Online Encyclopedia

ELGON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 271 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ELGON  , also known as MASAWA, an

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extinct
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volcano in
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British East Africa, cut by 1° N. and 3420 E., forming a vast isolated mass over 4o m. in diameter . The
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outer slopes are in
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great measure precipitous on the north, west and south, but fall more gradually to the east . The
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southern cliffs are remarkable for extensive caves, which have the appearance of
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water-worn caves on a coast
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line and have for ages served as habitations for the natives . The higher parts slope gradually upwards to the rim of an old
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crater, lying somewhat north of the centre of the mass, and measuring some 8 m. in diameter . The highest point of the rim is about 14,100 ft. above the sea . Steep spurs separated by narrow ravines run out from the mountain, affording the most picturesque scenery . The ravines are traversed by a great number of streams, which flow north-west and west to the Nile (through Lake Choga), south and south-east to Victoria Nyanza, and north-east to Lake Rudolf by the Turkwell, the head-stream of which rises within the crater, breaking through a deep cleft in its rim . To the north-west of the mountain a grassy plain, swampy in the rains, falls towards the chain of lakes ending in Choga; towards the north-east the country becomes more arid, while towards the south it is well wooded . The outer slopes are clothed in their upper regions with dense
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forest formed in
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part of bamboos, especially towards the south and west, in which directions the rainfall is greater than elsewhere . The
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lower slopes are exceptionally fertile on the west, and produce bananas in abundance . On the north-west and north the region between 6000 and 7000 ft. possesses a delightful
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climate, and is well watered by streams of ice-cold water . The
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district of Save on the north is a halting-place for Arab and Swahili caravans going north .

On the west the slopes are densely inhabited by small

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Bantu-Negro tribes, who style their country Masawa (whence the alternative name for the mountain); but on the south and north there are tribes which seem akin to the Gallas . Of these, the best known are the El-gonyi, from whom the name Elgon has been derived . They formerly lived almost entirely in the caves, but many of them have descended to villages at the
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foot of the mountain . Elgon was first visited in 1883 by Joseph Thomson, who brought to
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light the cave-dwellings on the southern face . It was crossed from north to south, and its crater reached, in 1890 by F . J . Jackson and Ernest Gedge, while the first journey round it was made by C . W . Hobley in 1896 . (E .

End of Article: ELGON
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ELGINSHIRE, or MORAY (Gaelic " among the sea-board ...
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