquired control.

The Tunjur people initiated the Wadai Empire to the east of Bornu during the 16th century. During the 17th century, the Maba people revolted and established a Muslim dynasty. At first, Wadai paid tribute to Bornu and Durfur, but by the 18th century Wadai was fully independent and had become an aggressor against its neighbors.[16] To the west of Bornu, by the 15th century the Kingdom of Kano had become the most powerful of the Hausa Kingdoms, with an unstable truce with the Kingdom of Katsina to the north.[19] Both of these states adopted Islam during the 15th and 16th centuries.[20] Both were absorbed into the Sokoto Caliphate during the Fulani War of 1805, which threatened Bornu itself.[21]

During the Berlin Conference in 1884-85 Africa was divided between the European colonial powers, defining boundaries that are largely intact with the present post-colonial states.[22] On 5 August 1890 the British and French concluded an agreement to define the boundary between French West Africa and what would become Nigeria. A boundary was agreed along a line from Say on the river Niger to Barruwa on Lake Chad, but leaving the Sokoto Caliphate in the British sphere.[23] Parfait-Louis Monteil was given charge of an expedition to discover where this line actually ran.[24] On 9 April 1892 he reached Kukawa on the shore of the lake.[25] During the next twenty years a large part of the Chad Basin was incorporated by treaty or by force into French West Africa. On 2 June 1909 the Wadai capital of Abéché was occupied by the French.[26] The remainder of the basin was divided by the British in Nigeria who captured Kano in 1903,[27] and the Germans in Kameroun. The countries of the basin regained their independence between 1956 and 1962, retaining the colonial administrative boundaries.

The area is badly affected by the Boko Haram insurgency, which began in 2009 and is centred on Borno State in northeastern Nigeria.

Population edit

 
People at a coronation in Chad, 2005.

As of 2011, more than 30 million people lived in the Chad Basin. The population is growing rapidly.[9] Ethnic groups include Kanuri, Maba, Buduma, Hausa, Kanembu, Kotoko, Bagger, Haddad, Kuri, Fulani and Manga. The largest cities are Kano and Maiduguri in Nigeria, Maroua in Cameroon, N'Djamena in Chad and Diffa in Niger.[7]

Economy edit

The main economic activities are farming, herding and fishing.[9] At least 40% of the rural population of the basin is impoverished and experiences chronic food shortages.[28] Crop production based on rain is possible only in the southern belt. Flood recession agriculture is practiced around Lake Chad and in the riverine wetlands.[10] Nomadic herders migrate with their animals into the grasslands of the northern part of the basin for a few weeks during each brief rainy season, where they intensively graze the nutritious grasses. When the dry season starts they move back south, either to grazing lands around the lakes and floodplains, or to the savannas further to the south.[29]

During the period 2000-01, fisheries in the Lake Chad basin provided food and income to more than 10 million people, with a harvest of about 70,000 tons.[28] Fisheries have been managed traditionally by a system where each village has recognized rights over a defined part of the river, wetland or lake, and fishers from elsewhere must seek permission and pay a fee to use this area. The governments only enforced rules and regulations to a limited extent.[30] Fishery management practices vary. For example, on the Katagum river in Jigawa State, Nigeria, a village will have a water management council that collects a portion of each fisherman's catch and redistributes it among the villagers, or sells it and used the proceeds for communal projects.[31] Local governments and traditional authorities are increasingly engaged in rent-seeking, collecting license fees with the help of the police or army.[32]

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Ma: Million years ago

Citations

  1. ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "Lake Chad Cultural Landscape (Nigeria)". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Obaje 2009, p. 69.
  3. ^ a b Wright 1985, p. 94.
  4. ^ a b c d Wright 1985, p. 95.
  5. ^ Schuster et al. 2005, p. 1821.
  6. ^ a b Chad Basin: Britannica.
  7. ^ a b c d e Geography: Lake Chad Basin Commission.
  8. ^ Haruna et al. 2012, p. 3.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h The Lake Chad basin: FAO.
  10. ^ a b c Rangeley et al. 1994, p. 49.
  11. ^ Kenmore 2004, p. 228.
  12. ^ Obaje 2009, p. 71.
  13. ^ Obaje 2009, p. 70.
  14. ^ "Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC) | UNDP Climate Change Adaptation". www.adaptation-undp.org. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
  15. ^ a b c Decorse 2001, p. 103.
  16. ^ a b c Appiah & Gates 2010, p. 254.
  17. ^ Falola 2008, p. 26.
  18. ^ Falola 2008, p. 27.
  19. ^ Falola 2008, p. 47.
  20. ^ Falola 2008, p. 32.
  21. ^ Udo 1970, p. 178.
  22. ^ Harlow 2003, p. 139.
  23. ^ Hirshfield 1979, p. 26.
  24. ^ Hirshfield 1979, p. 37-38.
  25. ^ Lengyel 2007, p. 170.
  26. ^ Mazenot 2005, p. 352.
  27. ^ Falola 2008, p. 105.
  28. ^ a b Kenmore 2004, p. 220.
  29. ^ Kenmore 2004, p. 230.
  30. ^ Kenmore 2004, p. 215.
  31. ^ Kenmore 2004, p. 217.
  32. ^ Kenmore 2004, p. 218.

Sources

  • Appiah, Kwame Anthony; Gates, Henry Louis Jr. (2010). Encyclopaedia of Africa. Oxford University Press. p. 254. ISBN 978-0-19-533770-9. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • "Chad Basin". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  • Decorse, Christopher R. (2001). West Africa During the Atlantic Slave Trade: Archaeological Perspectives. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-7185-0247-8. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Falola, Toyin (24 April 2008). A History of Nigeria. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-47203-6. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • . Lake Chad Basin Commission. Archived from the original on 6 January 2019. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  • Harlow, Barbara (2003). "Conference of Berlin (1884–1885)". Colonialism. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-335-3. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Haruna, Ahmed Isah; Maigari, A. S.; Tahir, M. L.; Mamman, Y. D.; Gusikit, R. B. (21 December 2012). Detrital Gypsum Forms in the Nigerian (Southern) Sector of Chad Basin: A Criteria for interpretation in Nigeria's inland basins: Implication of Detrital Gypsum Forms in Sedimentary Basins. GRIN Verlag. ISBN 978-3-656-33912-0. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Hirshfield, Claire (1979). The diplomacy of partition: Britain, France, and the creation of Nigeria, 1890–1898. Springer. ISBN 978-90-247-2099-6. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Kenmore, Peter Ervin (2004). The Future is an Ancient Lake: Traditional Knowledge, Biodiversity and Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture in Lake Chad Basin Ecosystems. Food & Agriculture Org. p. 215. ISBN 978-92-5-105064-4. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Lengyel, Emil (1 March 2007). Dakar - Outpost of Two Hemispheres. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4067-6146-7. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Mazenot, Georges (2005). Sur le passé de l'Afrique Noire. Editions L'Harmattan. p. 352. ISBN 978-2-296-59232-2. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Obaje, Nuhu George (12 August 2009). Geology and Mineral Resources of Nigeria. Springer. p. 69. ISBN 978-3-540-92684-9. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Rangeley, Robert; Thiam, Bocar M.; Anderson, Randolph A.; Lyle, Colin A. (1994). International river basin organizations in Sub-Saharan Africa. World Bank Publications. ISBN 978-0-8213-2871-2. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Schuster, Mathieu; Roquin, Claude; Duringer, Philippe; Brunet, Michel; Caugy, Matthieu; Fontugne, Michel; Mackaye, Hassan Taïsso; Vignaud, Patrick; Ghienne, Jean-François (September 2005). "Holocene Lake Mega-Chad palaeoshorelines from space". Quaternary Science Reviews. 24 (16–17): 1821–1827. Bibcode:2005QSRv...24.1821S. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2005.02.001.
  • "The Lake Chad basin". FAO. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  • Udo, Reuben K. (1970). Geographical regions of Nigeria. University of California Press. p. 178. GGKEY:7F4FLYR0FS5. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  • Wright, J.B. (30 November 1985). Geology and Mineral Resources of West Africa. Springer. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-04-556001-1. Retrieved 6 May 2013.

chad, basin, largest, endorheic, basin, africa, centered, approximately, lake, chad, outlet, contains, large, areas, semi, arid, desert, savanna, drainage, basin, approximately, coterminous, with, sedimentary, basin, same, name, extends, further, northeast, ea. The Chad Basin is the largest endorheic basin in Africa centered approximately on Lake Chad It has no outlet to the sea and contains large areas of semi arid desert and savanna The drainage basin is approximately coterminous with the sedimentary basin of the same name but extends further to the northeast and east Chad Basin outlineThe basin spans four modern nations including most of Chad and a large part of Niger Nigeria and Cameroon 1 A combination of dams increased irrigation climate change and reduced rainfall are causing water shortages Lake Chad continues to shrink Contents 1 Geology 2 Drainage basin extent 3 Climate and ecology 4 Water resources 4 1 Rivers 4 2 Aquifers 5 Oil and gas resources 6 Management 7 People 7 1 History 7 2 Population 7 3 Economy 8 ReferencesGeology edit nbsp Benue trough The northwest and east extensions lie below the Chad Basin Tibesti Cameroon Trough is not shown The geological basin which is smaller than the drainage basin is a Phanerozoic sedimentary basin formed during the plate divergence that opened the South Atlantic Ocean The basin lies between the West African Craton and Congo Craton and formed about the same time as the Benue Trough It covers an area of about 2 335 000 square kilometres 902 000 sq mi 2 It merges into the Iullemmeden Basin to the west at the Damergou gap between the Air and Zinder massifs 3 The floor of the basin is made of Precambrian bedrock covered by more than 3 600 metres 11 800 ft of sedimentary deposits 2 The basin may have resulted from the intersection of an Air Chad Trough running NW SE and a Tibesti Cameroon Trough running NE SW 2 That is the two deepest parts are an extension of the Benue Trough that runs northeast to the margin of the basin and another extension running from below the present lake to below the Tenere rift structure to the east of the Air massif The southern part of the basin is underlain by another elongated depression 3 This runs in an ENE direction and extends from the Yola arm of the Benue trough 4 At times parts of the basin were below the sea In the northeastern part of the Benue Trough where it enters the Chad Basin there are marine sediments from the Late Cretaceous 100 5 66 Ma a These sediments seem to be considerably thicker towards the northeast Boreholes under Maiduguri have found marine sediments 400 metres 1 300 ft deep lying over continental sediments 600 metres 2 000 ft deep 4 The sea seems to have retreated from the western part of the basin in the Turonian 93 5 89 3 Ma In the Maastrichtian 72 1 66 Ma the west was non marine but the southeast probably was still marine No marine sediments have been found from the Paleocene 66 56 Ma 4 nbsp The eastern part of the basin showing the Holocene Mega Chad lake blue area at its maximum size with the Chari in the south and the Benue in the south west The modern Lake Chad is in the centre of this map in green For most of the Quaternary from 2 6 million years ago to the present the basin seems to have been a huge well watered plain with many rivers and water bodies probably rich in plant and animal life Towards the end of this period the climate became drier Around 20 000 40 000 years ago eolianite sand dunes began to form in the north of the basin 4 During the Holocene from 11 000 years ago until recently a giant Lake Mega Chad covered an area of more than 350 000 square kilometres 140 000 sq mi in the basin 5 It would have drained to the Atlantic Ocean via the Benue River Stratigraphic records show that Mega Chad varied in size as the climate changed with a maximum about 2 300 years ago The remains of fish and molluscs from this period are found in what are now desert regions 6 Drainage basin extent editThe Chad Basin covers almost 8 of the African continent with an area of about 2 434 000 square kilometres 940 000 sq mi It is surrounded by mountains The Air Mountains and the Termit Massif in Niger form the western boundary To the northwest in Algeria are the Tassili n Ajjer mountains including the 2 158 metres 7 080 ft Jebel Azao The Tibesti Mountains to the north of the basin include Emi Koussi the highest mountain in the Sahara at 3 415 metres 11 204 ft The Ennedi Plateau lies to the northeast rising to 1 450 metres 4 760 ft 7 The Ouaddai highlands lies the east 6 They include the Marrah Mountains in Darfur at up to 3 088 metres 10 131 ft in height The Adamawa Plateau Jos Plateau Biu Plateau and Mandara Mountains lie to the south 7 To the west the basin is separated by a watershed from the Niger River and to the south it is separated by a basement dome from the Benue River 8 Further east watersheds separate it from the Congo Basin and the river Nile The lowest part of the basin is not Lake Chad but the Bodele Depression at a distance of 480 kilometres 300 mi to the northeast of the lake The Bodele Depression is just 155 metres 509 ft above sea level in its deepest portion while the surface of Lake Chad is 275 metres 902 ft above sea level 7 The basin spans parts of eight countries These are 9 Country Independent Area within basin km2 of total area of basin of country in basinAlgeria 1962 93 451 3 9 3 9 Cameroon 1960 50 775 2 1 10 7 Central African Republic 1960 219 410 9 2 35 2 Chad 1960 1 046 196 43 9 81 5 Libya 1947 lt 1 lt 1 Niger 1960 691 473 29 0 54 6 Nigeria 1960 179 282 7 5 19 4 Sudan 1956 101 048 4 2 4 0 Total 2 381 635 100 Climate and ecology edit nbsp Dunes in the Erg of Bilma The northern half of the basin is desert containing the Tenere desert Erg of Bilma and Djurab Desert South of that is the Sahel zone dry savanna and thorny shrub savanna The main rivers include riparian forests flooding savannas and wetland areas In the far south there are dry forests 7 Rainfall varies widely from year to year The amount of annual rainfall is very slight in the north of the basin increasing to 1 200 millimetres 47 in in the south 10 As late as 2000 the basin has remained home to large populations of wildlife In the Sahel these include antelopes such as the addax and dama gazelle and in the savanna there are korrigum and red fronted gazelle The black crowned crane and other waterbirds are found in the wetlands There are populations of elephants giraffes and lions The western black rhinoceros was once common but is now extinct Elephants almost became extinct by the end of the nineteenth century due to European and American demand for ivory but stocks have since recovered 11 Water resources editRivers edit nbsp Yobe River catchment area showing location of the Hadejia Nguru wetlands The seasonal Korama River in the south of Niger does not reach Lake Chad Nigeria includes two sub basins that drain into Lake Chad The Hadejia Jama are Yobe sub basin in the north contains the Hadejia and Jama are rivers which supply the 6 000 square kilometres 2 300 sq mi Hadejia Nguru wetlands They converge to form the Yobe which defines the border between Niger and Nigeria for 300 kilometres 190 mi flowing into Lake Chad About 5 cubic kilometres 0 12 cu mi of water reaches Lake Chad annually Construction of upstream dams and growth in irrigation have reduced water flow and the floodplains are drying The Yedseram Ngadda sub basin further south is fed by the Yedseram River and Ngadda River which join to form an 80 square kilometres 31 sq mi swamp to the southwest of the lake There is not any significant water flow from the swamp to the lake 9 nbsp Chari River basin The Central African Republic CAR contains the sources of the rivers Chari and Logone which flow north into the lake The volume of water entering Chad annually from the CAR has decreased from about 33 cubic kilometres 7 9 cu mi before the 1970s to 17 cubic kilometres 4 1 cu mi during the 1980s A further 3 cubic kilometres 0 72 cu mi to 7 cubic kilometres 1 7 cu mi of water annually flows from Cameroon into Chad via the Logone River The Chari Logone system accounts for about 95 of the water entering Lake Chad 9 Aquifers edit The basin in the Nigerian section contains an upper aquifer of Early Pleistocene alluvial deposits that are often covered by recent sand dunes varying in thickness from 15 to 100 metres 49 to 328 ft It consists of interbedded sands clays and silts with discontinuous clay lenses The aquifer recharges from run off and rainfall The local people access the water with hand dug wells and shallow boreholes and use it for domestic use growing vegetables and watering their livestock Below this aquifer separated from it by a sequence of grey to bluish grey clays from the Zanclean is a second aquifer at a depth of 240 to 380 metres 790 to 1 250 ft Due to intensive pumping since the start of the 1980s the water levels in both aquifers has been lowered and some wells no longer function 12 There is a third much lower aquifer in Bima Sandstones that lies at a depth of 2 700 to 4 600 metres 8 900 to 15 100 ft 13 Oil and gas resources editBoth the current and historical areas of the basin and the mega basin contain concentrations of fossils Fossil fuels deposits in the area are estimated to exceed a trillion barrels of reserves Management editThe Lake Chad Basin Commission was established in 1964 by Cameroon Chad Niger and Nigeria the four countries that contain parts of Lake Chad 10 14 About 20 of the basin lying in these countries is termed the Conventional Basin The Lake Chad Basin Commission manages use of water and other natural resources in this area 9 Although the lake fluctuates considerably in size from one year to another the general trend has been for water levels to decrease There has been a proposal to supply water from the Congo Basin via a canal 2 400 kilometres 1 500 mi long but major political technical and economic challenges would have to be overcome to make this practical 9 People editHistory edit nbsp States in the Sahel Savanna about 1750 Humans have lived in the inner Chad Basin from at least eight thousand years ago and were engaging in agriculture and livestock management around the lake by 1000 BC Permanent villages were established to the south of the lake by 500 BC at the start of the Iron Age 15 The Chad Basin contained important trade routes to the east and to the north across the Sahara 9 By the 5th century AD camels were being used for trans Saharan trade via the Fezzan or to the east via Darfur where slaves and ivory were exchanged for salt horses glass beads and later firearms 16 After the Arabs conquered North Africa during the 7th and 8th centuries the Chad Basin became increasingly linked to the Muslim countries 15 Trade and improved agricultural techniques enabled more sophisticated societies resulting in the early kingdoms of the Kanem Empire the Wadai Empire and the Sultanate of Bagirmi 16 Kanem developed during the 8th century in the region to the north and east of Lake Chad The Sayfuwa dynasty that ruled this kingdom had adopted Islam by the 12th century 15 The Kanem empire went into decline shrank and during the 14th century was defeated by Bilala invaders from the Lake Fitri region 17 The Kanuri people commanded by the Sayfuwa migrated to the west and south of the lake where they established the Bornu Empire By the late 16th century the Bornu empire had expanded and recaptured the parts of Kanem that had been conquered by the Bilala 18 Satellite states of Bornu included the Sultanate of Damagaram in the west and Baguirmi to the southeast of Lake Chad nbsp Abeche capital of Wadai in 1918 after the French had acquired control The Tunjur people initiated the Wadai Empire to the east of Bornu during the 16th century During the 17th century the Maba people revolted and established a Muslim dynasty At first Wadai paid tribute to Bornu and Durfur but by the 18th century Wadai was fully independent and had become an aggressor against its neighbors 16 To the west of Bornu by the 15th century the Kingdom of Kano had become the most powerful of the Hausa Kingdoms with an unstable truce with the Kingdom of Katsina to the north 19 Both of these states adopted Islam during the 15th and 16th centuries 20 Both were absorbed into the Sokoto Caliphate during the Fulani War of 1805 which threatened Bornu itself 21 During the Berlin Conference in 1884 85 Africa was divided between the European colonial powers defining boundaries that are largely intact with the present post colonial states 22 On 5 August 1890 the British and French concluded an agreement to define the boundary between French West Africa and what would become Nigeria A boundary was agreed along a line from Say on the river Niger to Barruwa on Lake Chad but leaving the Sokoto Caliphate in the British sphere 23 Parfait Louis Monteil was given charge of an expedition to discover where this line actually ran 24 On 9 April 1892 he reached Kukawa on the shore of the lake 25 During the next twenty years a large part of the Chad Basin was incorporated by treaty or by force into French West Africa On 2 June 1909 the Wadai capital of Abeche was occupied by the French 26 The remainder of the basin was divided by the British in Nigeria who captured Kano in 1903 27 and the Germans in Kameroun The countries of the basin regained their independence between 1956 and 1962 retaining the colonial administrative boundaries The area is badly affected by the Boko Haram insurgency which began in 2009 and is centred on Borno State in northeastern Nigeria Population edit nbsp People at a coronation in Chad 2005 As of 2011 more than 30 million people lived in the Chad Basin The population is growing rapidly 9 Ethnic groups include Kanuri Maba Buduma Hausa Kanembu Kotoko Bagger Haddad Kuri Fulani and Manga The largest cities are Kano and Maiduguri in Nigeria Maroua in Cameroon N Djamena in Chad and Diffa in Niger 7 Economy edit The main economic activities are farming herding and fishing 9 At least 40 of the rural population of the basin is impoverished and experiences chronic food shortages 28 Crop production based on rain is possible only in the southern belt Flood recession agriculture is practiced around Lake Chad and in the riverine wetlands 10 Nomadic herders migrate with their animals into the grasslands of the northern part of the basin for a few weeks during each brief rainy season where they intensively graze the nutritious grasses When the dry season starts they move back south either to grazing lands around the lakes and floodplains or to the savannas further to the south 29 During the period 2000 01 fisheries in the Lake Chad basin provided food and income to more than 10 million people with a harvest of about 70 000 tons 28 Fisheries have been managed traditionally by a system where each village has recognized rights over a defined part of the river wetland or lake and fishers from elsewhere must seek permission and pay a fee to use this area The governments only enforced rules and regulations to a limited extent 30 Fishery management practices vary For example on the Katagum river in Jigawa State Nigeria a village will have a water management council that collects a portion of each fisherman s catch and redistributes it among the villagers or sells it and used the proceeds for communal projects 31 Local governments and traditional authorities are increasingly engaged in rent seeking collecting license fees with the help of the police or army 32 References editNotes Ma Million years ago Citations Centre UNESCO World Heritage Lake Chad Cultural Landscape Nigeria UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 12 July 2023 a b c Obaje 2009 p 69 a b Wright 1985 p 94 a b c d Wright 1985 p 95 Schuster et al 2005 p 1821 a b Chad Basin Britannica a b c d e Geography Lake Chad Basin Commission Haruna et al 2012 p 3 a b c d e f g h The Lake Chad basin FAO a b c Rangeley et al 1994 p 49 Kenmore 2004 p 228 Obaje 2009 p 71 Obaje 2009 p 70 Lake Chad Basin Commission LCBC UNDP Climate Change Adaptation www adaptation undp org Retrieved 12 July 2023 a b c Decorse 2001 p 103 a b c Appiah amp Gates 2010 p 254 Falola 2008 p 26 Falola 2008 p 27 Falola 2008 p 47 Falola 2008 p 32 Udo 1970 p 178 Harlow 2003 p 139 Hirshfield 1979 p 26 Hirshfield 1979 p 37 38 Lengyel 2007 p 170 Mazenot 2005 p 352 Falola 2008 p 105 a b Kenmore 2004 p 220 Kenmore 2004 p 230 Kenmore 2004 p 215 Kenmore 2004 p 217 Kenmore 2004 p 218 Sources Appiah Kwame Anthony Gates Henry Louis Jr 2010 Encyclopaedia of Africa Oxford University Press p 254 ISBN 978 0 19 533770 9 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Chad Basin Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 5 May 2013 Decorse Christopher R 2001 West Africa During the Atlantic Slave Trade Archaeological Perspectives Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 7185 0247 8 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Falola Toyin 24 April 2008 A History of Nigeria Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 47203 6 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Geography Lake Chad Basin Commission Archived from the original on 6 January 2019 Retrieved 5 May 2013 Harlow Barbara 2003 Conference of Berlin 1884 1885 Colonialism ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 335 3 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Haruna Ahmed Isah Maigari A S Tahir M L Mamman Y D Gusikit R B 21 December 2012 Detrital Gypsum Forms in the Nigerian Southern Sector of Chad Basin A Criteria for interpretation in Nigeria s inland basins Implication of Detrital Gypsum Forms in Sedimentary Basins GRIN Verlag ISBN 978 3 656 33912 0 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Hirshfield Claire 1979 The diplomacy of partition Britain France and the creation of Nigeria 1890 1898 Springer ISBN 978 90 247 2099 6 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Kenmore Peter Ervin 2004 The Future is an Ancient Lake Traditional Knowledge Biodiversity and Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture in Lake Chad Basin Ecosystems Food amp Agriculture Org p 215 ISBN 978 92 5 105064 4 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Lengyel Emil 1 March 2007 Dakar Outpost of Two Hemispheres Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4067 6146 7 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Mazenot Georges 2005 Sur le passe de l Afrique Noire Editions L Harmattan p 352 ISBN 978 2 296 59232 2 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Obaje Nuhu George 12 August 2009 Geology and Mineral Resources of Nigeria Springer p 69 ISBN 978 3 540 92684 9 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Rangeley Robert Thiam Bocar M Anderson Randolph A Lyle Colin A 1994 International river basin organizations in Sub Saharan Africa World Bank Publications ISBN 978 0 8213 2871 2 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Schuster Mathieu Roquin Claude Duringer Philippe Brunet Michel Caugy Matthieu Fontugne Michel Mackaye Hassan Taisso Vignaud Patrick Ghienne Jean Francois September 2005 Holocene Lake Mega Chad palaeoshorelines from space Quaternary Science Reviews 24 16 17 1821 1827 Bibcode 2005QSRv 24 1821S doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2005 02 001 The Lake Chad basin FAO Retrieved 5 May 2013 Udo Reuben K 1970 Geographical regions of Nigeria University of California Press p 178 GGKEY 7F4FLYR0FS5 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Wright J B 30 November 1985 Geology and Mineral Resources of West Africa Springer p 94 ISBN 978 0 04 556001 1 Retrieved 6 May 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chad Basin amp 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