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RUDOLF (otherwise known as Basso NOROK and Gannon) , a large lake of E.See also: equatorial See also: Africa, forming the centre of an inland drainage See also: system, occupying the S. of the Abyssinian See also: highlands and a portion of the See also: great equatorial See also: plateau
.
The lake itself lies towards the N. of the great See also: East See also: African rift valley, between the See also: parallels of 2° 26' and 5° N., while the meridian of 36° E. is slightly W. of the centre of the See also: northern wider See also: part, the narrower See also: southern portion bending to 362 E
.
The length along the curved See also: axis is 185 m., the maximum width 37, and the See also: area roughly 3500 sq. m
.
Its altitude is 1250 ft
.
Towards the S. it seems to be deep, but it is come paratively shallow in the N
.
Its See also: water is brackish, but drink-able
.
The country bordering the lake on almost every See also: side is sterile and forbidding
.
The S. end, for some 50 M. on the W. and for a longer distance on the E., is shut in by high cliffs —the escarpments of a rugged See also: lava-strewn country, which shows abundant signs of volcanic activity, great changes having been reported since 1889
.
In particular, the great See also: volcano of Lubburua (Teleki's volcano) at the S. end of the lake is said to have been destroyed between 1889 and 1897 by a sudden See also: explosion
.
The highest point of the S.E. side of the lake is See also: Mount Kulal, 7812 ft., while the culminating height within the See also: basin of the lake is Mount Sil, 9280 ft., which lies about 20 m
.
S. of Lubburua
.
Further N., on the W. side, sandy plains alternate with lines of low hills, the immediate shores (on which the water appears to have encroached in very See also: modern times) being marked by spits of See also: sand, which in places cut off lagoons from the See also: main See also: body of the lake
.
These are the haunt of great numbers of water-birds . In 3° 8' N. the drySee also: bed of the Turkwell—in its upper course a large rivea descending the slopes of Mount Elgon—approaches the lake
.
Near the N. end mountains again approach the shores, the most prominent being Mount Lubbur (5200 ft.), an See also: extinct volcano with a well-preserved See also: crater
.
At the extreme N.W. corner a See also: bay some 35 M. long (See also: Sanderson Gulf) is almost separated from the rest of the lake by two long points of See also: land
.
On the E. side, open arid plains, with few trees, occupy most of the N. country
.
One See also: hill, in 3° 2o' N., has a height of 3470 ft., and at the N.E. end, separating the lake from Lake
See also: Stefanie, is a hilly country, the highest point between the lakes being 3524 ft
.
Immediately N. of these hills rises the Hummurr Range, with one See also: peak exceeding 7000 ft
.
Near the S. end is the volcanic See also: island of Elmolo, to m. long, and there are a See also: fee small islets
.
Just N. of 4° N. is a small volcanic
island with highest point 2100 ft
.
At the N. end of the lake a level swampy plain is traversed by various arms of the lake and by the Nianam See also: river
.
This river has been shown to be identical with the Omo, the course of which ,was long one of the most debated questions of African geography
.
Its northernmost feeders rise on the high plateau S. of the Blue See also: Nile, in 9° ro' N., and being swollen by other streams from the E. and W., soon See also: form a large river
.
During its See also: lower course it makes two considerable bends to the W. before finally entering the lake as a deep stream a quarter of a mile wide
.
Lake Rudolf (previously known on the east See also: coast by report) was discovered in 1888 by Count See also: Samuel Teleki and See also: Lieutenant Ludwig von Hohnel
.
It was subsequently visited by Dr Donaldson See also: Smith,
See also: Vittorio Bottego, H
.
S
.
H
.
See also: Cavendish, H
.
H
.
See also: Austin, and others, and by 1905 its shores and the neighbouring country had become fairly well known
.
In 1907, by an agreement between the See also: powers concerned, the N.E. end of the lake, into which the Omo debouches, was assigned to See also: Abyssinia, the rest of the lake to Great Britain
.
Au'rHOxrriEs.—Geographical Journal (See also: September 1896, See also: April 1898, See also: August 1899, May 1904; the last-named issue contains a map by Captain P
.
Maud, R.E.) ; Ludwig von Hohnel, See also: Discovery of Lakes Rudolf and Stefanie (See also: London, 1894); A
.
Donaldson Smith, Through Unknown African Countries (London, 1897) ; A
.
H . Neumann,See also: Elephant-Hunting in East Equatorial Africa (London, 1898) ; L
.
Vannutelli and C
.
Citerni, L'Omo (Milan, 1899) ; M
.
S
.
Wellby, 'Twixt Sirdar and Menelik (London, 1901); H
.
H
.
Austin, Among Swamps and Giants in Equatorial Africa (1902); C
.
H
.
See also: Stigand, To Abyssinia through an Unknown Land (191o)
.
(E
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