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VICTORIA NYANZA

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 46 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VICTORIA NYANZA  , the largest lake in Africa and chief
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reservoir of the Nile, lying between o° 20' N. to 3° S. and 31° 40' to 34° 52' E . Among the fresh-
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water lakes of the
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world it is exceeded in
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size by •Lake
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Superior only and has an
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area of over 26,000 sq. m., being nearly the size of Scotland . In shape it is an irregular
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quadrilateral, but its shores, save on the west, are deeply indented . Its greatest length, taking into account the
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principal gulfs, N. to S. is 250 m., its greatest breadth 200 M . Its coast-
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line exceeds moo m . It fills a depression in the central
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part of the
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great plateau which stretches between the western (Albertine) and eastern rift-valleys (see AFRICA, § 1), and has an
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elevation of about 3720 ft. above the sea.' Its greatest ascertained
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depth is some 270 ft., which compares with soundings of 2000 ft. on Tanganyika and 2500 ft. on
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Nyasa . Victoria Nyanza is remarkable for the severe and sudden storms which sweep across it, rendering navigation dangerous . It contains many groups of islands, the majority being near the coast-line . The lake is full of reefs, many just below the
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surface of the water, which is clear and very fresh . It is abundantly stocked with fish .
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Geological research shows that the
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land surrounding the lake consists of
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gneiss,
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quartz and schistose rocks, covered, in the higher regions, with marl and red clay, and in the valleys with a rich black loam . Shores and Islands.—The shores of the lake
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present varied aspects .

The western coast, which contains no large indentations, is, in its

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southern part, backed by precipices of 300 or more ft. high, behind which rise
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downs to thrice the height of the cliffs . Going north, the hills give way to
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papyrus and ambach swamps, which mark the delta of the
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Kagera . Beyond the mouth of that
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river the hills reappear, and increase in height, till on reaching the N.W. corner of the nyanza they rise some 500 ft. above the water . This western
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shore is marked by a continuous fault line which runs parallel to the lake at a short distance inland . The
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northern coast of the lake is very deeply indented and is marked throughout its length by rocky headlands jutting into the waters . This high land is very narrow, and the streams which rise on its northern face within a mile or two of the nyanza drain north away from the lake . On a promontory about 30 M. east of the Katonga (see below) is Entebbe, the
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port of
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Uganda and seat of the
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British administration . The chief indentations on the north side are Murchison
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Bay and
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Napoleon Gulf, the entrance to the last named being partly filled by the triangular-shaped island of Buvuma or Uvuma (area 16o sq. m.) . Napoleon Gulf itself is deeply indented, one bay, that of Jinja,
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running N.W. and being the outlet of the Nile, the water here forcing its way through the rock-bound shore of the lake . The north-east corner of the lake is flat and
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bare . A narrow channel, partly masked by islands, leads into
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Kavirondo Gulf, which, with an
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average width of 6 m., extends 45 M . E. of the normal coast-line—a fact taken
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advantage of in
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building the railway from
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Mombasa to the lake .

A promontory, 174 ft. above lake-level, jutting into the small bay of Ugowe, at the north-east end of Kavirondo Gulf, is the point where the railway terminates . The station is known as Port

Florence . On the south side of the gulf tall hills approach, and in some cases reach, the water's edge, and behind them towers the rugged range of Kasagunga with its saw-like edge . Proceeding south the shore trends generally south-west and is marked with many deep inlets, the coast presenting a succession of bold bluffs, while inland the whole
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district is distinctly mountainous . At the S.E. corner of the lake Speke Gulf projects eastward, and at the S.W. corner Emin
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Pasha Gulf pushes southward . Here the coast is barren and hilly, while long ridges of rock run into the lake . The largest island in the lake, Ukerewe, on the S.E. coast, immediately north of Speke Gulf, is almost a peninsula, but the
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strip of land connecting it with the shore is pierced by two narrow channels about of a mile long . Ukerewe is 25 M. long, and 12 broad at its greatest width . It is uninhabited, wooded and hilly, rising 65o ft. above the lake . At the N.W. corner of the nyanza is the Sesse
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archipelago, consisting of sixty-two islands . The largest island in this
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group, namely, Bugala, is narrow, resembling the letter S in shape, and is almost cut in two in the
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middle . Most of these islands are densely forested, and some of them attain considerable elevation .

Their scenery is of striking beauty .

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Forty-two were inhabited.' Buvuma Island, at the entrance of Napoleon Gulf, has already been mentioned . Between it and as far as the mouth of Kavirondo Gulf are numerous other islands, of which the chief are Bugaia, Lolui, Rusunga and Mfwanganu . In general characteristics and the beauty of their scenery these islands resemble those of the Sess6 archipelago . The islands are of ironstone formation overlying
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quartzite and crystalline schists . Rivers.—The Kagera, the largest and most important of the lake 1 For the altitude see Geog . Jour., March 1907 and
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July 1908 . 2 To prevent the spread of sleeping sickness the inhabitants were removed to the mainland (19o9) . affluents, which has its rise in the hill country east of Lake
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Kivu, and enters the west side of the nyanza just north of 1 ° S., is described in the article NILE, of which it is the most remote head-stream . The other rivers entering Victoria Nyanza from the west are the Katonga and Ruizi, both north of the Kagera . The Katonga rises in the plateau east of the Dweru branch of Albert
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Edward Nyanza, and after a sluggish course of 155 M. enters Victoria Nyanza in a wide swamp at its N.W. corner . The Ruizi (18o m.) is a deep, wide and swift stream with sinuous course flowing in part through great gorges and in part through large swamps .

It rises in the Ankole district and reaches the nyanza a little north of the Kagera . Between the Katonga and the Nile outlet, the rivers which rise

close to the lake drain away northward, the
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watershed being the lake shore . On the N.E. side of the nyanza, however, several considerable streams reach the lake—notably the Sio, Nzoia and Lukos (or Yala) . The Nzoia (15o m.), the largest of the three, rises in the foothills. of the Elgeyo escarpment and flows swiftly over a rocky bed in a south-
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westerly direction, emptying into the lake south of Berkeley By . On the east side the Mara Dabagh enters the lake between I° and 2 S . It is, next to the Kagera, the largest of the lake tributaries . All the rivers mentioned are perennial, and most of them bring down a considerable
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volume of water, even in the dry season . On the S., S.E. and S.W. shores a number of short rivers drain into the lake . They
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traverse a tree-less and arid region, have but an intermittent flow, and are of little importance in the hydrography of the district . The only outlet of the lake is the Nile (q.v.) . Drainage Area, Rainfall and Lake Level.—The very important part played by the Victoria Nyanza in the Nile
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system has led to careful study of its drainage basin and rainfall and the perplexingvariations in the level of the lake . The area drained by the lake covers, with the lake itself, 92,240 sq. m .

In part it is densely forested, part consists of lofty mountains, and a considerable portion is somewhat arid tableland . According to the calculations of

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Sir William Garstin the rainfall over the whole area averages 50 in. a
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year . Allowing that as much as 25% of this amount enters the lake, this is
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equivalent to a
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total of 138,750,000,000 cub. metres in a year . Measurements at the Ripon Falls show that i8,000,000,000, or some 13% of this amount, is taken off by the Nile, and when allow-, ance has been made for the
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annual rise and fall of the lake-level it is apparent that by far the greater part of the water which enters the nyanza is lost by evaporation; in fact, that the amount
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drawn off by the river plays a comparatively small part in the annual oscillation of the water surface . Rain falls more or less in every month, but is heaviest during March,
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April, May and again in September,
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October and November . The level of the lake is chiefly affected by the autumn rains and generally reaches its maximum in July . The annual rise and fall is on an average from I to 3 ft., but between November 1900 and
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June 1901 a difference of 42 in. was recorded . Considerable
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speculation was caused by the fact that whereas in 1878-79 the lake-level was high, from 1880 to 1890 the level was falling, and that after a few years (1892-95) of higher level there was, from 1896 to 1902, again a steady fall, amounting in seven years to 3o in. in the average levels of the lake . In 1903, however, the level rose and everywhere the land gained from the lake in the previous years was flooded . These variations are attributed by Sir William Garstin to deficiency or excess of rainfall . Any secular shrinking of the lake in
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common with the lakes of Central Africa generally must be so gradual as to have no
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practical importance . It must also be remembered that in such a vast
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sheet of water as is the nyanza the wind exercises an influence on the level, tending to
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pile up the water at different parts of the lake .

The winds may also be the cause of the daily variation of level, which on Speke Gulf has been found to reach 20 in.; but this may also partake of the

character of a " seiche." Currents setting towards the north or north-west have been observed in various parts of the lake .
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Discovery and Exploration.—The quest for the Nile
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sources led to the discovery of the lake by J . H . Speke in 1558, and it was by him named Victoria in honour of the queen of England . In 1862 Speke and his companion, J . A . Grant, partially expldred the N.W. shore, leaving the lake at the Nile outlet . Great differences of opinion existed as to its size until its circumnavigation in 1874 by H . M . Stanley, which proved it to be of vast extent . The invitation sent by King Mtesa of Uganda through Stanley to the Christian missionaries led to the despatch from England in 1876 of the Rev . C .

T .

Wilson, to whom we owe our first detailed knowledge of the nyanza . Mr Wilson and Lieut . Shergold Smith, R.N., made, in 1877, the first voyage across the nyanza . Lieut . Smith and a Mr O'Neill, both members of the Church Missionary Society, were in the same year murdered on Ukerewe Island . In 1889 Stanley further explored the lake, discovering Emin Pasha Gulf, the entrance to which is masked by several islands . In 1890 the ownership of the lake was divided by Great Britain and Germany, the firstdegree of south latitude being taken as the boundary line . The southern portion, which fell to Germany, was visited and described by scientists of that nation, whose
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objects, however, were not primarily geographic . At the instance of the British
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Foreign Office a survey of the northern shores of the lake was carried out in 1899-1900 by
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Commander B . Whitehouse, R.N . The same officer, in 1903, undertook, in agreement with the German government, a survey of the southern shores .

Commander Whitehouse's

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work led to considerable modification of the previously accepted maps . He discovered numerous islands and bays whose existence had previously been unknown . Previously to 1896 navigation was confined to Arab dhows, which trade between the south end of the lake and Uganda, and to canoes . In the year named a small steamer (the"
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Ruwenzori ") was launched on the lake by a
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Zanzibar
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firm, while in 1900 a somewhat larger steamer (the " William Mackinnon" ), built in
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Glasgow at the instance of Sir W . Mackinnon, and afterwards taken over by the British government, made her first trip on the lake . In 1903, the year in which the railway from Mombasa to the lake was completed, a steamer of 600 tons burden was launched at Port Florence . Since that date trade has considerably increased . See NILE and UGANDA and the British Blue-
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book
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Egypt No . 2 (1904), which is a Report by Sir Wm . Garstin upon the Basin of the Upper Nile . This report, besides giving (pp . 4-24) much
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original information upon the Victoria Nyanza, summarizes the information of previous travellers, whose
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works are quoted .

In 1908 the British

Admiralty published a chart of the lake (scale 4 in. to the mile) from the surveys of Commander Whitehouse . Non-official books which
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deal with the lake include: C . T . Wilson, Uganda and the Soudan (
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London, 1882) ; (Sir) F . D . Lugard, The Rise of our East
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African
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Empire, vol. ii . (London, 1893); Franz Stuhlmann, Mit Emin Pasha, &c . (Berlin, 1894) ; Paul Kollmann, The Victoria Nyanza (
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English
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translation; London, 1899); E . G . Ravenstein, " The Lake-level of the Victoria Nyanza,"
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Geographical Journal, October 1901; Sir H . H . Johnston, The Uganda
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Protectorate (London, 1902) .

In most of these publications the descriptions of the lake occupy but a small part . (W . E . G.; F . R .

End of Article: VICTORIA NYANZA
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