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CHAD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 787 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHAD  , a

lake of
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northern Central Africa lying between 12° 5o' and 14° lo' N. and 13° and 150 E . The lake is situated about 85o ft. above the sea in the borderland between the fertile and wooded regions of the Sudan on the south and the arid
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steppes which
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merge into the
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Sahara on the north . The
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area of the lake is shrinking owing to the progressive desiccation of the country, Saharan
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climate and conditions replacing those of the Sudan . The drying-up
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process has been comparatively rapid since the
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middle of the 19th century, a
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town which in 185o was on the
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southern margin of the lake being in 1905 over 20 M. from it . On the west the
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shore is perfectly flat, so that a slight rise in the
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water causes the inundation of a considerable area—a fact not without its influence on the estimates made at varying periods as to the
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size of the lake . Around the north-west and north shores is a continuous chain of gently sloping sand-hills covered with
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bush . This region abounds in big
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game and birds are plentiful . In the east, the country of Kanem, the desiccation has been most marked . Along this coast is a continuous chain of islands
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running from north-west to south-east . But what were islands when viewed by Overweg in 1851, formed in 1903
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part of the mainland and new islands had arisen in the lake . They are generally low, being composed of sand and clay, and lie from 5 to 20 M. from the shore, which throughout its eastern side nowhere faces open water . The channels between the islands do not exceed 2 M. in width .

Two

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principal groups are distinguished, the Kuri
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archipelago in the south, and the Buduma in the north . The inhabitants of the last-named islands were noted pirates until reduced to order by the French . The coast-
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line is, in general, undefined and marshy, and broken into numerous bays and peninsulas . It is also, especially on the east, lined by lagoons which communicate with the lake by intricate channels . The lake is nowhere of
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great
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depth, and about midway numerous mud-banks, marshes, islands and dense growths of aqueous
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plants stretch across its
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surface . Another stretch of marsh usually cuts off the northernmost part of the lake from the central sections . The open water varies in depth from 3 ft. in the north-west to over 20 in the south, where desiccation is less apparent . Fed by the
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Shari (q.v.) and other rivers, the lake has no outlet and its area varies according to the season . The flood water brought down by the Shari in December and
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January causes the lake to rise to a maximum of 24 ft., the water spreading over low-lying ground,
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left dry again in May or
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June . But after several seasons of heavy rainfall the waters have remained for years beyond their low-water level . Nevertheless the secular shrinking goes on, the loss by evaporation and percolation exceeding the amount of water received; whilst, on the
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average, the rainfall is diminishing . In 187o the lake rose to an exceptional height, but since then, save in 1897, there has been only the normal seasonal rise .

The prevalent north-east

wind causes at times a heavy swell on the lake . Fish abound in its waters, which are sweet, save at low-level, when they become brackish . The lagoons are believed to act as purifying pans in which the greater part of the salt in the water is precipitated . In the south-west end of the lake the water is yellow, caused by banks of clay; elsewhere it is clear . The southern basin of Chad is described under the Shari, which empties its waters into the lake about the middle of the southern shore, forming a delta of considerable extent . Beyond the south-east corner of the lake is a depression known as the
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Bahr-el-Ghazal (not to be confounded with the Nile affluent of CHADERTON 787 the same name) . This depression is the termination of what is in all probability the bed of one of the dried-up Saharan rivers . Coming from the
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Tibesti highlands the Bahr-el-Ghazal has a south-
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westerly trend to Lake Chad . Near the lake the valley was formerly swampy, and at high-water the lake overflowed into it . There was also at one time communication between the Shari and the Bahr-el-Ghazal, so that the water of the first-named stream reached Chad by way of the Bahr-el-Ghazal . There is now neither inlet nor outlet to the lake in this direction, the mouth of the Ghazal having become a fertile millet field . There is still, however, a distinct current from the Shari delta to the east end of the lake—known to the natives, like the depression beyond, as the Bahr-el-Ghazal—indicative of the former overflow outlet .

Besides the Shari, the only important stream entering Lake Chad is the Waube or Yo (otherwise the Komadugu Yobe), which rises near

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Kano, and flowing eastward enters the lake on its western side 40 M. north of Kuka . In the rains the Waube carries down a considerable
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body of water to the lake . Lake Chad is supposed to have been known by report to Ptolemy, and is identified by some writers with the Kura lake of the middle ages . It was first seen by white men in 1823 when it. was reached by way of Tripoli by the
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British expedition under Dr Walter Oudney, R.N., the other members being Capt,sin
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Hugh Clapperton and Major (afterwards Lieut.-Colonel) Dixon Denham . By them the lake was named
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Waterloo . In 185o James Richardson, accompanied by Heinrich Barth and Adolf Overweg, reached the lake, also via Tripoli, and Overweg was the first
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European to navigate its waters (1851) . The lake was visited by Eduard Vogel (1855) and by Gustav Nachtigal (1870), the last-named investigating its hydrography in some detail . In 189o-1893 its shores were divided by treaty between Great Britain, France and Germany . The first of these nations to make good its footing in the region was France . A small steamer, brought from the
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Congo by Emile Gentil, was in 1897 launched on the Shari, and reaching the Chad, navigated the southern part of the lake . Communication between Algeria and Lake Chad by way of the Sahara was opened, after repeated failures, by the French explorer F . Foureau in 1899-1900 ..

At the same time a French officer, Lieut . Joalland, reached the lake from the middle

Niger, continuing his journey round the north end to Kanem . A British force under Colonel T . L . N . Morland visited the lake at the beginning of 1902, and in May of the same
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year the Germans first reached it from Cameroon . In 1902-1903 French
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officers under Colonel Destenave made detailed surveys of the south-eastern and eastern shores and the adjacent islands . In 1903 Captain E . Lenfant, also a French officer, succeeded in reaching the lake (which he circumnavigated) via the
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Benue, proving the existence of water communication between the Shari and the Niger . In 1905 Lieut . Boyd Alexander, a British officer, further explored the lake, which then contained few stretches of open water . The lake is bordered W. and S.W. by
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Bornu, which is partly in the British
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protectorate of
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Nigeria and partly in the German protectorate of Cameroon .

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Bagirmi to the S.E. of the lake and Kanem to the N.E. are both French possessions . The north and north-west shores also belong to France . One of the ancient trade routes across the Sahara—that from Tripoli to Kuka in Bornu—strikes the lake at its north-west corner, but this has lost much of its former importance . See the
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works of Denham, Clapperton, Barth and Nachtigal cited in the
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biographical notices; Geog . Journal, vol.
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xxiv . (1904); Capt . Tilho in La Geographie (March 1906) ; Boyd Alexander, From the Niger to the Nile, vol. i . (
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London, 19o7); A . Chevalier,
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Mission Chari-
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Lac Tchad 1902-1904 (Paris., 1908) ; E . Lenfant, La Grande Route du Tchad (Paris, 1905) ; H . Freydenberg, Etude sur le Tchad et le bassin du Chari (Paris, 1908) .

End of Article: CHAD
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