Online Encyclopedia

LIMPOPO, or CROCODILE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 701 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LIMPOPO, or
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CROCODILE
  , a
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river of S.E . Africa over woo m. in length, next to the
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Zambezi the largest river of Africa entering the
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Indian Ocean . Its head streams rise on the
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northern slopes of the Witwatersrand less than 300 m. due W. of the sea, but the river makes a
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great semicircular sweep across the high plateau first N.W., then N.E. and finally S.E . It is joined early in its course by the Marico and Notwani, streams which rise along the westward continuation of the Witwatersrand, the ridge forming the
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water-parting between the
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Vaal and the Limpopo basins . For a great
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part of its course the Limpopo forms the north-west and north frontiers of the
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Transvaal . Its banks are well wooded and
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present many picturesque views . In descending the escarpment of the plateau the river passes through rocky ravines, piercing the
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Zoutpansberg near the north-east corner of the Transvaal at the Toli Azime Falls . In the low country it receives its chief affluent, the Olifants river (450 M. long), which, rising in the high veld of the Transvaal east of the
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sources of the Limpopo, takes a more'
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direct N.E. coarse than the main stream . The Limpopo enters the ocean in 25° 15' S . The mouth, about r000 ft. wide, is obstructed by sand-banks . In the rainy season the Limpopo loses a good
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deal of its water in the swampy region along its
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lower course . High-water level is 24 ft. above low-water level, when the
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depth in the shallowest part does not exceed 3 ft .

The river is navigable all the

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year round by shallow-draught vessels from its mouth forabout loo m., to a spot known as Gungunyana's Ford . In flood time there is water communication south with the river
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Komati (q.v.) . At this season stretches of the Limpopo above Gungunyana's Ford are navigable . The river valley is generally unhealthy . The basin of the Limpopo includes the northern part of the Transvaal, the eastern portion of Bechuanaland,
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southern Matabeleland and a large
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area of Portuguese territory north of Delagoa
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Bay . Its chief tributary, the Olifants, has been mentioned . Of its many other affluents, the Macloutsie, the Shashi and the Tuli are the most distant north-west feeders . In this direction the Matoppos and other hills of Matabeleland
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separate the .Limpopo basin from the valley of the Zambezi . A little above the Tuli confluence is Rhodes's Drift, the usual
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crossing-place from the northern Transvaal into Matabeleland . Among the streams which, flowing north through the Transvaal, join the Limpopo is the
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Nylstroom, so named by Boers trekking from the south In the belief that they had reached the river Nile . In the coast region the river has one considerable affluent from the north, the Chengane, which is navigable for some distance . The Limpopo is a river of many names .

In its upper course called the

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Crocodile that name is also applied to the whole river, which figures on old Portuguese maps as the Oori(or Oira) and Bembe . Though claiming the territory through which it ran the Portuguese made no attempt to trace the river . This was first done by Captain J . F . Elton, who in 187o travelling from the
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Tati goldfields sought to open a road to the sea via the Limpopo . He voyaged down the river from the Shashi confluence to the Toli Azime Falls, which he discovered, following the stream thence on
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foot to the low country . The lower course of the river had been explored 1868–1869 by another
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British traveller—St Vincent Whitshed Erskine . It was first navigated by a sea-going craft in 1884, when G, A . Chaddock of the British mercantile service succeeded in crossing the bar, while its lower course was accurately surveyed by Portuguese
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officers in 1845–1896 . At the junction of the Lotsani, one of the Bechuanaland affiuents, iwith the Limpopo, are ruins of the period of the Zimbabwes .

End of Article: LIMPOPO, or CROCODILE
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LIMOUSIN (or LIMOSIN), LEONARD (c. 1505-c. 1577)
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