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V i '

●a'

\

R

A

/

E

THE

DK

GEOGRAPHY 1

OF THE

J

WORLD V I f

s

e

a

o

n

] U N I T E D

PHILIPPINES

ARGENTINA

El NEW

ZEALAND

S

c : a n a d a

BRUNEI

PA R A G U AY

K A Z A K H S T A N

B A H A M A S

S U D A N

K I N G D O M

UNITED OF

S TAT E S AMERICA

C H I N A

THE

B H U T A N

DK

R U S S I A N F E D E R A T I O N

B

GEOGRAPHY

I T A L Y

V E N E Z U E L A

S W E D E N

-

P A N A M A

OF THE

w

G H A N A

I\^ORY

PORTUGAL

n

WORLD

COAST

B R A Z I L

B E L G I U M

K E N Y A

M E X I C O S P A I N

N O R W A Y

I N D I A C H I L E

SAUDI

ARABIA N E T H E R L A N D S

G E R M A N Y

JAMAICA

F R A N C E

SOUTH

AFRICA

INDONESIA

S E N E G A L

THAILAND

s

I

P I *

A U S T R A L I A

i AZERBAIJAN

T U V A L U

K I R I B A T I

M A L A Y S I A

MONGOLIA

i ADK

PUBLISHING

BOOK

www.dk.com Senior Art Editor

Senior Editor

Rachael Foster

Susan Peach

Art Editors

Editors

Marcus James, Tina Robinson, Jane Tetzlaff

Marie Greenwood, Fran Jones, Veronica Pennycook

US Editor Camela Decaire

Deputy Art Director Miranda Kennedy Deputy Editorial Director Sophie Mitchell Senior DTP designer Mathew Birch

DTP designer Amudena Diaz Cartographyjan Clark, Robin Giddings Picture research Rachel Leach Research Robert Graham

Special photography Andy Crawford Production Catherine Semark, Louise Barratt Chief consultant Dr. David Green Consultants

Dr. Kathy Baker, Professor Mark Blacksell, Dr. Tanya Bowyer-Bower, Dr. Robert Bradnock, Dr. Edward Brown, Dr. Brian Chalkley, Professor Roman Cybriwsky, Professor Dennis Dwyer, Professor Aan Gilbert, St.John Gould, Professor Ian Hamilton, Robert Headland, Dr. Michael Heffernan, Professor Eleanore Kofman, Keith Lye, Professor Robert Mason, Professor W.R. Mead, Professor William Morgan, Susan Murrell, Jenny Nemko, Dr. Rewi Newnham, Professor Robert Potter, Dr. Jonathan Rigg, Dr. David Simon, Dr. David Turnock,John Wright and Nicholas Awde, Dr. Ted Yates

Authors Simon Adams, Anita Ganeri, Ann Kay Additional text by Arm Kramer, Claire Watts First American Edition, 1996 46810 9753

Published in the United Slates by

DK Publishing, Inc., 95 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 Copyright ©1996 Dorling Kindersley Limited, London All rights resei-ved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in aretrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the priorwritten permission of the copyright owner. Published in Great Britain by Dorling Kindersley Limited. Distributed by Houghton Mif in Company, Boston. library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data DK geography of the world. —1st American ed. p. cm. Includes

index.

Summaiy: Maps and text describe countries around the world and the ways of life of the inhabitants. ISBN 0-7894-1004-4

1. Geography—Juvenile literature. [1. Geography.] G133.D58 1996 910--dc20 96-15129 CIP A

i

Colour reproduction by Colourscan, Singapore Printed and bound in Spain by Artes Gra cas Toledo, S.A.U.

fi

C

fl

D.L. 10:227-2000

o

Contents How to Use This Book

52

Cuba and Jamaica

1 0

The Physical World

54

The Bahamas, Puerto Rico,

1 2

Moving Continents

1 4

Climate and Vegetation

1 6

World Population

18

The Political World

5

Lesser Antilles

58

Northern Sonth America

6 0

Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana Colombia and Ecuador

64

Peru and Bolivia

66

Brazil

70

Sonthern South Ameriea

72

Uruguay, Paraguay, and Chile

74

Argentina

76

The Atlantie Oeean

78

E U R O P E

8 0

Peoples of Europe

8 2

Scandinavia and Finland

CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA

8 3

Norway

84

Denmark and Sweden

Peoples of Central and

8 6

Finland

87

The British Isles

NORTH

2 2

Peoples of North America

24

Canada

3 0

United States of Ameriea

38

Mexieo

4 2

56

62

2 0

4 0

Haiti, and Dominican Repnblic

AMERICA

South America 4 4

Central America and the Caribbean

88

United Kingdom

4 6

Guatemala and Belize

9 0

Ireland

4 8

H o n d u r a s , E l S a l v a d o r,

91

The Low Conntries

and Niearagua

9 2

Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg

5 0

Costa Riea and Panama

94

Germany

138

Russian Federation

97

France

144

Turkey and Cyprus

98

France, Monaco, and Andorra

146

The Middle East I

1 0 0

Spain and Portugal

148

Syria and Lebanon

101

Spain

150

Israel and Jordan

102

Portugal

152

The Middle East II

103

Italy

154

Iraq and Iran

104

Italy, Malta, Vatican City,

156

Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar

158

United Arab Emirates, Oman, and Yemen

160

Central Asia

162

Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan,

and San Marino 1 0 6

Switzerland and Austria

107

Switzerland and Liechtenstein

108

Austria

109

Slovenia and Croatia

111

Belarus and the Baltic States

112

Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania

164

Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Afghanistan

166

The Indian Subcontinent

114

Central Europe

168

Pakistan and Bangladesh

11 6

Poland and Czech Republic

170

India

11 8

Slovakia and Hungary

172

Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Bhutan

120

Ukraine, Moldova, and the

174

East Asia

176

China

179

Hong Kong and Macao

Caucasian Republics 122

Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia

124

The Balkans

180

Taiwan and Mongolia

125

Yugoslavia and Bosnia &Herzegovina

182

North Korea and South Korea

126

Macedonia and Albania

184

Japan

128

Romania and Bulgaria

188

Mainland Southeast Asia

130

Greece

190

Thailand and Myanmar (Burma)

192

Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos

194

Malaysia and Singapore

196

Maritime Southeast Asia

198

Indonesia and Brunei

2 0 0

The Philippines

2 0 2

The Indian Ocean

i

i

and Tajikistan

132

A S I A

134

Peoples of Asia



A

f

Edward Is.

' . /

n

A

fi

^

(

THE

B

C

D

E

F

G

1

K

L

M

THE

PHYSICAL

WORLD

Wa t e r ; 7 1 %

Only 29 percent of

Continents

the Earth’s surface

The seven continents that make up

island. The

percentage area of

\the world’s land mass are, from

Europe:

Und: 29%

each continent is

\largest to smallest: Asia, Africa,

7%

shown here.

nL North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe, and Australia.

T F

,JThe polar regions, not completely

k3visible on the at map, surround Wthe North and South poles and are

aNC6«

Australia: 5%

Earth’s surface

I

jshown on the globes left and below.

Asia:

Africa:

30%

2 0 %

North South America: America 16.5 1 2 %

Antarctica: 9 . 5 %

f: E A S T

BERfAN

. — .

0

CHUKCHI

BEAUFORT

1

SEA

- V

9

7

Great Bear L.

ARCTIC

f

CIRCLE

T

'■

1

i I

3

Hudson

LABRADOR V

i

J

SEA !

4 V

'.Newfoundland i (■■■ ■ r :

r

^

— -T>

.

i

r''



A~T

i

0

i.

.

L'ANTIC

6

(^°Midway Js. tM.,.,.

5 i < , C t)h CAN

f f \■}

i

,

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7

^ 4

J

'/j

3 « *

F

. . .

A

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1

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1

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A

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C

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i

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y

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O

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8

4

o

'

Hdl'

BOUilJG

W

PI deriix Is. ( ?

r -

■' t!'.’

●F-”- -.

Marqueshs Is. »

''^>3*"^Samoi J'lC

'

’iji

*

' V,

-

I

O’,

Q -

;

li".

it iv ,l /. 0

THE

L

S 0 U T H

THINGS TO LOOK FOR ON

9

I. A

MAP

0 . ^

A M E R I C A

Highest point on Earth: Mt. Everest, China/Nepal, 29,029 ft (8,848 m)

10

MapH

t

, T u b u a i

Lowest point on Earth: Mariana ---

J-J,

ihOPIC

Trench, Paci c Ocean, 35,840 ft

of

CAPRICORHJt*

(10,924 m) below sea level Map L8 J

( i

y

r-v ^

11

Longest river: Nile, Egypt/Sudan/ Uganda, 4,187 miles (6,738 km)

'v4:

Map E

I

f

-

Largest lake: Caspian Sea, Azerbaijan/Iran/Turkmenistan/ N

I

L

A N T. . I C . . . . ‘

146,101 sq miles (378,400 sq km)

MapF

O C E A N [

Largest ocean: Paci c Ocean, 63,804,540 sq miles (165,241,000 sq km) Map Q7

Bounty Is.

Aniipodes;

13 Falkland

Is

- i.

fl

P

fi

fi

:

i

%

6

S

7

O

fl

N

12

/

I s .

A u c k l a n d

A

Kazakhstan/Russian Federation,

I :

e

Z e a

%

:

-

I

»

'

A

1

A

■)

s

Awto-o” ..

! 1 I

Q

R

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T

U

V

Cape H o r n

w

X

Y

A

CONTINENTS ' f y. - . - -

f .

-!h i f .

'i \

Earth's crust

Liquid

Moving continents

outer core

Upper mantle

The hot

■S

inner core

Lower

is solid. ^

Xhe continents that make up most of the Earth’s land surface

?

are always on the move, shifted around by forces deep inside the

mantle

yj

I

Earth. This is known as continental drift. Movement, or drift,

takes place because of intense heat generated within the Earth.

1

■i f :

.‘■M >

t-

1

The heat is carried upward where it disturbs the cool, rocky

‘i

% %

"i

j

i

surface, or crust, forcing sections of it, called plates, to move. Each year the continents, parts of the plates, drift nearly half an inch (about acentimeter), some getting closer together, others moving farther apart, some grinding past each other. As this happens, many of the Earth’s natural features

'

-

’j



m . . .

are created or changed.

INSIDE

THE

EARTH

The Earth is not asolid ball, but is made up of many different layers. The crust which forms

200 million years ago

panthala.ssaI

In THE BEGINNING

the continents and the ocean

oors is athin

layer of rock that covers the Earth like ashell. The mantle beneath is 1,864 miles (3,000 km)

P A N r H A l . A S . I A

z

thick and made of hot rock, some of which is 180 million years ago

Scientists believe that some

molten (liquid). At the center is the core, the

hot metallic center of the Earth. This is liquid

300 million years ago all the land on Earth was joined together in one “supercontinent” called Pangaea. It

on the outside and solid on the inside.

VM3RASI4

was surrounded by agiant ocean, Panthalassa. About

TETHYS

SEA l O RT U

200 million years ago, as the plates moved, Pangaea began to split into two great landmasses, Laurasia in

IROPE ASIA

A M I

NU

the north, and Gondwanaland in the south. These were

A F R I C A

(ndi

.^SOUTIi

separated by the Tethys Sea. As the plates continued to move, the two landmasses split and moved farther apart, eventually forming the continents on the map below.

AI

JSTI

65 million years ago

■' X

:: 'A

\

,Ci

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X .

/

e >

T,-.( :'A ■'

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jan 12“F (-ITC) July 70”F (21°C) [an

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(74

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iBelcher

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mpson

V

s^Belle, I.

-V

i

Goose Bav’

ScheffeJ

V~:'

- r9 :

.Falls 3

.Grande . Riviere de



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Channel-Porp 'aux-Basqua^

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ChibougamauQ

Moosonee® 1

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PRINCE

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n i E I ]

V ‘ N

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UTuque^ ^iq^Eq

ibitibi

Cochrane

Va l - d ’ O r O

7

riW-A' MGT%.t


Longest river: Colorado, US/Mexico, 1,400 miles (2,253 km) Map 11 Highest point: Mt. McKinley (Denali), 20,320 ft (6,194 m) Map C Largest lake: Great Salt Lake, 1,361 sq miles (3,525 sq km) MapJ World’s largest land gorge: Grand Canyon, 217 miles

D

6

(349 km) long, 6,234 ft (1,900 m) deep Map JIO

Boise, Idaho -

Coeur f d'Alene'

Spokane*'

N

cJmCPLV*

Snak^

■y i ,

c

0

Jan 1.9 in (48 mm)

WJuly 0.2 in (5 mm)

r

4^

-

b t o T

r -

f »●

. . r .

{Portland

» V

5s(tt*»* O

...

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.

BOISE

5=

Valley

"r

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O' ‘j^edford

'V4

p: :'0

T*-

4

●V, ,?■

BL.^K ROfK BESitRT .

Great SaltL

Winnemucca ●

y-*

The Sonoran Desert was

o

AP Falls

„A"/^^'P«ca.eUo Twin Falls^

\

LIVING IN THE DESERT ;

/«?

A

CiioseL. ;

\

'Tvt'lahS,

Sun

■X

I

IDAHO

B u r n s

I (

I

I

.k-

^iOREGON^



4 * -

Q

?

/

F. u r t ' k a

S A LT l A | t E “ C I T Y tOrenT'. « V

.-yti Rf EA

V .

once home only to creatures adapted to the heat. Today, Phoenix,

]an 30“F (-VC) July 74°F (23X)

^ ■_>0'

' * ■

^

n

i

a.

.< .

^ n



i:

,9 f

-7^

Arizona, is one of the

o r r c T i Y

L . Ta h o e .

C ‘

fastest-growing US cities, despite its location in the

Santa

CRAM^FTI^tr -

O

O

C o l

middle of the desert.

San Francisco

Between 1960-1990, its

A

population grew by more

than 300 percent. Part of the reason why the Colorado River 'ISH fails to reach the ocean is because ^ -5

of demands for water from Phoenix.



11

^OpAVEDESERj

Cactus plants can survive the

A R I Z O N A ^

'San%ernardino Ana "a .

desert heat. —-

\

12

^Oceanside

■I

\ The collared lizard of

\

4 -

i f

"3

^Tucson

\

\the southwestern deserts

hides under arock at night and comes out in the morning to warm up in the sun.

13

Ra C/jp r'C

K a u a i

Niihau^ 41'

kHilo

1 1

0

1

0

0

This extraordinary road runner ,rarely ies, but can run very brake, or as arudder to »change direction.

0

8

2

2

0

'

0

,

0

33 1

0

10

20

300 km

1 T

T

5

^fast. It uses its long tail as a

0

200 miles

72°F (22“C) 77°F (25°C) 4.1 in (104 mm) 0.9 in (23 mm)

H a w a i i

100 200 300 km

fl

[an July Jan July

Lanai^'^^ H A W A I I

fi

e . I 'a u i M

14

15

Honolulu, Hawaii

O

10

S

n

D E S E R T

San Diego

- f

5?



PHOENIX

SONORAN *Mesa

Sea

0

'

0

0

fi

'

T

0

N O R T H A M E R I C A ♦ U N I T E D S TAT E S O F A M E R I C A

miles 15

200



US: CENTRAL STATES

Ears of the type of wheat used for

making bread

Famous for cowboys and cattle ranches, the central states of the US are also the country’s

“bread basket” and oil re nery. This vast region

includes high mountains, fertile plains, and the Mississippi River system. Texas and Oklahoma have major oil and gas elds, while coal is mined in Wyoming and Montana. The Rocky Mountains contain important national parks, such as Yellowstone and Glacier, and are rich in mineral resources. Hot summers and cold winters, as well as \iolent hailstorms and tornadoes, make the region’s climate one of extremes. TORNADO ALLEY Several hundred tornadoes a

year strike ‘Tornado Aliev,”

Missouri. They occur when hot air from the Gulf of

Mexico hits cold, dry air from Canada. The violent

storms, known as “twisters,' cut through towns and

countryside, destroying everything in their path.

P

Atwisting column of rising air forms beneath athunder cloud.

.column

ii

and

Today, most Americans live in cities and towns, but at the start of this

sucks

century, two out of every

tU; up dirt and objects - \ y

Tornadoes can travel at 112 mph (180 km/h).

1

RURAL AMERICA

The air spirais up the

f :

ve adults

lived on farms. There are still many small towns with populations of less than 10,000 people. These towns are often in farming country and are where people go for supplies, to attend school, church, or special

\

events, such as this fair.

Hats keep

t 1;

Grains of wheat

The great plains Once home to millions of buffalo, the vast open plains between the Rocky Mountains and the Mississippi River

Plains produce more wheat and corn than anywhere else on Earth. Farming is highly mechanized, with huge machines to harvest the grain. In drier parts, the land can be farmed only if it is irrigated, often using water taken from anatural underground reservoir, called an aquifer.

Kansas, Oklahoma, and

f

a

I

are now planted with cereal grains. Farmers on the Great

an area tliat runs through

off the sun

Cowboy country

and the rain and were

Cattle are raised on the Great Plains and

once used to

foothills of the Rocky Mountains. In

c a r r y w a t e r.

summer, cowboys on horseback used to

drive the cattle to fresh pastures; in winter,

Leather

they herded them back to the ranch to be

I

cuffs

sold at auction for food. Hollywood lms

■^k

^turned cowboys into heroes, but life in

m

the saddle was not easy. Pay was poor, wand men often spent 15 hours aday on

r.

horseback in scorching heat or driving rain. Today, ranches are smaller and

cowboys and horses may be ferried from

1

\ranch to pasture by truck and trailer.

t

Alasso is

;]

used to

rope cattle.

A

W t

rider from cattle horns.

Boots have

Fringe helps / to drain away any rainwater.

Spurs

From Minnesota in the north to its

CITIES OF THE DEAD Cemeteries in New Orleans are built

enormous delta in the Gulf of Me.xico, the the central states. It is one of the World’s f-w.

grounds are called

keep feet rmly in the stirrups.

Cities of the Dead.

busiest waterways, suitable for cargo boats for almost 1,802 miles (2,900'km). This

oods. The burial

heels to

mighty Mississippi’River ows through

a

above ground to protect them when the Mississippi

:

Chaps protect the

'IK':

Mississippi river

X

view of the river shows it owing through t v

Iowa, where it forms anatural border with

Illinois and Wisconsin. In the south, severe Awreath of

owers.

ooding often occurs after heavy rains.

f T Z ' - - . - - - : ,

fi

fi

fi

fl

fl

fi

3 4 fl

fi

fl

fl

N O R T H A M E R I C A ♦ U N I T E D S TAT E S O F A M E R I C A

A

B

D

C

♦UNITED

AMERICA

E

S TAT E S

F

OF

G

AMERICA

I

H

1

■ L. Sakakawea

>

M i n o t

Fort Peck,

2

t :

O

K A N S A S

:

■^Moky H/LLS

.Bbert

Longest river: Missouri, 2,714

fSs o

u r i

JEFFERSON St- Louis C I T Y

P u e b l o

Highest point: Mt. Elbert, 14,432 ft

M I S S O U R I

W i c h i t a

(4,399 m) MapE

●Spring eld

Largest lake: L. Pontchartrain 625 sq miles (1,619 sq km) Map Lll

8

e

Kansas City \

T O l >T5

O

miles (4,367 km) Map 1



Farmington

>

Tulsa

y /

OTtOdioj

SANTA Efe

o

Albutpierque

9

>

o

A R K A N S A S

.●

Norman

M

, O K L A

N E W

F o r t

A

iU

'^^UTTLE ROC»

S m i t h

● L a w t o n

M E X I C O Q.

2

^Fayetteville

lOMA

i

Amarillo

5W

Pine!

L u b b o c k

jji

s

Dallas

5.-^'

10

A , A , C D

Fort Worth

as Cru^s^

Shreveport

Abilen^

CD

r -

p

I W a c o

T E X A S

■ V

11 y-

\ B ATO N ROUGE'

E LV ^ L \ R D S PL

AT E

-L.. . Beaumont.

O

AV

o

A U S T I N

Houston San Antonio

I

)

^New Orleans

o

/

'

i

12 0

I 13

S!

Corp Christi ■ Laredo ° ■

Houston, Texas Jan 53°F (12°C)

v. _

'It

July SS-F (27”C)

L

Jan 3.5 in (89 mm) July 3.9 in (99 mm)

14 OUT

OF

THE

GROUND

The US is the world’s third largest producer of crude oil and the world leader in

petroleum products, such as fuel oil. Oil was discovered in Texas in the early 1900s, bringing great wealth to the state. Today, Texas is the second largest oil-producing state after Alaska. Magnesium,

15

0

10

20

5

,S00 km

10

miles 1,5

iron, and uranium are also mined there.

0

5

0

7

0

0

35 fi

c

0

hrs

Mississippi

A

f

I

0

\

0

NORTH

200

A ^ 0

\

D e l t a

AMERICA

♦UNITED

S TAT E S

OF

AMERICA

US:EASTERN STATES Excellent harbors, eertile land, and rich

RULING

COUNTRY

of laws, known as a constitution, that sets out how the country should be

governed. The center of government is Washington, DC, where the President

some of the country’s largest cities, such as New York

and his family live in

and Washington, DC, as well as the once-great industrial centers of Chicago, Detroit, and Cleveland

I

THE

The US has awritten set

mineral resources have made this region one of the most densely populated in the country. It was along the East Coast that the rst settlers from Europe arrived in the 16th cenfury. Today, the area includes

The White House. The President is the head of state and is chosen in

on the Great Lakes. Earther south, farmers use the

elections that are held

land to cultivate cotton, tobacco, and vegetables

once every four years.

grown for their oil. Hurricanes are athreat to people living on the Gulf and Atlantic coasts.

The White House has been the home of

every US president since 1800.

Big BUSINESS in new york Originally afur-trading post at the mouth of the

Hudson River, New York is now the country’s nancial capital. Wall Street, so called because it marked the line of the old city wall, is the j

home of the New York Stock Exchange

■-mfL

-

Einancial deals worth billions of dollars are

m

■vj.

made there every day, and on the trading

I

oor screens display up-to-date information f r o m a r o u n d t h e w o r l d . N e w Yo r k i s k n o w n a s T H E A P PA L A C H I A N S

The Appalachian Mountains run through North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. For many years, coal was mined here and used to power

V

“the city that never sleeps,” and many people are still out at 4a.m. The city is also famous for its museums, theaters, restaurants, and parks.

steel mills. Today, many mines and factories

have closed, eliminating jobs. Despite aplan to open up the area to tourists, Appalachia remains

-.-U.

! i ^

fcj

/ {

I

I't

This huge machine picks the cotton bolis from the plant.

. i ● ●

one of the poorest parts of the US.

I'; ^

Flower buds

~

form on the

r

I.---

cotton plants..

The sign on this blues club in Memphis, Tennessee, is shaped like agiant guitar.

I!

Flowers turn THE

BIRTH

pink and then fall off.

OF THE BLUES

This part of the US

is the birthplace of some of the world’s

most popular music. Jazz and blues were based on the

spiritual and work songs of the black population. Country music began as poor white people’s music in Kentucky

After the

The cotton boll

opens into a uffy ber ready for harvesting.

Motown grew up in Detroit, or Motor

To w n .

into fabric for

invented in 1898.

and abroad. ,—

shirts, pants, and

does the hard work. Soy beans, used mainly for oil, are now the biggest crop in tbis region.

towels, which are sold at home

.

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eld to fabric

In the mid-1800s, the southern states produced 80 percent of the world’s cotton and grew rich on the pro ts. Cotton was grown on huge plantations, then handpicked by black slaves who had been brought Cotton is still an important crop, although modern machinery now

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Cotton -from

by force from Africa. Slavery was nally abolished in the US in 1865.

Cotton is woven

Neon, used to light up so many buildings across America, was rst

fl

ower

falls off, atiny seed ripens and grows into apod, or boll.

a n d Te n n e s s e e , and the soul label

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NORTH

♦UNITED

AMERICA

S TAT E S

F

OF

G

AMERICA

H

I

K

J

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

0

Jan 30°F (-1°C) July 74°F (23“C)

100 1

L

200 1

T

300 km

T

1

0 UNITED OF

200 miles

S TAT E S .AMERICA

Jan 3in (76 mm) July 4.2 in (107 mm)

0

C

A

M A I N E

i lA

.U'

M
a.s ❖. G r e a t

;●Holguii

Cl If of

Guael^nayabOj

Inagual

● B a \ ' a m o

^

Caribbean are descendants /5X-

Cai

of the African slaves brought over to work the plantations. Europeans, Asians, Syrians,

Turks Is.6

T

URKS & C A K OS ISLANDS

de duba

and Lebanese also form a

(UK)

Guantanamo

part of Caribbean culture.

4;^Port-de-Paix

Bay (US)

M o n t e c r i s t i

A

ICA

I

●Pjierto Plata

q&M|ranciscodeMacaris

Jerer

Spanish

PORT-Al

>*●

GSTOl

tWEl'N-

0

I-'/*

Choco Indians, but their THE

numbers were severely

once

held

considerable

power in the area and traded, mainly by canoe, along the Caribbean coast. Important chiefs were carried by hammock. Today, the Cuna live in small villages and depend on agriculture for aliving.

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®

Hammocks are

develops from clays, sand, and silt deposited

made of woven

from these rivers is called

ber from plants that grow on

alluvial soil, and is good for growing crops such as the vegetables shown here. With poorer soils the land is used for afew years and then left until its natural fertility returns. This system of land

the coast.

Embroidered clothing designs, known as molas, are afeature of the Cuna culture.

use is called roza.

51 fi

SOIL

rivers. The soil that

of European explorers in the 16th century. The Cuna

GOOD

Panama has many

reduced after the arrival

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CENTRAL

'.T7j

Find out mor Bananas: 48

Coffee: 50, 62, 66 Export dependency: 281 Peoples of the continent: 42

AND

SOUTH

AMERICA

♦CURA

Cuba )>

More than 200 rivers wind their way across Cuba, watering the lush green scenery of the Caribbean’s largest island. The land is made up of mountains, rolling hills, and at plains, all covered in afertile soil that is ideal for growing sugar, tobacco, and avariety of tropical fruits and vegetables. Most Cubans are descended from the early Spanish settlers, or from Africans brought over later to work as slaves on the plantations. In recent decades, the socialist policies of the long-standing leader Fidel Castro have kept

, / C U B A

Capital city: Havana Area: 42,803 sq miles (110,860 sq km) Population: 10,800,000

Of cial language: Spanish

Cuba isolated from much of the world.

Major religions: Christian

Cuban politics

42%, other 58% Government;

One-party state

)k

Currency: Cuban peso Adult literacy rate: 96%

,0QUE

I.

In 1959, Fidel Castro and agroup of rebels overthrew the ruling dictator, Fulgencio Batista. Since then, Cuba has been acommunist state, aided

Life expectancy: 76 years

by the Soviet Union until its breakup in the early 1990s. Many

1,^

People per doctor; 270

)EL

Televisions: 207 per 1,000 people

MUSIC

AND

DANCE

Cuba’s lively music re ects its mix of Spanish and African in uences. The Spanish brought distinctive melodies, along with the guitar and violin, and the Africans brought avery different style, as well as various drums and short wooden sticks called claves. The music has

gradually fused to create rhythms such as the mambo and salsa.

Athriving Afro-Cuban jazz scene has also developed.

^of Castro’s social policies have ^been successful. Housing and

Dark brown

sugar has

Cigars are stored in boxes

health care have greatly improved, and most people can

made from cedar wood to

now read and write. However,

remove ali

keep them fresh.

the US remains hostile to the

the syrup.

not been re ned to

communist government.

^Cuba’s warm days and cool nights are

ve different

types of tobacco.

re ned. Rum is made from

the distilied Juice of sugarcane.

ml/

Sugar is stored inside the stalk, in a rm puip.

avor of the leaf before it is sent to one of

from at least

partiaily

(sunshine.

leaves are picked when pale green and hung up to dry for 40-45 days. They are then sorted and packed for the fermentation process, which mellows the

Agood cigar is made

been

/rain as weli as

jideal for growing tobacco. Tobacco

A

Light brown sugar has

Sugarcane is a giant grass that needs pienty of

^CUBAN CIGARS

Cuba’s famous cigar factories. Cigars are rolled by hand by men and women working at long wooden tables.

'M

TV’'

Adark syrup _ known as

by-product of cane juice.

The largest city in the Caribbean, Cuba’s capital, Havana, has apopulation of

Sugar industry

more than 2million. It was

Sugar has long been important to Cuba and still

founded by the Spanish in

makes up 75 percent of the country’s earnings from

1515 and some areas of

exports. By the 1800s, the sugar industry was already booming, fueled by African slaves who worked by hand on the vast colonial plantations. Today, the methods are more modern and the cane is usually cut down by machine or bulldozer. However, during the early 1990s, poor weather reduced the sugar harvests and there were also problems with obtaining

the city are extremely old, with cobbled streets and

elegant colonial buildings. Today, parts of Havana have become run down and

in

need

of

improvement. However, housing policies mean there are no shantytowns around the city. Havana is amajor port and exports most of Cuba’s sugar, tobacco, and tropical fruit.

fuel from the former Soviet

U n i o n . To o v e r c o m e t h i s o i l

crisis, many of the mills started to use bagasse, a by-product of sugarcane, to run their machinery.

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Ovtlftl

moiasses is a

Havana

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CENTRAL

Find out mor Breakup of the ussr: 136

Cities: 17, 43 Peoples of the continent: 42 Political systems: 270-271

CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA ♦JAMAICA

JAMAICA The beautiful island of Jamaica is aplace

I

of strong contrasts. On the one hand, there is

iJAMAICA/

the relaxed attitude of people enjoying the

national passions -cricket and reggae music. On the other hand, there is tension between 'A r

the few powerful families and the many poor living in violent slums. This side of life is rarely seen by the tourists who ock here each year. In addition to tourism, the mineral

JAMAICA

Capital city: Kingston Area: 4,243 sq miles

(10,990 sq km Population: 2,374,193 Of cial language: English Major religions: Christian

bauxite, used to make aluminum, is a

Rastafarianism

valuable source of income. Sadly, the

The Rastafarian religion began among

landscape is damaged by

the poor of Kingston, Jamaica, in the

democrac

the bauxite mines, which leave red mud

Selassie, the former Emperor of

Currency:

lakes with an acid

also believe that God (Jah) will lead

Adult literacy rate: 99%

content that kills

Life expectancy: 73 years

vegetation.

black people back to Ethiopia, the promised land. Rastafarians do not

60%, other 40 Government: Multiparty

Jamaican dollar

1930s. Members believe that Haile

Ethiopia (Ras Tafari), was agod. They

usually eat pork, they are against violence, and wear their hair in long

People per doctor: 2,040 Televisions: 130 per 1,000 people

dreadlocks. Their clothes are often

green, yellow, and red because these are the colors of the Ethiopian

ag.

REGGAE MUSIC

The driving rhythms of reggae music can be heard everywhere across the island. Its songs often tell of hardship and political struggle, and are linked to Rastafarianism. Reggae developed in Jamaica from ska, which was ablend of African, European, and South

American styles. Jamaican singer Bob Marley (1945-81) made reggae music popular around the world.

Island industries Avariety of industries bring money to Jamaica, from oil re ning to clothes manufacturing. Various minerals are mined, with bauxite being the most

Kingston Jamaica’s capital city and chief port, Kingston, is one of the largest urban centers in the Caribbean. Founded by the British, the city

rst

grew as amajor port for shipping cane sugar to Europe. However, an earthquake in 1907 damaged the city. It has now been rebuilt with modern hotels, banks, and

nancial of ces.

important. One rapidly growing industry is data processing, which involves typing data into computers

and sending it to companies in the US. Unlike many other Caribbean countries, however, Jamaica’s data

processing companies are mostly owned by Jamaicans, and not by large foreign organizations.

Crowded shantytowns also exist on the western

side of the city. Violence frequently breaks out here, connected either to political unrest or to

the long-established trade in illegal drugs. FARMING THE LAN

^

The breadfruit tree

produces fruit with apuip that is eaten as avegetable

Dasheen is grown for its edible

Not everyone in Jamaica works in industry ^

root and leaves.

or tourism -agriculture is also important. cr-^ Plantations growing sugar, bananas, coffee, C.~7.. and cocoa employ large numbers of

Okra Is used In

or farm their own small plots of land,

soups and stews

producing food for themselves, as shown here,

or eaten as a



vegetable.

(/■.●●●. A..

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%

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more

Growth of cities: 17 Religion: 274-275 Sugar: 52

’ /

L . 53

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out

Ethiopia: 218

people. Many Jamaicans also sh for aliving with alittle left over to sell at local markets.

Find

THE

BAHAMAS

s

The BAHAMAS

i

This long line of about 700 coral islands snakes its way across the warm Caribbean Sea. PUERTO

RICO

It was on the island of San Salvador tha

Christopher Columbus

M

,

rst set foot when he

7

arrived in the “New World” of the Americas in

\

W/.

1492. The Spanish, who called the islands Bajamar, meaning “shallow seas,” were followed by British settlers, and the islands remained aBritish colony until 1973. Today, the islands are aparadise for vacationers of every nationality. They are also amajor nancial center, because tax laws make it pro table

THE BAHAMAS

Capital city: Nassau Area: 5,359 sq miles (13,880 sq km) Population: 300,000

Of cial language: English Major religions: Christian

JUNKANOO FESTIVAL At the end of each year, the streets come alive with the dancing and

music of the Junkanoo parades. This festival forms alink with the

country’s past. It is said that when an African chief, given the name John Canoe (Junkanoo), came here as aslave, he was granted the right

for banks and foreign businesses to have of ces here.

95%, other 5%

to celebrate in true African style.

Government: Multiparty democracy

Main overseas

Currency: Bahamian

J

dollar



Adult literacy rate: 98%

I ^ 1

!(

Canada

UK

Germany Others

tourists 1994

ir»-

I

Life expectancy: 72 years

M

People per doctor: 1,060

»

Televisions: 224 per 1,000 people

Jt.

1

1

AL .lAuiL.ty I

■; Ut_LjL _Uti>! i

1,254,21 99,02

a 1

PUERTO RICO*

29,39

28,49

1 0 4 , 9 1 5

To u r i s t d e s t i n a t i o n People from all over the world come to play on the white sandy beaches and in the warm

.hi

" I

Capital city: San Juan

' f a *

w a t e r s o f t h e B a h a m a s . To u r i s m i s v i t a l t o

Area: 3,459 sq miles

the economy and at least half the local people work in jobs linked to the tourist

(8,959 sq km Population: 3,500,000 Of cial language: Spanish

>^A

%

^

85%, other 15%

trade, in hotels, shops, and restaurants. The city of Freeport on Grand Bahama is

the largest tourist resort, with adeep-water harbor for cruise ships. However, passengers often eat and sleep on their ship, which does not help the local economy.

Major religions: Christian .

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: US dollar *Puerto Rico is not an

independent country. It is a self-governing commonwealth state of the US.

Puerto

rico

SpanishisthemainlanguageofPuertoRico,butthe country is strongly American in avor. Colonized by

Spain in the years after Columbus, the Spanish stayed in control until the 1890s, when the US took over.

The cultivation of tobacco, sugar, and tropical

fruits remains important despite the increasing

number of factories set up by US manufacturers. Most people have agood standard of living with

Operation bootstrap This plan, which began in 1948 with backing from the US, was

|H||g)^ set up to tackle the island’s

economic problems. Attracted by low taxes and cheap labor, many .US companies moved here. IOver the years, the plan

"has helped raise living

5standards on the island.

excellent education and

The main industries

health-care programs.

include petrochemicals, textiles, and medicines.

PEOPLE OF PUERTO RICO

Puerto Ricans are mainly of Spanish and African descent. Most live in

cities, with one-third in the capital of San Juan. Overcrowding forces others into housing projects outside the main cities. Some people choose to move to the US.

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CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA ♦THE BAHAMAS AND PUERTO RICO

Find out mor Coral islands: 202 Education: 277 Health:

216

Peoples of the continent: 42

1

CENTRAL

AND

SOUTH

AMERICA

♦HAITI

AND

DOMINICAN

REPUBLIC

H a i t i H A I T I

The poorest country in the western world, Haiti DOMINICAN

REPUBLIC

A

"

H A I T I

Capital city: Port-au-Prince Area: 10,714 sq miles (27,750 sq km) Population: 6,800,000 Of cial languages: French, French Creole

Major religions: Christian 96%, other 4%

shares the island of Hispaniola with the Dominican

Republic. Arevolution by African slaves in I79f, led by Toussaint Ouverture, broke French rule, and Haiti became the rst black republic. Recent decades were dominated by the cruel dictatorship of Francois Duvalier, known as “Papa Doc,” and his son, “Baby Doc.” Political unrest continues and the country

ART

AND

C U LT U R E

Many Haitians try to make extra money by selling craft goods, such as straw hats and woodcarvings, and by acting as unof cial tourist guides. Since the 1930s, artists have been noted for producing simple, bold paintings in astyle derived

suffers from great poverty. Many Haitians practice the religious cult of voodoo, which blends traditional African beliefs with Roman Catholicism. Followers

believe in powerful spirits, and dancing to the beat of sacred drums is part of the voodoo ritual.

from the decorations in voodoo

temples.

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Gourde

■● m

II

Soil erosion Farming is the main occupation here and

Adult literacy rate: 56% Life expectancy: 55 years

most Haitians live on small plots of land,

People per doctor: 7,140 Televisions: 5per 1,000 people

growing food and keeping goats. They make very little money and pressure for more land to farm means that trees are

constantly being cut down. Some wood

D O M I N I C A N R E P U B L I C

is turned into charcoal, shown here,

Capital city: Santo Domingo

and used as fuel in rural areas. Goats

Area: 18,815 sq miles

The exposed soil has now become so severely eroded that crop yields are poor.

overgraze on the remaining woodland.

(48,730 sq km Population: 7,500,000

It has been estimated that one-third of

Of cial language: Spanish Major religions: Christian 95%, other 5%

the land in Haiti is no longer arable.

democracy

DOMINICAN

Currency: Dominican Republic pes Adult literacy rate: 84%

REPUBLIC

Government: Multiparty

Life expectancy: 67 years People per doctor: 930 Televisions: 84 per 1,000 people

Island of Hispaniola

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

The landscape of mountains and forests in the Dominican Republic

may be similar to that of its island neighbor, but other aspects of life

H A I T I

are very different. Spain was the main colonial power here

per 1,000 people

per 1,000 people

9telephones per 1,000 people

86 telephones per 1,000 people

1.7 years

4.3 years

SANTO

DOMINGO

The capital city of Santo Domingo was founded by Columbus’s brother, Bartolome, in 1496. The city became the main base from which Spain launched its conquest of the region. The city has many recently restored colonial buildings dating back to the 16th century.

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at school

ECONOMY

People in the Dominican Republic have abetter standard of living than those in Haiti, where most cannot even afford health-care. The economy is stronger in the

natural resources, with

Republic because it is boosted by earnings from tourism

deposits of silver, platinum,

industries, such as

uranium, and nickel, and the

largest gold mine in the C a r i b b e a n . To u r i s m a n d

sugar are the most important source of foreign earnings. 55

fi

at school

THE

R E P.

84 cars

and US in uences are also

strong. The people and the culture are amix of Spanish, African, and native peoples. The country is rich in

DOMINICAN

4oars

and mining and by agovernment that encourages new textiles. In recent

years vacation resorts have sprung up across the country, creating] obs. Many Haitians come here in search of work.

Find out mor Dictatorship: 271 Peoples of the continent; 42 Religion: 274-275

Soil erosion: 55, 244

SOUTH

Lesser

AMERICA

♦LESSER

ANTILLES

Antilles

The ISLANDS OF the Lesser Antilles stretch

-C5i -

l e s s e r a n t i u . e s

C R I C K E T

in agentle curve from the Greater Antilles

Cricket is the national

game of the Englishspeaking islands. Children learn to play ^on sun-dried turf that

island of Puerto Rico in the north, down to the coast of South America. Once

S T. K I T T S A N D N E V I S

European colonies, most of the islands are now independent. However, the background of African, European,

Capital city: Basseterre

and Asian in uences has resulted

Area: 139 sq miles (360 sq km)

in avibrant and distinctive culture,

Population: 44,000 ANTIGUA

AND

B A R B U D A

Capital city: St.Johns Area: 170 sq miles (440 sq km) Population: 63,880

dVs--

highlighted in music and festivals. Bananas, which thrive in the heat and

high rainfall, remain amajor export,

Iallows the ball to be B“bowled” at high

Ispeeds. As adults Ithey can play for the PWest Indies team, drawn

from

the

best players on each island. The team has

included many great bowlers and batsmen.

although some producers are at risk from

B r i a n L a r a f r o m Tr i n i d a d h a s

hurricanes, which can devastate the land.

played for the West Indies cricket team since 1990.

D O M I N I C A

T R A N S P O R TAT I O N

Capital city: Roseau

In the past, people and goods

Area: 290 sq miles

were transported by boat

(750 sq km

between the islands. Today,

Population: 83,000 S T.

I

LUCIA

Capital city: Castries Area: 239 sq miles

(620 sq km Population: 153,000 S T. V I N C E N T A N D THE GRENADINES

ships are still the most economic way to move

cargo, and ports, such as Castries in St. Lucia, handle

the islands’ exports. Many islands have no railroads and main roads are often con ned

to the coasts, making the interior dif cult to reach. Antigua, Barbados, Martinique, and other islands now have

Capital city: Kingstown

large airports capable of handling jumbo jets.

Area: 131 sq miles (40 sq km) Population: 117,000 B A R B A D O S

Capital city: Bridgetown Area: 166 sq miles

To u r i s m The main industry in the

(430 sq km

Caribbean is tourism, which

Population: 300,000

provides work for local people in restaurants, hotels, shops,

GRENADA

Capital city: St. George’s Area: 131 sq miles

(340 sq km Population: 84,000 TRINIDAD

AND

T O B A G O

Capital city: Port-of-Spain Area: 1,981 sq miles (5,130 sq km)

and beach stalls. However the

work is mainly seasonal since most visitors only come to escape cold at home. Also many hotels

are owned by foreign companies, and money does not always remain on the islands. Some local

governments are trying to reduce their dependence on tourism.

Population: 1,300,000

Food from the land

t t

SCARLET IBIS

■■ ■■■ S3

The Caribbean is ahaven for colorful bird life,

notably the scarlet ibis of

Trinidad

and

Tobago. The ibis lives

Because of the shortage of land, most island farms are small. Farmers grow food for themselves, and sell awide range of crops in local markets, including yams, sweet potatoes, okra, and salad crops, as well as fruits such as mangoes, limes, coconuts, and bananas. They also grow cash crops for

Curved beak for

digging in mud

in the islands’ mangrove swamps,

export. The main crop varies from island to island, with nutmeg grown in Grenada, coffee in Trinidad, arrowroot

ying off during the day to feed on crabs and other small sea creatures that live in the coastal mud ats.

in St. Vincent, and sugar and bananas almost everyw'here.

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CENTRAL AND

Industry

LESSER ANTILLES

r

INDUSTRIES

The most industrialized

Antigua and Barbuda

country in the area is Trinidad and Tobago, which has petrochemical,

Cotton production, tourism, rum

I 4 m *

iron, and steel industries based on its resen’es of oil

c >

4aa

J

Dominica

CO c o

Barbados, the other islands

Bananas, citrus fruits,

have few mineral resources and

essentiai oils

rely on bananas, sugar, cotton, and cocoa for export. In recent

St. Lucia

*‘v)

>

years, all the islands have tried to produce awider range of exports. and Martinique an oil re nery.

V:;

Light industrial parks have been set up on anumber of islands.

Co ■YC'

lAKE

La Brea, in the .soutli of Trinidad, boasrs one of the world's most

Bananas, cement works, food processing Barbados

Ji 0 4

a n t i l

unusual sights. Near the town is a lake

Bananas, tourism, eiectricai parts St. Vincent and THE Grenadines

St. Vincent now has a our mill,

PITCH

St. Kitts and Nevis

Sugar, cotton production, tourism

6

and natural gas. Apart from

Sugar, tourism, electrical parts

m

i

Grenada Bananas, cocoa,

lled not with water, but with

tourism

Q)

natural pitch, ablack, sticky tar

T r i n i d a d a n d To b a g o

that is mainly used for surfacing

Oii re ning, sugar,

roads. The lake, which is 200 It

chemicals

< 2 3

(60 m) deep, is the world’s largest

single supply of natural pilch. It is thought to be linked to the underground rocks that su]5ply

SOUTH

nearbv South .-America with oil.

AMERICA The Jinnah Memorial Mosque i n Tr i n i d a d s e r v e s t h e M u s l i m

community. People are called to prayer from the minarets.

ISIAND MUSIC

Almost every Caribbean island

resounds with the beat of calypso

Minaret

music, which has its origins in the

slave songs brought from M'est Africa. Calypso has astrong beat and lyrics

' IY ."

about social and political problems.

In recent years .wen, amixture of soul and calypso, has started to become popular with younger people. steel band music originated in Trinidad, using pans or drums made from large oil drums.

This steel band is playing music for tourists in Tobago.

ISIAND SPICES The island of Grenada is

the world’s second largest

Ginger comes

■I\

The single brown nutmeg seed is protected within agreen fruit.

from the thick

underground

PEOPLE OF THE CARIBBEAN

stem of this

Most people who live on the islands are a

owering plant.

Indonesia, and grows almost one-quarter of the world’s total crop. Nutmeg, aspice used to avor food, originated in

from the Indian .subcontinent. Shipped over to

I

work in the plantations, the immigrants brought their religions with them, setting up Hindu temples and Mtislim mosques and continuing

The oil from nutmeg

the East Indies, and was

to obsen'e their own religious customs.

can be added to

/perfume and soap.

introduced to Grenada by the Dutch in the 19th century. The trees

ourished in the

Find

fertile volcanic soil, warm

pepper, and cloves are also grown on the island.

Spices: 198, 264

t^PGround nutmeg T' tcan be used

Ginger root can be

in cooking.

used fresh or dried. ■i t

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Hurmcanes: 44 ijj;

57 fi

out

Bananas: 48

temperatures, and high annual rainfall. Ginger, cinnamon,

mixture of descendants of African slaves,

Europeans, and local Carib Indians. The exception are the people of Trinidad, where almost 40 percent of the population is originally

producer of nutmeg, after

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CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA ♦LESSER ANTILLES

car.

Sugar: 52

i

Northern south America The llama is

Arching around the rain forests of the great Amazon River, the

ANIMALS

countries in northern South America are dominated hy the Andes Mountains. Running north to south from Venezuela to Ecuador, and then through Chile, the mountains were once home to the Inca

THE

The Quechua have lived high in the Andes in Bolivia, Peru, and

Ecuador for hundreds of years. The Quechua were once farmers,

used to carry goods.

'1!!

ANDES

f t

¥/

people of the

\i"'

Andes have relied 'j® y i

on agroup o W versatile mammals ’

and carved out ahuge empire. British, Erench, and Dutch colonies were also established in the northeast. Except for Erench Guiana, these are now independent, although not without problems. Extremes of wealth and poverty, overcrowded cities, and the illegal drugs trade are features of most countries in this region. QUECHUA INDIANS

OF

For centuries, the

Empire. In search of gold, the Spanish arrived in the 16th century

1

til 'I.

■'i.-l

for food and clothing. The wild guanaco and vicuna, as well as the domesticated llama and

alpaca, are treasured for their wool and meat. Vicuna wool is as ne as silk, while coarse llama wool is used to make

blankets, ropes, and other goods. The Altiplano, or high plain, Is used for growing potatoes and grazing animals.

L a k e Ti t i c a c a s t r a d d l e s the border between Peru and Bolivia.

The Andes Is the

longest unbroken mountain chain over

9,850 ft (3,000 mj tall in the world

and shared common land equally Tbetween men and women. Today

‘many Quechua have moved to the cities in search of work. Those who

remain farm tiny plots of land.

Cultivating the Andes

3,850 ft

3,000 m)

Fertile land is in such short supply in the Andes that every available scrap of soil must be

Potatoes, wheat, and barley grow in the cool highland areas

used. Farmers often cut terraces into

the hillsides to get the maximum use from their land. Crops are

of the Andes. ti y

grown to suit the temperature,

7 /

/

6,550 ft (2,000 m)

/

which is hot and humid on

the lower slopes near the coast, but gets £ cooler as the

Sugarcane

Sugarcane, coffee, tobacco, and corn

VV >

iK-A i

ourish in the

m

3,280 ft

mountains rise

temperate zone.

Potato plant

(1,000 m)

upward. On the high

Bananas, cocoa,

plains heyond the Andes

cotton, and rice ah

w , I

grow well in the

only the potato will ripen

warm climate of

successfully. This artwork shows a

the lowlands.

section of the Andes from Peru to Bolivia.

Sea level Bananas

World drug routes u s

To Europe

u s

"o

■/ / .

To eastern

A

The drug trade

t o

k To N o r t h Africa

For many centuries, people in this region have chewed the leaves of the coca plant to reduce

hunger. Today the leaves are processed to make

T o

cocaine, an illegal drug much in demand in

western

US and Canada

S O U T H A M E R I C A /'

Main growing areas 1

Main traf c routes

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waterfall in the world. It was

crops, which need tending. Growing coca is also more pro table than growing food. As aresult, large quantities of coca are grown in isolated areas

was

of the Andes. Once re ned into cocaine, the

5 8 fi

FALLS

Angel Falls is the highest discovered in 1935 by Jimmy Angel, an American pilot who

drug is smuggled out of the region.

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ANGEL

North America and Europe. Coca bushes thrive

on poor soil and need little attention, unlike food

/

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CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA ♦NORTHERN SOUTH AMERICA

ying across Venezuela in

search of ariver he had once

prospected for gold. Instead he ew over avast waterfall that

plunges 3,215 ft (980 m) into t h e C h u r u n R i v e r b e l o w.

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Pop^yan SanAgustin.

^Jan 79T (26°C)

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VENEZUE-L

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^CARACAS

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^

example, supplies the quinine used to treat malaria. Other plants have properties that help ght cancer.

it'

%

r L -

LOSS

of years. But the rain forest is afragile environment

obtained from the

plants that provide the basis for many valuable IK products, such as rubber, varnish, paint, cosmetics, and most importantly,

V

r

Quinine is

POWTR

The forests contain

i

on Earth. It covers about one-third of

♦BRAZIL

OF

FOREST

Vital areas of forest are lost through logging, cattle ranching, and relocation (moving people). Building roads also opens up the interior to further destruction. If the present rate of deforestation continues, there will be no forest left by the end of the century.

and

people are under serious threat as vast areas of the forest are cut down. This village chief is Native Indian homelands

f r o m t h e Te m b e t r i b e .

R E L O C AT I O N

The Brazilian government recently cleared large areas of forest and encouraged landless people to buy small plots of land for farming. But the soil is shallow and rapidly

-tC; - a . „

w

il

r f

L Indian

. 4

tribes

L O G G I N G

At one time there were about

5million native Indians living in the rain forest; today, fewer than 200,000 remain. The

T h o u s a n d s o f e b o n y.

I

largest of these tribes are located on the above map. Most live as shifting cultivators, which means they settle for awhile to hunt and grow basic food crops, and then move on. This way the forest soil can recover its fertility. Since the arrival of people from

C AT T L E

BREEDING

About 30 percent of Brazil’s rain forest has been cut down for cattle ranches. But the land

can only support cattle for afew years. Then the ranchers have to move on and clear another site.

■teak, and mahogany trees are cut down each

year for export. People are now encoura ged to buy furniture made of softwoods, such as

pine, which take less time to regrow.

Plan of Brasilia

outside the forest, the Indians have been at risk from diseases, such as in uenza and

Business districts

measles, to which they have no resistance. T. Government

buildings Residential a r e a s

Brasilia The city of Brasilia was built in the late 1950s as

M I N I N G

In the last 20 years large deposits of gold and other minerals have been discovered in the Amazon rain

forest. At Carajas, ahuge iron mountain was accidentally discovered when ageologist crashlanded his helicopter. The rock contains massive amounts of iron ore, as well as manganese and copper. Mining is one of Brazil’s major industries, despite the damage it does to the rain forest.

part of agovernment scheme to encourage people to move into the interior of the country. It became Brazil’s capital in I960, taking over from Rio de Janeiro. The city is laid out in the shape of an airplane, with the business district in the center, residential areas in the wings, and the government in the cockpit. Bold architecture, such as the glass cathedral shown here, is afeature of this modern city.

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69

Find out mor

Cities: 17, 43 Coffee: 50, 62 Rain forests: 15, 204 R o m a n C AT H O i . i c s : 2 7 4

AND

SOUTH

♦SOUTHERN

AMERICA

SOUTH

AMERICA

Southern south America From the tropical interior of Paraguay, through the warm Mediterranean climate of central Chile, to the freezing conditions around the glaciers of Argentina, southern South America is aregion of great contrasts. Four countries -Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay -make up this half of the continent, often called the “southern cone” because of its shape. An important land resource is the pampas, avast fertile plain that stretches across Argentina and Uruguay, where huge

ATA C A M A

quantities of wheat are grown. During the 1970s, all

DESERT

This desert in northern Chile is the

four countries were known for their brutal military dictatorships. These have since been overturned,

driest place on Earth, often with no rain for years on end. Wlien rain does fall, devastating ash oods are

and the countries are now run as democracies.

often the result. The Atacama is a

barren wilderness of sun-baked rock

Main migration routes from 1860-1926

and shifting sand dunes where the nighttime temperature can fall dramatically in just one hour. The only paved road across this desolate desert is the Pan-American Highway.

Migrant groups Many people from Europe have settled in South

America. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, poverty in Italy drove laborers to Argentina

INDIAN

the countries in the south have

only afew native Indian groups, with Paraguay home to the largest proportion. Uruguay has no Indian population at all. The main surviving roups include the Kolia of Argentina, awn here, the Mataco and Mapuche

many never went home. Workers also left Spain for Argentina and Uruguay. AGerman religious group, the Mennonites, moved to

Paraguay from Canada to nd freedom of worship, and the Welsh set up a community in Argentina to escape English rule and preserve their language.

. ' ^ 1

PEOPLES

,Unlike northern South America,

for the wheat harvest;

of central and southern Chile, and the

Ache, who live in Paraguay.

Where people live In the past 50 years there has been agreat shift as people have moved from the country to the cities in search of work. In Argentina

and Uruguay, city populations were already swollen by large numbers of immigrants. In

each country, the capital city has grown very quickly while the population in other cities has remained fairly small. One-third of Argentinians, for example, live in the capital city of Buenos Aires, shown here. Since the 1970s, the move to

the cities has begun ehi p to slow down

E

H

_

r

86% Growth of cities

75%

Cattle breeding In Argentina and Uruguay, cattle breeding for beef exports is amajor source of income. Vast herds of cattle graze the pampas, many feeding on alfalfa plants, which produce aleaner meat. The main breeds are Aberdeen Angus and Herefords, brought over from Europe during the last century. Sheep are grazed in the cooler area of Patagonia, and both Argentina and Uruguay are among the world’s top wool-producing nations.

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78%

About 11 million people

65% 3 7 %

now live in Buenos Aires.

58% 48%

The chart shows

35%

IS] 1990 □ 0791 □ 0591

the percentage of people living in cities in 1950, 1970, and 1990.

Argentina

Paraguay Chile

70 .

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CENTRAL

Uruguay

B

C

AND

SOUTH

D

AMERICA

E

10 1

♦SOUTHERN

F

20 km

5

G

SOUTH

AMERICA

H

I

K

J

Asuncion, Paraguay

300

L

Buenos Aires, Argentina 1

^Jan74°F (23°C)

Jan 83°F (28“C) July63”F (17°C)

100150200miles

July50°F (10°C)

P A R A G U A Y

Jan 3.1 in (79 mm) July 2.2 in (56 mm)

Jan 5.5 in {140 mm)

~!0 July 2.2 in (56 mm) / Arica

2 Jilayor Pablo Lagcrenza



Fuerte , OUmpo Iquique p

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FUadel a

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Highest temperature: Seville, Spain, 122°F (50°C)

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9

10

11

12

13

A

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78

d

i

.

EUROPE

This is ariver vailey before the arrival of agiacier. Glaciers are huge masses of ice that grind away land as they move slowly forwards.

The lake district The 15 lakes of the Lake District in northwestern England lie in U-shaped valleys extending outward like the spokes of awheel from an uplifted dome of low mountains. Long ago, the valleys contained rivers, but during the Ice Age these were deepened by the movement of glaciers. Most were dammed by eroded rock left behind when the glaciers melted. The erosion of the main valleys has cut off tributary valleys and left them “hanging” above the main valleys, often with waterfalls cascading from them.

«●

. ' f r. Wi

NORTHERN

When glaciers I retreat, at the end of an Ice Age for example, they

Ahanging valley on the side of the

main valley

leave behind

U-shaped valleys. Ullswateris alake that lies in aU-shaped valley.

Northern

FORESTS

Athick band of dense coniferous

■r : '

plains

forest, known as taiga, covers northern Europe. Conifers (trees that have cones), such as spruce and pine, keep their leaves all year round and can withstand heavy snow. They also provide winter food and shelter for many animals.

A..

The North European Plain stretches from southern England across Erance and Germany as far as Russia, ending at the Ural Mountains. Most of the Plain is

Shchugor●

low-lying, and in the Netherlands it even lies partly below sea level.

'

Some of the world’s most fertile Lowest

farmland is found here, as well as

temperature:

Ust’Shchugor, Russian

^●Kamn ■' R e s .

Federation, -67°F (-55-C)

important deposits of coal, oil, and natural gas. This is Europe’s most densely populated area and contains many major cities.

Wheat, sugar beets, and apples are grown on the plains of northern France.

Foxes are often

%●found in the

elds

and woodlands of

JFa:

l i

Europe, although many 'now live in towns. They -eat almost anythingTHINGS ON

TO LOOK THE MAP

from rabbits to FOR

apples or worms.

Area: 4,000,000, sq miles (10,400,000 sqkm) Highest point: Mt. El’brus, Russian Federation, 18,510 ft

THE

(5,642 m) MapKl

The region around the

Longest river: Volga, Russian

Mediterranean Sea has a

THE

Federation, 2,194 miles

distinctive climate of

(3,530 km) Map L

hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters.

The Danube, western Europe’s longest river, ows easnvard from its source in Germany to its mouth

Russian Federation,

These conditions are

on the Black Sea. It serves as a

7,100 sq miles (18,389 sq km)

perfect for growing crops such as citrus fruits, grapes, and

trade route between the nine

Largest lake: L. Ladoga,

MapJ Largest island: Great Britain, 88,745 sq miles (229,850 sqkm) MapD9

N

O

P

MEDITERRANEAN

countries that lie along Its course. The Danube delta, where the river divides into numerous channels, is

olives, shown here in

southern Spain. Many trees, such as cork oaks,

an important wetland area. About 300 different bird species have

develop thick bark as a protection against the heat.

been recorded in the delta, as well as boars, deer, and wild cats.

8

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79 7

DANUBE

Peoples oe Europe

■' m j m

Europe is acrowded continent. It is the second smallest of the continents by area, yet it has the second highest population. As aresult, population densities are very high, and most Europeans live in cities. Europe is also crowded with countries more than 40 different nations jostle for position on the continent. Con icts between these countries have often

erupted into war -two world wars have taken place on European soils this century alone. Yet, despite these problems, Europe is by and large arich continent, and many European countries are among the wealthiest in the world. Some pockets of poverty exist, but in general the population enjoys ahigh standard of living compared to most other parts of the world. Much of this wealth has come as aresult of industrial growth, and because of the large colonial empires established by many European countries in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Population: approximately 578,240,000 people (This gure does not include the

EUROPEAN

CITIES

Alarge proportion of Europeans live in cities. The most densely populated part of Europe lies in the west and forms abelt that stretches more or

less continuously from southeastern Britain, through northern France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and into Germany. In these densely populated areas, individual cities can merge into one another, forming what are known as conurbations. The largest of these is in the German industrial region known as the Ruhr. By contrast, in eastern Europe agreater proportion of the population lives in country areas.

Largest country: Russian Federation -the European

Russian Federation.)

part covers 1,527,349

Number of countries: 42

) /

Most densely populated country: Netherlands,

1,062 people per sq mile (410 per sq km)

I C E L A N D

Faeroe

r

/

< ( / / \ (

Is

en)

Least densely populated country: Iceland, 8people per sq mile (3 per

I f

I

R U S S I A N F E D E R A T I O N

sq km)

\ /

ELARUS

I

\

K E Y

P O L A N D

1 N E T H E R L A N D S

I

GERMANY

2 B E L G I U M 3 L U X E M B O U R G

C p.

4 S W I T Z E R L A N D

U K R A I N E sj

5 L I E C H T E N S T E I N 6 M O L D O V A 7 A N D O R R A

>FRANCE

8 M O N A C O 9SAN

s

NtARINO

10

VAT I C A N

11

SLOV'ENIA

12

C R O AT I A

13

BOSNIA

A

ROMANIA

- . T- ^ '

Netherlands:

■ n

QTY

■' \

;

AND



9^

i F

(1,062)410 14

/

;UL^RIA-

15 16

M

lEORl

H E R Z E G O V I N A 14

Y U G O S L AV I A

5(SPAIN T-'"

AI.B.4NIA MACEDONIA

\ a 0.

L Z \\

G i b r a l t ^ (UK)

y- Smallest country: Vatican City, 0.17 sq miles (0.44 sq km)

-"ARMENL

imCET.U

CD

;erbaijan

AZERBAm

0 :

4

Germany: 583 (225)

6

●1



.MALTA

>

Poland:

319(123) P O P U L AT I O N

World

DENSITY

Over 578 million Europeans are crammed into an area little

Population density chart

more than the size of Australia. As aresult, European countries have some of the highest population densities in the world. In the Netherlands, for example, there are 1,062 people per sq mile (410 per sq km). Population densities in eastern Europe are lower, but even these are above the world average.

The gures on the chart show the number of people per sq mile (per sq km). Countries outside Europe are included as acomparison.

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EUROPE

USA

..

average

70(27) 106(41)

||T' i&i

f

M

EUROPE

THE

TWO

EUROPES

Economically, Europe can be divided into two main sets of countries.

Western Europe contains some very rich countries, such as Germany, Switzerland, and France, which have

strong economies. By contrast, eastern Europe contains former communist countries such as Poland,

Hungary, and Romania, which are much poorer. They are still struggling to adjust their economies in order to compete in world markets. Age of population

The changing

Germany (Europe)

P O P U L AT I O N

n

f

16.7

Compared to Asia and Africa, the populations of most European countries are stable -they are not increasing or decreasing to any great

Kenya (Africa)

t 68.7%

14.6%

47.9%

49.1% India

(Asia)

During the period of communist ruie, many peopie in eastern Europe had to wait in line to buy food.

f t

n

n

3%

Cultural

f t

3 6 , 5 %

extent. Birth rates are low,

melting

pot

Europe’s wealth and relative political ility have attracted large umbers of migrants to its shores, many from former

and average life expectancy is

very high -about 75 years in

tif Ages 0-14

colonies. As aresult, most

most countries, compared to less than 60 years in India and

f t

countries, particularly in western Europe, contain large numbers of people

Ages 15-64

most of Africa. As aresult of

these two factors, Europe’s population is relatively elderly, with alarge number of people aged over 65 years.

from

^1 Ages 65+

ethnic

minorities.

In

France, for example, north Mricans from Algeria and other

former

colonies

have

settled in cities such as Marseilles and Paris. The UK's population contains migrants from many countries, including the Caribbean, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.

Former Czechoslovakia split apart peacefully in 1993, when the Czech Republic and Slovakia voted to separate.

New European countries

Former CZEto REPUBLIC

Yugoslavia has been shattered S L O V A K I A

by war since 1991, as

various regions have declared themselves

elected by the people of the EU, meets in this building in Strasbourg, France

countries. S I

I I A

The European Parliament,

independent

\

l A T I A

BOSNIAUND V'lIGO.SI.AVIA

ierzegiAina Y U G O S L AV I .

The EUROPEAN UNION

MACEDQtSIA

In 1957, ve European countries agreed to form the European Economic Community (EEC). They believed that economic cooperation would reduce the

New European countries have also been formed from the former USSR -see

likelihood of war between the

page 136. SPLITTING

A PA RT

Europe is afragmented continent made up of more than 40 independent countries. Even within individual countries there are sometimes separate groups, such as the Basques in Spain, who claim some form of independence from the national government. New countries are still being formed. The former USSR, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia are among the European countries that have split apart in recent years, sometimes violently.

The stars

on the ag of the European Union represent the member countries.

fi

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%

81

member countries and would bring prosperity to the peoples of Europe. Since that time, more countries have joined, and the EEC has been renamed the European Union (EU). Today it consists of 15 member states and in addition to

closer economic cooperation, there are moves to encourage greater political union.

i-r

AND

FINLAND

Scandinavia

1

I

I

1

0;50

75

50 100 150 200 250 km 1 = ^ 1

100

125

150

. I

miles F I N L A N D

North Cap i—7^'^

AND FINLAND

C

-

S0r0ya ' I

2 3

Ringed

The NORTHERN EUROPEAN countries of Norway, Sweden, and Denmark are together known as Scandinavia. Along with neighboring

K a r a s i o t

3

Finland, all four countries have small

v V

C-,

populations and enjoy ahigh standard of living

^ ■

with extensive social welfare systems that

I

K i r i i n a C

Bod0|r *

bodankylsi

\

N

distribute wealth evenly among the people.

4 ,r

O

o

Gallivare

&

o ^

Much of Norway, Sweden, and Finland

Jokkmokk

is covered by forests of pine, spruce,

A

Vfga*’.,. ‘

0

and birch trees, riddled with lakes

.

iC'ddjmr

'iA

Arvidsj

gouged out by glaciers during the last Ice Age. Norway and

● o K e m i

5

N: Vik,

-■

i

^

.

V

Skellcftea

Sweden are mountainous,

ei^^e

rv'-

S t

Hitrq'^^i

li.

®

Sm0la-

while Finland and

.Kokkola

U n i e a

irondhei

M o l d e

i

fertile Denmark

m

stereund

are low-lying.

R ms®

^,j^^nosand Sundsvall

^Hudiksvall

U H e h a n i m e r

Copenhagen, Denmark Jan 32T (OX) July 64°F (18X)

Rauma.'#

MjstwiHamar L. Y

Hario

Flonefoss o

^rammcn o

^Stavang^' *^andnes c

Pori ●

●2^ora

o

Jan 1.9 in {49 mm) July 2.8 in (71 mm)

.OSLO

^Falun

.

Borlange

^avle



Porsghinn

Vanfaa

Uppsala^

Karbtad

cV^rds ,-^brrtalje

9 . O r e b r o

idal

Hameenlinna®

V s

ani

M o s s

\L.V

Jdnkdping ,

Jan 0.9 iri (22 mm) July 2.1 in (53 mm)

^astervik

oVarberg Vi x j o

oHalmstad O

K a l m a r

●nd

r

THINGS TO LOOK FOR ON THE J-LtP

H a n d

Longest river: Kemijoki, Finland,

''H*Wr^Halsi„gborg _

Highest point: Mt. Galdhopiggen, Norway,

.yn' r-”- ■

8,101 ft (2,469 m) MapE

.Bornholma-IN

i»I -

Televisions: 290 per 1,000 people

iSS&Jnijhr

m m i 'HI

IRISH

a

PUBS

Much social life in Ireland

At,

centers around the pub, or bar, where people meet to

wiTitTp

i f

liiii

''YWm

I:''S’^

&

drink, chat, and exchange news. Stories from Irish histoiv

fd'Sii

!

are told through .songs, and bars are often alive with the

n

i l l

sound of folk music. Irish stout -

astrong, dark beer with acreamy, pale head -is the favorite drink. The largest brewery in Europe is

Bustling O’Connell Street is Dublin’s major roadway.

Dublin The capital of Ireland, Dublin, is steeped in the

found in Dublin, opened by the Guinness family 200 years ago.

country’s history. This compact city was the focus for the revolt against British rule and it was here, in 1922, Many Irish peat bogs are adistinctive domed

shape.

that the Irish state was born. In recent years, Dublin has attracted manufacturing and service industries, as

well as many people from other parts of the country that have come here in search of work. The peat is cut out in blocks and then stacked and left to dry. Peat is still

w

hand In many ./J parts of Ireland. ^ thousands

RACEHORSES

ne Irish

thoroughbreds are world famous and frequently win major international laces. The animals, bred on stud farms, are valuable sources of income for the Irish

economy. Buying and selling horses is also p(tpiilar, and countiv horse fairs are afamiliar sight.

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Pea ‘ ‘ Ireland has few natural resources, such as coal or '* oil, that produce energy. What it does have are huge peat bogs. Peat consists of dead, rotted plants that have been compressed and can be burned as fuel. Some villages have their own peat supplies, and there are also vast government-owned areas that are dug out by mechanical cutters. These provide fuel for large power stations that generate electricity. 9 0

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years, mud and plants compress to form peat.

The lush pastures of Ireland provide excellent grazing land for racehorses. These

gathered by ^

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Find out mor B e e r B R E W i N c ; : 11 7

Coal .VND oil: 96, 152, 162 Northern Ireland: 89 Religions: 274-275

LOW

COUNTRIES

The low countries

THINGS TO LOOK FOR ON THE MAP 1

Longest river: Meuse, France/Belgium/ Netherlands, 560 miles (901 km) Map J8

TheTHREECOUNTRIESINTHISREGION-Belgium,the

Highest point: Botrange, Belgium,

Netherlands, and Luxembourg -are known as the Low Countries because much of their land is at and low-lying.

2,277 ft (694 m) Map JI Largest lake: Ijsselmeer, Netherlands, 467 sq miles (1,210 sq km) Map 15

The Low Countries are also called “Benelux” after the

2

Is.

economic union they formed in 1948. The Benelux union allows the free ow of goods between the three countries, although each keeps its own currency and tax system. These are the most densely populated countries in Europe, yet their people generally enjoy

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traditional heavy industries, such as coal mining, are declining, they are being replaced by modern manufacturing

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industries and service activities, such

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ahigh standard of living. Although the region’s

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as banking and administration.

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LUXEMBOURG

Jan 2.4 in (61 mm) July 2.4 in (61 mm)

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13 3

■PSP*'' Rotterdam

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is the world’s

with the coast. The most useful rivers for

Mosel, and Meuse. At the mouth of the

Rhine River stands the port of Rotterdam. Stretching for 12 miles (20 km )along the river, the port can handle 300 cargo ships at atime. Canals are also important for linking the ports with the rivers and inland areas.

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The region’s at plains are used for grazing dairy cattle and for growing owers and vegetables. reclaimed from the sea by enclosing areas with earth barriers, called dykes, and draining out the water. The only areas of high land are the forested Ardennes Mountains, which run across the south of

Belgium and into Luxembourg.

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Much of the farmland has been

transportation and trade are the Rhine,

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FA R M L A N D

Some of Europe’s most important rivers ow through these countries, linking the interior

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busiest and largest port.

Rivers

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Jan 33“F(UC) July 64°F (18X)

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♦THE

EUROPE

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1ST

Netherlands

N E T H E R L A N D S

j

This small, densely populated country

is also referred to as Holland, the name of

two of its provinces. In the 16th and 17th centuries, Dutch merchants and sailors

traveled far and wide, trading in gold and spices. The empire they established stretched

NETHERLANDS

Capital cities: Amsterdam,

The Hagu Area: 14,410 sq miles

(37,330 sq km

from Southeast Asia to the Caribbean. Trade

Amsterdam

is still of great importance to the Netherlands

This historic city is the capital of

today, since several large international companies are Dutch, and exports make up

Population: 15,300,000 Of cial language: Dutch Major religions: Christian

about half the country’s income. The Dutch

66%, Muslim 2%, other 32%

are known for their tolerance and for

the Netherlands and is much visited

by tourists. In the 17th century, Amsterdam was acenter of world trade. Merchants built the network

of canals that crisscross the city and

their liberal social attitudes.

Government: Multiparty

the tall, narrow houses that line the

democracy

canals. Today, Amsterdam is a

Currency: Netherlands guilder

world center for diamond cutting

More than half amillion

people in Amsterdam use abicycle to travel

Adult literacy rate: 99%

and polishing.

to school or work.

Life expectancy: 77 years People per doctor: 410

CYCLING

Televisions: 500 per 1,000 people

The extreme

Tulips were rs

easiest and most popular ways of getting around. Country areas have long❖

5>

VJf riburg

Kaiserslautern

Munich

Jan 29°F (-2°C) July 65°F (18“C)

Erlangen ●

r

Largest lake: L. Muritz, 45 sq miles (117 sq km) Map J3

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\,Bajreuth OBamberg

Mainz *r Darmstadt

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Highest point: Zugspitze, 9,718 ft (2,962 m) Map H12

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Map

iprlitz

Chemntiz

Zwickau i

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France/Netherlands 820 miles (1,320 km)

9

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FOR ON THE MAP

8

'Gotha^ Erfurt

^ologne

LOOK

Bautzen

Dresden^-

Leverkusen! TO

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^Jan 2.4 in (60 mm)

THINGS

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Jan 35T (3°C) Julv66°F(19°C)

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75miles

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(l^S^remerhavenHamburg

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Fehmarn

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Jan 1.8 in (46 mm) July 2.9 in (73 mm)

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Schlep

I

Jan 31 °F (-0.5X) July 66“F (19°C)

< /

Nuremberg ●

Heidelberg

Jan 2.3 in (59 mm) July 5.5 in (139 mm)

CHeilbroim

iK^lsruhe

World’s busiest canal:

●●forzheim

Kiel, 61 miles (98 km)

long Map G2

10

??1 Munich

A

●Freiburg iir Brcisgau

11

Chiemsee '-i-.

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^

Roses

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PORTUGAL

Meguinen^f Res.

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VAT I C A N

Jan 48.5°F (9“C) July 77°F (25°C)

\

^amp^b:Foggia● ●I*

Frosinone

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Brindisi, Italy

-J^.Var^o

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LOME

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J a n3in (77 mm) July 0.6 in (14 mm)

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THINGS TO LOOK FOR ON THE MAP

10

Longest river: Po, 405 miles

(652 km) Map B Highest active volcano in Europe: Mt. Etna, 10,705 ft

11 S a n t '

C o s e r

(3,263 m) Map H1 „„ \'y^^yCagliari

Largest lake: L. Garda, 143 sq miles (370 sq km) MapD3

A n t i o c o

i

I T A L Y

/Stromboli

Filicudi ^.^aftna

L

Alicudi

V u l c a n o

12

Valletta, Malta

Palermo

Jan 54°F (12°C) July 78T (25°C)

SJcJi 'I y

Jan 3.5 in( 90 mm) July 0in (0 mm)

13

C a t a n i a

I

Pantellert

14 LANDSCAPE R

A

£

The Alps sweep across the north

of the region, and theApennin

15 l.ampione^

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10

5 0

central spine down the length of Italy, continuing beneath the sea to Sicily. Once covered

150 km

2

5

7 miles

100

in dense forest, much of the

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♦ I TA LY

EUROPE

H

region’s hills are now rocky scrubland, while the lowlands are used for growing crops.

EUROPE

♦ I TA LY

I t a l y

I T A L Y

Ancient traditions and historic

O'

wealth have left Italy arich legacy of art and architecture. Although Italy is one of

I

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the world’s leading industrial powers today, there is agreat divide between the wealthy, industrial north and the poorer, agricultural

I T A L Y

T O U R I S M

Capital city; Rome

south. This economic division affects many

Some of the world’s most stunning sights can

Area: 116,320 sq miles (301,270 sq km)

aspects of Italian life and is one of the reasons behind the country’s rapid turnover

and churches of Florence, where the great

Population: 56,411,290

of governments. Most people throughout Italy follow the Roman Catholic religion.

Of cial language: Italian Major religion: Christian 100%

be found in Italy’s cities. Tourists ock to the ancient ruins of Rome and to the palaces revolution in art knotvii as the Renaissance

.. rt

Government: Multiparty democracy Tall vines scramble up rows of posts and any

Currency; Italian lira Adult literacy rate: 97%

O P E R A

available fnjit trees.

SThe three great national hL. passions are fast cars,

Life expectancy: 77 years People per doctor: 210

I

^

performerssuchas names

is unique in its being a part of everyday life, and not apastime for the wealthy

of vines and land left

for grazing cattle

.

'1%



w, a s i t o f t e n i s e l s e w h e r e .

.Li'1

Small, family-run farms cover

‘‘the Italian countryside, and

m m m i On many small farms, a variety of different crops are grown mixed up together in what is known as polyculture. Grapes and fruits, vegetables, and cereals are main crops.

many farmers work part-time. In the fertile northern plain

Crops such as potatoes are grown in the soli

surrounding the Po River, smallscale farmers get the most from

beneath vines.

their land by growing avariety of different crops close together. Cereals, fruit trees, grapes, and vegetables are widely grown. and there are olive groves in the south. Italy is aleading producer

Vi n e r o o t s r e a c h

down to adeep layer of soil

Apopular meal is pasta with tomatoes,

■■S

of fruit, wine, and olive oil.

and often Parmesan cheese.

Parmesan cheese is made from cow’s milk

in the north of Italy.

Industry Once an agricultural nation, Italy is now aleading industrial country. Since it does not have many natural resources, Italy imports raw materials and uses its highly skilled workforce to turn

them into manufactured

goods, like the computers shown here. Italy is aworld

Tomatoes grow well in the warm

Pasta oomes in

sun around Naples.

many shapes.

leader in industrial and

product design.

FA M I LY M E A LT I M E S

To Italians, life revolves around the family, and large, extended networks of different

Find out mor

generations usually live within close proximity. Meals are important family gatherings, and the food differs from region to region. In the north,

European cities: 80 Olive growing: 131 Roman catholics: 274

pasta is often replaced by rice or polenta, made

from corn our. Olive oil and fre,sh vegetables are also important in Italian cooking.

Afamily enjoying alunch together of pasta and fresh vegetables on the southern Italian island of Lipari

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pworldwide. Italian opera

corn IS grown in a block between arow

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Luciano Pavarotti are

Phousehold

Acereal crop such as

P

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invented in Italy and ●

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soccer -and opera. Opera was virtually

Televisions: 420 per 1,000 people

The hard, strong-tasting

il

was born in the 15th century. The northern ski resorts and lakes are also popular. Tourism is vital to Italy’s economy.

Wine making: 99

S'

E U R O P E ♦ M A LTA , VAT I C A N C I T Y, A N D S A N M A R I N O

M A LTA

S A N M A R I N O

\

O'

Due to its strategic position on Mediterranean \

Capital city: Valletta

shipping routes, Malta has been ruled by many powers over the centuries. It nally became an independent country in the 1960s. Perhaps because of this history, the Maltese people cling to astrong sense of national identity, mostly following Roman Catholicism and speaking their own language. The country consists

Area: 124 sq miles

of two main islands, Malta and

(320 sq km

Gozo, and asmaller

i

V A T I C A N C I T Y

C " M A L T A

M A L T A

Population: 400,000

island called Comino.

Of cial languages: Maltese and English

,!TT'

/

The busy Grand Harbor i of Malta’s capital, Valletta,

100%

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Maltese lira

is asign of how vita J shipping is to the Maltese 'j economy. This has been

Adult literacy rate: 87%

Televisions: 740 per 1,000 people

attraction

is

the

Vand Byzantine empires, and

.IIl" .E s

1

Flater as an Italian and British

j

Malta’s position on the trade route between Europe and Africa. Many ships still come here to use the port and facilities for ship re tting.

People per doctor: 890

KAnother

a*, country’s imposing architecture, alegacy of its history as part of the Roman

true for centuries due to

Life expectancy: 76 years

■^J

colony. Because of poor soil, farming produces little income. However, light industry, such as clothes manufacturing, is growing in importance.

CITY

Capital city: Vatican City Area: 0.17 sq miles (0.44 sq km)

Va t i c a n

Population: 1000

The world’s smallest

Of cial languages: Italian and Latin

city

independent state, Vatican City lies at the heart of Rome. This tiny

Major religion: Christian 100%

state is the center of the Roman

Government: Ruled by the Pope

Catholic Church and the home of

Currency: Italian lira

the Pope. States ruled by the Pope once stretched right across Italy -

No gures available for remaining statistics SAN

Amajor source of Malta’s income is provided by tourism. Visitors are drawn by its sheltered beaches Land coves and its good climate.

s

SHIPPING

Major religion: Christian

VAT I C A N

T O U R I S M Mtl

t h e Va t i c a n i s t h e l a s t s u r v i v o r.

MARINO

Capital city: San Marino

Many visitors are drawn by its

Area: 24 sq miles (61 sq km) Population: 23,000

religious signi cance and its rich cultural legacy. The Vatican has its own ag, national anthem, stamps, and coins, as well as anewspaper and radio station.

Of cial language: Italian Major religions: Christian 96%, other 4%

Government: Multiparty

Aspectacular view from St. Peter's basilica The Pope delivers his messages and blessings to packed crowds in this grand piazza.

democracy

Currency: Italian lira No gures available for remaining statistics

San MARINO

Situated in Italy’s mountainous north, San Marino is Europe’s smallest republic. It is also one of the oldest, possibly founded around ad 900. During the Middle Ages Italy was divided into powerful “city-states,” such as Venice and Florence. These states gradually became absorbed into other, larger territories, but San Marino held on to its independence. Despite its tiny size, the republic boasts asoccer team good enough to be entered for the World Cup.

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T O U R I S M

The fairy-tale fortress of Rocca Tower, perched high on arocky outcrop,

Find out mor Political swTEMs: 270-271

overlooks San Marino.

Roman catholics: 274

With few resources, the

SMA1.L EUROPEAN STATES: 80-81

republic relies heavily on athriving tourist trade.

♦SWITZERLAND

AND

AUSTRIA

Switzerland and Austria Home to Europe’s tallest mountains, the Alps, this region includes Switzerland, Austria, and the tiny state of Liechtenstein. The mountains have shaped the way Switzerland and Austria are organized politically since communication has been dif cult. Each is split up into individual

1

districts with great control over their own affairs.

2

With no direct access to the sea and few

natural resources, all three countries have

had to maintain good relations with their neighbors and develop specialized industries. M O U N TA I N S

AND

3

L\KES

Idyllic scenes ot towns and villages next to peaceful lakes are just one of the sights that inspire so mtiny tourists to visit this part of the world. Europe’s largest lakes and its Innsbruck, Austria highest mountains Jan 27“F (-3"C) are found in these

jvily6(TF(19°C)

two countries.

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●Freistadt Sankl

VIENNA ^

P

Wels^

D

H i

Scharding Baden^

●Amsletten

W i e n e r

Steyr*

Braunau am Inn

Neustadt*

Ncun^ij^en ● I A

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> -

6

c c

^^pfenberg

L I F C H T E N S T E I N

Jan 2.9 in (74 mm) July 5.4 in (136 mm)

4

' G m i i n d

Zurich, Switzerland Jan 3UF (U(i) July 6(5 F(20‘'C)

BLIC

A U S T R I A

Jan 2.1 in (54 min)

WJuly 5.3 in (134 mm)

» J L -

L . C V n « / n n ff

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● Z u r i c h

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Lucerne^ L. Lucfny'; 8

THINGS TO LOOK, FOR ON THE MAP

Longest river: Rhone, Switzerland/France, 505 miles (813 km) Map C9

9

Highest point: Diifour Spitze, Switzerland/ Italy,

15.204 ft (4,634 m) Map C Largest lake: L. Constance, Switzerland/Austria/ Germany, 208 sq miles (540 sci km) Map E7 S W n / . E R L . - \ N D

I

For centuries, narrow mountain passes have been the main links with

,I

K

I.

Ski resorts are built

ALPINE

in the snowy peaks where few plants

The different plants found at different levels on the Alps show how vegetation is affected by climate. On the upper, colder slopes only much hardier plants

can

surrounding countries.

grow.

V E G E TAT I O N

than those farther dotvn can suivive. Unlike the decidttous trees on the lower

C O . M M U N I C AT I O N S

slopes, cttnifer trees have downward sloping brandies so they can shed heavy snow. Above the tree line there is scrubland where only small, owering plants

The towering Alps cut through these two countries, forming a

ina.ssive wall separating

Un

northern Europe from

the

and shrubs can thrive.

higher slopes patches of

the Mediterranean countries farther south.

conifer trees

In the past, people had to cross the mountains via steep

are cleared for small farms.

passes that were often blocked by snow'. Today, tunnels and high bridges provide year-round access for road and rail transportation -Sw'iss engineering linns have become world experts in tunnel construction.

The lower slopes are used as meadowland

where cows can graze

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.

EUROPE

Vines and crops such as fruit are grown in the fertile valley bottom.

10

EUROPE

♦SWITZERLAND

AND

LIECHTENSTEIN

Switzerland

S W I T Z E R L A N D

Switzerland has been aneutral country

LIKCHTEN.STEIN

SWITZERLAND

Capital city: Bern Area: 15,940 sq miles (41.290 sq km) Population; 6,873,687 Of cial languages;

[i'lHirii

%

I

pooled its few resources to create a ourishing economy. Its neutrality and political stability have helped make it amajor nancial center.

Geneva Many of Switzerland’s banks

German, French, and

and businesses are based in the

Italian

M A N U F A C T U R I N G

Major religions; Christian

Even though it has virtualh-

92%, other 8%

no raw materials, Switzerland

Government: Multiparty democracy

has made itself amajor industrial power. The Swiss have askilled workforce specializing in producing high-value, lightweight products.

Currency; Swiss franc Adult literacy rate: 99%

■S'

since 1815, and has stayed out of all the wars that have affected Europe since that time. It is acountry of isolated mountain communities in which people speak several different languages. Despite this, Swtzerland is remarkably uni ed in many ways and has

■The pharmaceutical industry is important.

beautiful lakeside city of Geneva. This city is also home to many international organizations, attracted here by Switzerland’s political stability and its neutral

status. These include the Red Cross,

Since Switzerland is asmall cotintry.

the World Health Organization, and the European headquarters

Life expectancy: 78 years People per doctor: 630

Swiss companies have had to export goods in order to nd large

Televisions; 400 per 1,000 people

markets. Many businesses now have

As many as 50

branches worldwide.

million watches

of the United Nations.

are exported each year.

L I E C H T E N S T E I N

A G R I C U LT U R E

Capital city: Vaduz

Fanning is not easy in such mountainous terrain, but the fertile valleys are used extensively, and fruit and grape vines are grown on warmer, south-facing slopes. Dairy farming is atraditional way of life here. Cattle, sheep, and goats graze on the upland slopes in the warmer months, and are brought down to the valleys for the winter. Their milk is used to produce avariety of

Area: 62 sq miles (160 sq km) Population: 29,868 Of cial language: German

Major religions: Christian 95%, other 5%

Government: Multiparty' democracy

cheeses, .such as Emmental, or Swiss chesse.

Currency; Swiss franc No gure.s available for remaining statistics

French-speaking Swiss people at astreet market in Lausanne

SWISS LANGUAGES

Liechtenstein

Four different

languages are spoken in Switzerland,

Nestling in the RHINE valley between Switzerland and Austria, this tiny German-speaking principality is

one of very few small European states to hold on to its independence. It is not totally independent, though, as Liechtenstein’s Swiss neighbors pro-vide its currency, as

well as its postal and telephone services, and also direct the country’s foreign policy. THE

“ C l

one celebrates the

¥

Stamp sales make up about 10 percent of the state's income each year.

FUERSTENTuS^,R

anniversary ot the prince and princess.

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Italian are the of cial

languages, btit a fotirth, “Romansch,”

spoken in remote

Alpine villages, has been given the status of anational language.

ECONOMY

economy, and investors are drawn here by liberal banking laws and political stability. Intensive agriculture, athriving small-scale manufacturing industity', and tourism bring in large amounts of revenue. Its varied economy makes this is an extremely wealthy state.

107 fi

German, French, and

Financial seiv'ices are vital to the

ii .r1Q43

Liechtenstein

produces highly decorative postage stamps that are much sought after by collectors. This

Europe’s most multi¬ lingual countiy.

Find out more Intf.rnationai, organizations: 272-273 Rich and poor: 278-279 Service industries: 281

EUROPE

♦AUSTRIA

Austria

A U S T R I A

TheSMALL,MOUNTAINOUSrepublicof

iv^l

Austria was once the center of the vast

O'

Austro-Hungarian Empire. It

\ ,

rst became

an independent country in 1955. The Alps

.0

cover much of western Austria and fertile

lowlands stretch across the east. Dairy herds graze on the mountain slopes and

A U S T R I A

Capital city; Vienna

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crops such as cereals and fruit grow well in

Area: 32,375 sq miles (83,850 sq km)

91%, Muslim 2%, other 7%

●ii'

the north. Austria is ahighly industrialized

Vienna

nation, with major cities such as Linz

Austria’s capital city was once the

producing iron, steel, heavy engineering products, and chemicals. Austriajoined

glittering capital of the Austro-Hungarian

Population: 7,812,100 Of cial language; German Major religions; Christian

iUk.,

l i

the European Union in 1995.

Govermnent; Multiparty democracy

Water is coilected in

Currency; Austrian schilling

areservoir high up in the mountains.

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Adult literacy rate; 99%

Empire. In the late 1700s and 1800s,

Vienna was one of the most sophisticated cities in Europe. Today, the splendid architecture from that era attracts many visitors. Others come to soak up musical history -the imperial city was amagnet for composers, such as Beethoven, who hoped to win commissions from the

Life expectancy; 76 years People per doctor; 230

Austrian aristocracy or from the

Televisions; 470 per 1,000 people

emperor himself.

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HYDROELECTRIC POWER

>

Austria has little coal and no oil of its own,

●-/tA-

%

so other ways of producing power have been developed. Plentiful rivers and steep Alpine valleys provide an opportunity to harness the power of moving water to generate electricity. This is known as hydroelectric power. In the mountains, as water is released from an upper to alower reservoir, it powers generators that produce electricity.

-j-a-

-The movement of the turbine drives an

eiectricity generator.

Steep roofs are built to shed heavy winter snowfalls.

The water falls down to amotor called aturbine.

The energy of the falling water drives the turbine. ^

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Tourism in the Austrian Alps 59%

57%

&

43% t -

41%

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hiking. Some of the world’s best ski

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To u r i s m Tourism accounts for nearly 15 percent of the country’s income. In addition to exploring Austria’s historic cities, visitors come to go skiing and

M

This chart shows

the percentage of tourists visiting

resorts are found here, and favorite

M O U N TA I N H O U S E S

summer haunts include the huge lakes nestling in the Alps. Conservation

Alps built their steep-roofed houses

measures are being introduced to

plentiful. Animals, hay, and

protect the land from damage by large

Austria in the winter o r s u m m e r. W i n t e r

numbers of visitors.

visitors go skiiing; summer visitors

go hiking. Austrians drin

VA R I E D F O O D

Austrian food blends arange of in uences -the result of all the d i ff e r e n t c o u n t r i e s t h a t o n c e f e l l

within the empire. For example, the famous Wiener Schnitzel (Viennese

cutlet) is abreaded and fried piece of veal or pork that may have originated in Italy. Viennese coffee

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same building. Hay was kept under the roof; cattle were kept in the

Dobostorte is arich, layered cake of sponge and chocolate cream,

basement; and the farmer’s family

topped with caramel.

housing can still be seen in some

lived in between. This kind of

Find out mor

People enjoy acoffee break with lavish

Alpine LANDSCAPE: 106

cakes mid¬

morning or

European union: 81, 273

afternoon.

Hydroelectric powtr: 262 Danube river: 78

108 !

humans were often housed in the

is changing the face of rural areas.

houses are famous worldwide for their

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from wood because trees were

farming villages, although tourism

coffee with milk, whipped cream, or strong and black.

vast selection of cakes and pastries.

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In the past, Austrian farmers in the

♦SLOVENIA

EUROPE

AND

C R O AT I A

Slovenia and Croatia The countries of Slovenia and Croatia stretch from the snow-clad Alps in the north to the sunny Adriatic coast in the south. The area is crossed by the Sava River which ows past the capital cities of Ljubljana and Zagreb, across a

fertile plain, eventuallyjoining the Danube. In the west the Karst region of Slovenia has given its name to atype of scenery associated with limestone rock formations and deep caves. Some caves, such as those at Postojna, are as large as cathedrals. Ruled by Austria and Hungary for centuries, both countries retain strong cultural ties with Europe. At the end of

H : m -

Walled city of dubrovnik This ancient Croatian port, with its narrow streets and massive walls, was founded by the Romans in the 7th century. Protected by its forti cations, Dubrovnik grew into athriving city with trade links throughout the region. The wealth brought by trade encouraged astrong artistic tradition which persists today. Most of the damage from the recent war with Yugoslavia has now been repaired.

World War I, Slovenia and Croatia were

incorporated into the newly formed Yugoslavia but declared themselves independent in 1991. B

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Ljubljana, Slovenia

U S T ^ ●rat

SLOVENIA

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Bjelovar

Postojna

Vi r o v i t i c a

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Rijeka

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Dubrovnik, Croatia

Slavonski Pozega '' Dakovo '

Jan 46T (8°C) July 77“F (25°C)

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CROATIA

Longest river: Drava, Slovenia/Croatia, 450 miles

(724 km) MapF2 Highest point: Triglav, K

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7

Slovenia, 9,395 ft (2,864 m)

m

Map D2 Largest lake: L. Vransko,

Croatia, 13 sq miles (33 sq km) MapF7

SOUTHERN

ALPS 9

Much of northern Slovenia consists of the

high mountains and steep-sided valleys of the southern Alps. Small towns and villages, many of which retain their winding streets and wooden buildings, nestle in the valleys on sheltered slopes. The rugged terrain and snow-covered mountains, which in previous centuries helped preserve the isolation of such places, now attract tourists to this part of Slovenia

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EUROPE

S L O V E N I A

♦SLOVENIA

AND

C R O AT I A

Slovenia XhE small, alpine country of

IRIDING SCHOOLS

As long ago as 1580,

Slovenia lies at the northeastern end

astud farm was set

of the Adriatic Sea. Formerly ruled by Austria, and later part of Yugoslavia, Slovenia regained its independence in 1991 without involvement in the

S L O V E N I A

Population: 1,900,000

Austria with its main maritime outlet.

Of cial language:

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horses

to

the

HSpanish Riding School in Vienna.

violence of the ensuing war. It maintains astrategic position in this corner of Europe, and its ports provide

Capital city: Ljubljana Area: 7,820 sq miles (20,250 sq km)

.up in wliat is now Slovenia to supply

|F The farm eventually ibred the famous

snow-white Lippizaner horse. Today they are considered the

nest

riding horses in die world.

Slovene

Major religions: Christian 98%, other 2%

Slovene people

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Tolar

Despite being ruled for almost athousand years by German-speaking Austrians, the Slovenes have kept their Slav language and folk culture. Colorful embroidery and

No Figures available for remaining statistics C R O AT I A

Capital city: Zagreb Area: 21,830 sq miles (56,540 sq km)

distinctive headwear, as worn

by women at this wedding, are part of that culture. Most people live in small towns or in one of the numerous villages scattered across the country. Only 300,000 people live in Ljubljana, making it

Population: 4,600,000

Of cial language: Croatian

Major religions: Christian 89%, Muslim 1%, otlier 10%

ECONOVfY

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Kuna No

'S

Widespread forests provide wood for sawmills, furniture-, and papermaking industries in Slovenia. In recent years, license agreements with companies in western Europe have allowed local factories to produce arange of cars, trucks, motorcycles, and refrigerators.

gures avaihilile for

remaining statistics

second smallest capital in Europe.

Slovene women attend avillage wedding.

I The islands along the Adriatic coast are popular with tourists.

Croatia The crescent-shaped country of Croatia was part of Hungary until it was joined to Yugoslavia in 1918. It was the rst province to declare its

independence. Almost immediately, war erupted with Serbia. Until that time, the economy had prospered. Mineral wealth provided the basis for industry while vast areas of fertile land were used for crops. Although the war devastated much of the country, the economy is beginning to recover.

To u r i s m along coastline with hundreds of islands, bays, and secluded beaches, backed by the dramatic Dinaric Alps, has drawn tourists to Croatia for many years. In 1990 more than 4.6 million people visited the country, the equivalent of Croatia’s entire populadon. Despite atemporary drop in tourism, visitors from abroad -particularly Italy, Germany, and Slovenia -are now returning.

C R O AT I A N

The

ax plant

is harvested

Linen

when the lower

obtained by crushing the stalks of the ax plant.

stalk starts to

turn yellow.

ber is

its seeds, which are used for linseed oil.

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CROPS

The fertile river vtilleys in the north have awarm climate that is ideal for growing friiiLs such as plums, apricots, and grapes. Flax is also grown, both for its ber, which i.s made into linen clothing and canvas, and for

Find out mor Breakup of uigoslavla:

81, 124 Oil and coal: 96, 152, 162 Timber indu.stry: 26

THE

B A LT I C

Belarus andT H E

S TAT E S

THINGS TO LOOK FOR Ta l l i n n , E s t o n i a

ON

)an 20T' {-7°C) juIvtU T{16°0

B A LT I C S TAT E S

|an 1.5 in (39 mm)

Tucked away in the northwestern

Gaizin Kalns, Latvia, Xtiis.ui

Estonia/Russiaii

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and acool, moist climate.

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resources in this thinly populated area. The peoples represent many different cultural groups and have suffered centuries of hardship from invasions and uprisings.

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There are few natural

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B E L A R L S

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K A L I N I N G R A D

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with hills, lakes, and marshes

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Federation, 1,400 sq miles (3,626 sq km) Map 13

L N

E S T , 'Saarena^

Sea. The fourth, Belarus, lies inland.

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LITHUANIA

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Vilnius, Lithuania

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I N D E P E N D E N C E

The three Baltic State.s’ struggle for independence during the 1980s plated alarge part in the USSR's breakup into many separate republics in 1991. At one point, as aform of protest, tlie people of these states formed a

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FARMING

AND

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m FISHING

Lack of good farmland and acold, damp climate limit the range of crops that can be grown in this region. The main crops are cereals, potatoes, and sugar beets. Cattle graze on the wet pastures. Fishing is an important industry in the Baltic States.

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s' notv trt'ing to forge closer links with neighboring countries, especially Finland and Poland. Tawny owls nd shelter in the region’s dense forests. At night they y over farmland, hunting for prey.

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massive human chain across their

Ilands. These Baltic peoples are

111 S

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the states -Estonia, Latvia, and

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This poor, rural republic is sparsely

K B E L A R U S

t

populated and has few natural resources. However, living conditions have improved

greatly since the 1960s when adrive began to develop industry and to provide better housing. B E L A R U S

Capital city: Minsk Area: 80,154 sq miles (207,600 sq km) Population: 10,199,709

Of cial language: Belorussian

In 1986, an explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power station in Ukraine seriously affected people’s health across the country. Two hundred years of Russian rule ended in 1991 with the breakup of the former USSR, and Belarus became an independent republic.

Major religions: Christian 68%, other 32%

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Belarian rouble

Adult literacy rate: 98% Life expectancy: 71 years People per doctor: 250 Televisions: 27 per 1,000 people

Dried chanterelle mushrooms

Glassmaking Glass is actually cooled liquid sand. It is made from sand, limestone, soda, and waste glass. These four ingredients are

Mushrooms

ourish

fed into afurnace

been called the

where they are heated to produce molten glass.

national sport.

PRIPET

MARSHES

Huge areas of southern Belarus are covered in misty, marshy land. The Pripet Marshes form the largest expanse of marshland in Europe. Much of this area is forested with pine, alder, aspen, and oak trees, which supply agrowing timber industry. Animals such as elk, lynx, wild boar, and grouse have made the marshes and forests their home.

in the country's thick, damp forests, and mushroom-picking is so popular it has

LOCAL

FOODS

Mushrooms and potatoes are staple foods. Potatoes cooked in different ways are eaten for b r e a k f a s t , l u n c h , a n d d i n n e r. Mushrooms and sour cream are

served with meat dishes, such as

Industry Boletus or cepe

Heavy industries such as oilre ning and machinery manufacturing are important to Belarus.

mushrooms

baked rabbit or pork. In addition to being enjoyed fresh, mushrooms may be dried or sailed and pickled.

The furnace is

heated up to 2,550°F(t,400"C)

Under the former USSR,

to melt the raw

large factories were located here to process

ingredients.

raw materials from Russia and Ukraine. Reserves of

useful minerals, such as

oil, rock-salt, and types of sand have been discovered. The sands are used to

As glass cools, it can be carefully shaped. To make sheets of glass, the liquid glass is oated on ariver of molten tin. To make bottles, the glass is poured into bottle-shaped molds.

i

make high-quality glassware.

Minsk The centrally placed capital city has ahistory

Alump of molten / glass called agob is dropped into amold.

r P The liquid glass / sinks to the far end.

T

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Air is blown in to

make the glass ll the mold.

The glass bottle

of changing fortunes. Although it was

devastated by bombing in World War II, in peaceful times Minsk has blossomed as a center of government, education, culture, and

communications. Recently, industrial growth has brought rapid expansion to the city. It is

is left to cool

also the headquarters of the Confederation

and set before

of Independent States (CIS), an organization

being taken out

that brings former Soviet states together.

of the mold.

E D U C AT I O N

During the rule of the USSR, almo.st everyone in Belarus was taught to read and write. Education was free between the ages of 7and 17. This

rm educational foundation

has led to the development of astrong literary and musical heritage within the republic.

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EUROPE

_Find out more— Education: 277 European cities: 80 Former ussr: 134

Oil: 135, 152, 281

E U R O P E ♦ E S T O N I A , L AT V I A , A N D L I T H U A N I A

E S T O N I A

Estonia

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ALAND OF FORESTS, low hills, and 0

if Wil

lakes, Estonia is the smallest of the

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Baltic States. Once afarming nation,

L I T H U A N I A

a:

the Soviets transformed Estonia into an

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(45,125 sq km

urban, industrialized region. Today its industries include timber, shipbuilding, and food processing. Since becoming independent from the former USSR in 1991, tensions have sprung up between

Population: 1,118,829

native Estonians and the third of the

Roughly one-third of the people of Estonia live in or around the capital city of Tallinn. Aregular ow of

population that is Russian.

streets of the city’s old quarter.

E S T O N I A

Capital city: Tallinn Area: 17,423 sq miles

Of cial language: Estonian

I.' a

i a

TA I . L I N N

tourists comes to wander around the narrow, medieval

Major religion: Christian 100% Government: Multiparty

democracy

L AT V I A

Currency: Kroon Adult literacy rate: 99% Life expectancy: 71 years People per doctor: 210 Televisions: No gures available

Sandwiched between the other Baltic States, Latvia’s central position, with easy access to the coast and three major

L A T V I A

Area: 24,938 sq miles (64,589 sq km) Population: 2,666,567 Of cial language: Latvian Major religion: Government: Multiparty democracy

Currency: Lats Adult literacy rate: 99% Life expectancy: 71 years People per doctor: 210 Televisions: No

The cool, damp climate is well suited to dairy farming and meat production. Since becoming independent from the USSR in 1991, Latvia has concentrated

on developing its farming,

shing, and

timber industries, which had been

Christian 100%

L I T H U A N I A

Capital city: Vilnius Area: 25,174 sq miles (65,200 sq km) Population: 3,689,779 Of cial language: Lithuanian



The capital has been an important trading port .since the Middle Ages. This is perhaps the most lively capital Latvia has strong historic links with Germany, and this can be seen at every turn in Riga -in the buildings, the fashions, and the many German visitors.

production under the Soviets.

Amber can be cut or

A y is

polished to make jewelry.

attracted to the tree’s

sticky resin and then

Inmanyways,LITHUANIAstandsapart

caught as it

from the other Baltic States. Eirst, most of

a m b e r.

hardens into

its people are native Lithuanians, whereas Estonia and Latvia have

large Russian populations. Secondly, life here tends to be

A M B E R

Lithuania, where it is found in sands

Government: Multiparty democracy

of the country, away from the coast. The third major

Currency: Litas

difference lies in the fertile

Adult literacy rate: 98%

soil, which makes farming

Life expectancy: 73 years

vital to the economy.

available

FOLK

amber comes from the shores of

dating back 50 million years. Amber is afossilized tree resin, found in

chunks of different shapes and sizes. Some is opaque and brown, but the most sought-after amber is yellow or gold. One small piece may contain the remains of insects or plants, trapped forever in the golden re.sin.

TRADITIONS

The songs, dances, music, and crafts of their folk histoiy have great value for tile people of the Baltic States. Keeping folk traditions alive became especially important as away of maintaining asense of identity under Soviet rule. Now, eacli country has annual folk festivals and parades.

Find out mor European cities: 80

Folk TRADITIONS: 116, 118 Former USSR: 134 Shipbuilding: 183

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Up to 90 percent of the world’s

People per doctor: 220 Televisions: No gures

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concentrated in the interior

Major religion: Christian 100%

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overshadowed by large-scale factory

Lithuania

" m n i M v i m r T A i i r . ’

gures

available

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ports, has done much to help trade.

Capital city: Riga

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EUROPE♦CENTRAL

Central

EUROPE

Europe

The very heart OE Europe consists of acompact block of

R O M A N C AT H O L I C I S M The celebration of saints’

four countries -Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary. Great plains and basins extend across this region, broken by low mountain ranges in the south. Over centuries, the country borders within Central Europe have been redrawn many times. This is partly because the at landscape provides an easy target for invaders, and partly because four mighty empires have surrounded the area: Russia, AustroHungary, Prussia, and the Ottoman Turks. After World War II Central Europe came under the communist control of the former Soviet Union, only gaining its independence since the late 1980s.

days and religious festivals is aregular feature of life in Central Europe, where Roman Catholicism is the

main religion. This region was

invasions have led its

people to cling to their sense of national identity, and Roman Catholicism is

an important part of this.

Each year, thousands of people visit the Black Madonna at Czestochowa,

AHungarian musician in traditional costume

FOLK

d

How coal and lignite are formed

This major waterway links Slovakia and Hungary to Germany and the Rhine River in the west, and to the Black Sea in the southeast. In the past, the

In swamps millions of years ago, plants died and were

■■ c o v e r e d

V-fKj

Danube has been avital trading route for Central

in

P o l a n d ’s h o l i e s t s h r i n e .

MUSIC

Weddings, harvest festivals, Christmas, and other kinds of family and religious occasions are marked by music, song, and dance. Local styles vary tvidely, but traditions are particularly strong in rural areas. In Poland, for example, most musicians are amateurs, only picking up their instruments after a thard day’s work in the elds. Slovakian folk music traditions survive mainly in the mountain tillages, and are associated tvith brightly colored folk dress.

F,

The DANUBE RIVER

rst converted to

Christianity about 1,000 years ago. Repeated

mud.

The dead plant material was

gradually compressed into peat.

Over centuries, layers of peat and rock sediment are

Europe, although river traf c has declined recently as trade 'with the former Soviet Union has fallen off sharply. However, the waters have

laid down.

Achunk of iignite,

been dammed to produce an important source of

also known as

hydroelectric power -adam at Gabcikovo now provides 15 percent of Slovakia’s electricity.

brown coal

Cabbage is very popular and is often eaten stuffed, or pickled as sauerkraut.

Underlying bedrock r'-x-Pi

served with

The weight of all the layers pushes

most main

downward.

Potatoes are

i

Root vegetables such as beets are used to make

courses.

harder black coal.

It is burned in power stations to produce much of the region’s electricity. However, lignite is very rich in sulfur, and, when it is burned, its fumes join with moisture droplets in the air to produce amild form of sulfuric acid, or “acid rain,” which eats into stone buildings and destroys

FOOD

The more northerly area.s of Central Europe tend to have warm summers but ver\’ cold

winters. Plummeting temperatures have made heavy, warming foods popular here. In uences are strongly German, Austrian, and Russian, and potatoes, dumplings, soups, and meat stews are favorite dishes. To the south, Hungary has a more exotic tradition, featuring highly spiced foods such as goulash -its famous beef stew.

Meat, such as this Polish salt pork called oczek, is a centra! part of most meals.

plant life. Air pollution in this region is made even worse by vehicle exhaust fumes -although car ownership is relatively unusual, the cars on the road are frequently old models running on inef cient engines.

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Over time, lignite may eventually become

Lignite Brown coal, or lignite, is the main fuel in Central Europe.

thick soups.

HE.\RTY

The pressure turns the peat into lignite.

A

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EUROPE

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RUSSIAN

R E D E R AT I O N

%

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W l o c i a w e k .

Warsaw, Poland

4

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W A R S A W

Ursus^

Jan 1.1 in (27 mm) July 3.8 in (96 mm)

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Ostrava

o n i o u c

S L t T VA K L A

CMarlin

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Bmo, Czech Republic

I

'X"

'-

-

.Koiice

Jan 29“F (-2“C) July 67“F (19.5°C)

9

n

'Banska

o

■Bystrica ( B a n s k a

Jan 1.2 in (30 mm) July 3.2 in (81 mm)

l e c

H U N G A R Y

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M i s k o l c

J^yiregyhi

10 THINGS ON

TO THE

LOOK

FOR

11

D e b r e c e n

BUDAPEST

MAP

.

Longest river: Vistula, Poland, 678 miles (1,091 km) Map H2

Szolnok

s

3)'

Highest point: Gerlachovka, Slovakia, 8,711 ft (2,655 m)

QDebrecen, Hungary

Map 1 S L O V E N I A

Largest lake: L. Balaton, Hungary, 231 sq miles 12

S f

(598 sq km) Map Gil

Jan 27°F (-3“C) July 70°F (21°C) Jan 1.3 in (.34 mm)

WJuly 2.2 in (56 mm)

Abison cow WILD

FOREST

ANIMALS

feeding her calf in

FOREST

Bialowieza National Park in

Bialowieza National

Poland is northern Europe’s largest area of woodland. Wild

Park, Poland

Woodland covers aquarter of Central Europe. In some places, the forest dates back many thousands of years -there are

animals native to the forest

include elk, deer, wolves, and bears, and conservation

campaigns have done much to protect them. Special anima V breeding programs have . been set up here, and it is now the only natural breeding place for wild bison in Europe.

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AREAS

%A

’iyew, m?>f

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centuries-old oaks near Poznan, in Poland, Acid rain has harmed

trees across the region,

^Jk especially in Poland,

m

Mr w'here almost half the (A,-, trees have been affected. Ancient forest in

Ll

Bialowieza National Park, Poland

115 0



EUROPE♦CENTRAL

S

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♦POLAND

P o l a n d Poland is amix of scattered farming P O L A N D

I3£i P O L A N D

Capital city: Warsaw Area: 120,720 sq miles (312,680 sq km) Population: 38,500,000

Of cial language: Polish Major religions: Christian 95%, other 5%

Government: Multiparty democracy

villages and magni cent medieval towns. This mainly at country is larger than the other three countries of Central Europe put together. Once aland of many different peoples, warfare, migration, and border changes in 1945 have made the majority of people now Polish-speaking Roman Catholics. During the 1980s, Poland broke free from Soviet communist control and began the dif cult journey toward amore democratic political system.

Currency: Zloty Adult literacy rate: 99% Life expectancy: 72 years

Machinery: 26%

People per doctor: 490

/■:

Televisions: 300 per 1,000 people

Recent politics It was atrade union leader, Lech

Walesa, who led the countr)’ away from communism. He became

president of anewly democratic Poland in 1990. Ten years earlier, workers at the Lenin Shipyard in

Gdansk had been protesting against poor conditions under Soviet rule, and the Solidarity trade union, led by Walesa, formed amouthpiece for their discontent. The change to democracy, however, brought a new era of political instability. Food: 18%

Metai goods: H E AV Y

I

INDUSTRY

-J-

Major exports include vehicles, machinery for industry and farming, and crops such as potatoes and other vegetables. Poland is also amajor world exporter of coal

n

Union, Poland was part of a vast centralized economy. For example, iron would be shipped

liiUi

an

into Poland, where it was then made

into goods such as tractors for export to other parts of the Soviet Union. However, with

Ihe

the arrival of democracy, the country has tried to move swiftly to afree-market economy, and it is struggling to transfer the huge, old-fashioned Soviet-style factories to private ownership. Painted

Wooden box

wooden eggs

carved with a

are exchai

Polish exports, 1993

15%

'ill

Under the former Soviet

t

m

AT R A D I T I O N A L .

and metals.

Katowice

Steelworks in Poland

WAY

OF

Te x t i l e s :

Fuels: Chemicals: Other:

8%

10%

10%

1 3 %

I.IFE

This nation of small-scale farmers clung ercely to its local traditions throughout the years of Soviet control. As aresult, unlike other countries under Soviet rule, the many small farms were not merged into larger state-run farms. Today, traditions such as horse-drawn plowing are still common in parts

at Easter.

if-

of Poland. Local folk arts and crafts

ourish, too.

nbroidery and woodcarving are often used to decorate household objects, and wooden furniture may be colorfully painted. A G R I C U LT U R E

Medieval krakow The superb medieval buildings found along

The main

About aquarter of the nation’s workforce is employed in agriculture. The most important products are potatoes, sugar beets, cereals, and livestock. Some farms sjtecialize in commercial crops, but most grow some crops for selling and some for feeding the family. This is partly because most farms are still small and privately owned, often operated part-time, frequently by elderly or retired owners.

market square in

Krakow

the city streets of Krakow are areminder that

Poland was amajor power during the 15th and 16th centuries, before it was divided up among other countries. Poland has some of the

nest old churches,

palaces, and public buildings in Europe. Many were lost or damaged during World War II, but Krakow’s buildings escaped relatively unscathed. Unfortunately, this is also one of the most air-polluted cities in Europe, due mainly to the nearby Nowa Huta Steelworks.

Find out mor A i r p o l l u t i o n : 11 4 Political SWTEMS: 270-271 Roman catholics: 274 Soviet union: 136

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EUROPE

♦CZECH

REPUBLIC

Czech republic As CENTRAL EUROPE’S most industrialized V/

C Z E C H

REPUBLIC /

r

k

CZECH

REPUBLIC

country, the Czech Republic has amodern economy and agood standard of living. From 1918 until 1993, the Republic was part of the union forming Czechoslovakia. By the 1950s, Czechoslovakia was under

Capital city; Prague

Soviet control, but democratic elections

Area: 30,260 sq miles

in 1990 led to its peaceful split into two countries -the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Much of the Republic lies on a high, mountain-ringed plateau, and its people have astrong national identity.

(78,370 sq km Population; 10,302,215

Of cial language: Czech Major religions: Christian 72%, other 28%

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Czech koruna

The main

Adult literacy rate: 99% Life expectancy: 71 years

grain crops are wheat, rye, barley, hops,

People per doctor: 310

and canola.

.7? a i E , , .

Televisions: 470 per 1,000 people

Bridges over the Vltava River in Prague PRAGUE

Not far from the historic core of this ancient city, one of the most beautiful capitals in Europe, a booming commercial center has sprung up. The capital is now host to ever-increasing numbers of visitors, coming for both pleasure and business. However, as elsewhere in Central Europe, air pollution is amajor problem. It is caused mainly by factories in the commercial quarter, and in the extensive industrial suburbs beyond.

The brewing process in the Czech Republic

Agriculture In contrast to Poland, most of the

agricultural land in the Czech Republic is worked by large farms owned by the state or by cooperatives. But, as in Poland, the changeover from acommunist to a

Czech farms are very productive, with the highest

grain yields in Central Europe. Alarge proportion of this grain is fed to livestock, since the Republic concentrates on meat and milk production.

Malted barley grains and water

When heated.

are fed into the

the barley is

the starch in converted

mash tun.

into sugar. Dried hops are added for avor

capitalist economy has proved dif cult for farmers as they ght to compete in an open “market economy.”

Ye a s t i s a d d e d . It converts the

sugar into alcohol.

T H E A T E R

It is extremely appropriate that the Czech Republic’s rst pre.sident, Vaclav Havel, was akso aplayivright, since this region has apowerful

The mixture is boiled with

theatrical tradition that stretche.s

back to the 13th centtiry.

The beer

hops for

stays in the fermenting

1-2 hours.

tank for about

Contributions in other areas

aweek



of the arts, notably music, literature, and

The beer

lm,

's bottled

have come from this

or stored in casks.

region as well.

Industry

The Smetana

Beer is one of the best-known products to come out of this highly industrialized country. Its centuries-old brewing traditions

Concert Hall, in

9

Prague, was named after a T



Czech composer.

have created such famous brands as Pilsner, made in Plzen since 1925, and Budweiss.

Intricate, highly

Industry in general has along history here. As long ago as the 1200s,

decorated

I

glassware BOHEMIAN CLAS

t ■

'

For centuries, the

*ih-.

mountains were excavated for ne sands found in this

region, once known as Bohemia, have been used for glassinaking. Medieval craftsmen were praised for their breathtaking stained glass windows. Bohemian glass is renowned for its -- high quality and delicacy and is still made today.

their rich mineral deposits, and mining is still amajor employer. Other important industries produce vehicles, explosives, plastics, and textiles.

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EUROPE

Beer is awell-

known export.

Find out mor A i r P O L L U T I O N : 11 4 G i a s . s m a k i n g : 11 2 New EUROPEAN COUNTRIES: 81 Political SYSTEMS: 270-271

EUROPE♦SLOVAKIA

Slovakia d.

Once the eastern part of Czechoslovakia, this small, beautiful country is much more rural than its highly industrialized neighbor, the Czech Republic. When Czechoslovakia broke free of Soviet control in 1990, the Slovaks felt they were being dominated by the wealthier Czechs and campaigned for independence, which came in 1993. The Slovakian economy wasihit hard by the split because it relied on Czech money and

S L O VA K I A

S L O VA K I A

Capital city: Bratislava Area: 19,100 sq miles (49,500 sq km) Population: 5,274,335 Of cial language: Slovak Major religions: Christian 72%, other 28%

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Slovak koruna

resources. In this mountainous land, the Slovak

Bratislava

population is divided between different valleys, and the country lacks ageographical focus. Most people speak Slovak, but various dialects are still spoken in the more isolated areas.

This city is one of the youngest capitals in the world -it became the new capital of its new country in 1993. This former residence of

an archbishop has been made into the parliament buildings. Bratislava is the only large city in Slovakia and historically has better links with Hungary than with the rest of Slovakia. However, the city’s good

Adult literacy rate: 99% Life expectancy: 71 years Jwo women

People per doctor: 310

dress up in their

Televisions: 300 per 1,000

nationai costume.

people

communications and modern

Amap of main industries

industry have helped attract interest from foreign investors. FOLKl.ORE

F E S T I VA L S

*Slovaks love to celebrate with traditional

1

music, dancing, and dress. Folk traditions are important, and are different from those of the neighboring Czechs. While Czechs look

Bratislava

north for their roots, Slovaks look sotith and

Ilimber

east, toward Hungary and Russia. Unusually, the communist rulers encouraged folk customs here in order to foster asense of regional pride.

WMining I N D U S T RY

Today, one-third of the workforce has Jobs in industry as Slovakia ghts for a place in the industrialized world. This has not been easy, especially as the large industries set up by the former communist rulers have been dif

cult to

break up. Mining and metal production has along history in Slovakia, and mines at Banska Stiavnica claim to be the

rst

in Europe to have used gunpowder, in 1657. Much of eastern Slovakia is still

forested, .so timber and papermaking are also important.

The well-forti ed walls of Orava

Village life This is acountry of mountain villages and small towns.

Slovakian farms are either tiny, family-run affairs, or they are large businesses run by the state or agroup of people called cooperatives. As in the Czech Republic, the main crops are potatoes, sugar beets, and cereals, and many livestock are

kept. Although Slovakia is traditionally rural, only asmall proportion of the population is now employed in agriculture. There has been agreat drive to develop industry, and I many people are moving from the country to the towns.

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Castle were built to guard the trade route with Poiand.

Tr a d i t i o n a l wooden houses in

Cicmany, Slovakia

UNSPOILED

iSt

lANDSCAPE

The natural beauty of Slovakiaks countryside give.s it huge potential as atourist destination as long as it remains unspoiled. Here are stunning mountain landscapes, castles perched on rocky outcrops, ancient walled towns, and mineral-rich spas. Great efforts are being made to develop the tourist trade, since there are as yet few facilities for visitors.

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Find out mor

Cereals: 34, 122, 162 New EUROPEAN countries: 81 P o t a t o e s : 11 0 Soviet UNION: 136

t

H u n g a r y (01

ABROAD,FERTILEPLAINsweepsacrossmuchof

r

this country, while gentle hills and low mountains

are found in the northern and western parts. The most southern country in Central Europe,

H U N G A R Y

£ k H U N G A R Y

Capital city; Budapest Area: 35,919 sq miles

(93,030 sq km Population: 10,374,823 Of cial language; Hungarian (Magyar) Major religions: Christian 93%, other 7%

Hungary has been home to many different peoples, including Germans, Slovaks, Serbs, Croats, Romanians, and Gypsies. Most Hungarians, however, are descended from the Magyars, who were erce nomadic horsemen. After World War II, the communists established

aharsh rule here, putting down arebellion in 1956. Ademocratic government is now in place.

Government: Multiparty democracy

iirif

by hot summers and short, mild winters, awide variety of crops are found here. Cereals

‘j.'vV's'L

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at avast

ower farm

THERMAL

SPRINGS

AND

S PA S

The grand architecture of Budapest’s old Turkish baths is adistant echo of

the country’s past as part of the Ottoman Empire. There are baths and spas right across Hungary, centered on the hundreds of warm springs that gush naturally from the ground. Since ancient times, people have

ocked to bathe in these mineral-rich

waters, often seeking to cure their ailments.

ourish, as in

other parts of Central Europe, but Hungary also produces

Sn-

Televisions: 410 per 1,000 people Flowers being gathered

Since this fertile land is warmed

m

Adult literacy rate: 99% Life expectancy: 70 years People per doctor; 340

A G R I C U LT U R E

a

i^i

Currency: Forint

sun owers, fruits, and ■'TA7 i

vegetables, as well as olives, gs, and grapes -there is athriving wine trade. However, the changeover j

A

run by acooperative

from

Paprika is used -In many recipes, and Hungary grows over 40 percent of the world's paprika.

. - A

●r-:

Goulash was

/

acommunist

to

a

capitalist economy has caused problems. The parliament buildings

originally abasic dish eaten by shepherds.

on the Danube River

in Budapest

CUISINE

Paprika >

The varied crops produced in Hungaiy mean that it has developed some distinctive dishes. Hungaiy'’s national dish is afamous beef and vegetable mix called goulash, sened as astew or athick soup. Ahot red pepper called paprika is added to give goulash its spicy avor. Other examples of the rich and heavy

Budapest If you 'were to take acruise ship through Budapest along the great Danube River, you would discover that the capital is actually two cities. Buda, on one bank of the river, is the old royal capital, lled with ancient buildings. Across the water lies Pest, the heart of modern business and political life, where the government buildings are found. Budapest has more foreign ■visitors than any other Central -S European capital, and almost two-thirds of foreign money invested in Hungary is centered in the city.

^cuisine include carp in paprika sauce, pastn' lled with liver pate, and grilled meats served with stuffed peppers.

Asauce of tomatoes, paprika, onions, and sour cream is served with

sh, as well as on meat dishes

such as goulash.

Industry

I ’ >●■1

j- /:

Hungary’s many industries produce metals,

A

chemicals, and vehicles as well as texdles

and electrical goods. Since ademocratic government gained control in 1990, the country has had to compete in aworldwide market. Many rms have been privatized, and some industry has declined. However, Hungary’s population has highly developed skills, especially in science and engineering, and it attracts more foreign investment per person than any other country in Central Europe.

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Foreign lm companies are drawn to Hungary by the climate, scenery, and cheap, skilled labor. / vM.

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A ' CERE.VLS: 34, 122, 162 European plains: 79

V,

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£ 119

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♦HUNGARY

EUROPE

Political systems: 270-271 Wine making: 99

E U R O P E ♦ U K R A I N E , M O L D O VA , A N D T H E C A U C A S I A N R E P U B L I C S

E

Ukraine, moldova, and™

F

Kiev, Ukrauie )an 19“F (-7°C) July 68°F (20”C)

CAUCASIAN REPUBLICS

Jan 2.3 in (58 mm) July 3.6 in (91 mm)

The grassy steppe lowlands of Ukraine and Moldova lie in the east of Europe. Farther east, the three mountainous Caucasian Republics of Georgia, Armenia,

C

B

D

and Azerbaijan lie betw^een the Black Sea and the Caspian

4 «

U S

A

Sea, cradled by the Caucasus Mountains. From the 17th

^*1

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century on, the Russian Empire dominated this region, and in this century it became part of the USSR, regaining independence only in the 1990s. Fertile farmland and

)

Chernobyl

eRivne

A

awealth of natural resources have made this area

Knrojsteri' L u t s ’ k

one of the richest parts of the former USSR. The

L’ v i ’

region’s mountains give it protection from the

Te r n o p i r Khmel’nyts’kyy

extreme cold of the Russian winters, and this

has helped encourage alarge tourist industry,

Ivano-

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Frankivs’k *

particularly along the Black Sea coast.

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Vinnytsya Kam”yanets’Podil’s’kyy

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These

B a l t i

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children at

M O L D O VA

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are from

o

different

MykoL la ●

ethnic groups.

M O L D O VA

B i l h o r o d -

i

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Simferopol, Ukraine

PEOPLES

Jaii31°F (-rC) July71°F (22“C)

The people of Ukraine and Moldova are mo.stly European and Slavic, while more than 50 different

Jan 1.8 in (45 mm) July 2.5 in (64 mm)

ethnic groups exist in the Caucasian Republics. The USSR tried to wipe out differences between the peoples of its empire by forcing them to use the Russian language

r '

and by suppressing local culture.

However, many of the people of

This coal mine is at Donetsk, in 'the Ukraine’s Donbass region.

this region have aproud and ancient histoiv and hav

i

struggled to hold on to their o

own languages and culture. [ fS\

Natural RESOURCE \

Large deposits of coal, gas, and oi

/

■v-v‘v'

'M.

this area. In addition to coal from the Donbass

Basin in Ukraine, and oil and natural gas from the Caspian Sea off Azerbaijan, nuclear reactors, hydroelectric schemes, and wind-power plants have been built in the region. Metal ores such as iron, manganese, lead, zinc, copper, and

l

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mine

^Gas

eld

AOil eld

120 e

^Coal

Power station

uranium are also mined here.

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have made this region aleading producer of energy. In 1990, aquarter of all the energy used in the USSR came from

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E U R O P E ♦ U K R A I N E , M O L D O VA , A N D T H E C A U C A S I A N R E P U B L I C S

1 I

H

K

THINGS

TO

LOOK

L

FOR

ON

FA R M I N G

M

THE

The Caucasus Mountains protect the three republics from cold northerly winds and allow farmers to cultivate many exotic crops that cannot be grown elsewhere in the region. Crops such as tea, vines.

MAP

Longest river: Dnieper, Russian Federation/ Belarus/Ukraine, 1,420 miles (2,285 km)

MapG5

nuts, tobacco, and cotton are sold

Highest point: Shkhara, Georgia, 17,071 ft (5,203 m) Map 012

to countries of the former USSR.

Cattle and sheep are grazed on the high mountain pastures.

Largest lake: L. Sevan, Armenia, 546 sq miles (1,414 sq km) Map Q14

&

A

'

Jan 1.9 in (47 mm) BOSNIA

MJuly 2.4 in (61 mm)

AND

2 i c a

YUGOSL/WIA

H E R Z E G O V I N A

Sombor l a d n

feadka Topola

vojvod’ina Zrenja^ 0 A T n

I

/ Banja Luka ^

Vr S a c

Doboj /

Jan 31 “F (-1°C)

' ' t A , ■^ ' * W s " .

July 68°F (20°C) Jan 2.6 in (66 mm) July 2.8 in (71 mm)

iELGRADEyA*

4

4

Zvornik

...

Arandelovac ^tika Plana

. i .

vAoko«,% ,f '

L^e

Ssm,

tkljevo SERBIA

S ‘ rebrenci a Xivno -

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Gradanica

1 H K J t - Z E O O V WA

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Sarajevo, Bosnia

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THINGS

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lOuHanovo '

f .

Longest river: Sava,

.

and Herzegovina/Yugoslavia, 583 miles (938 km) Map G4

9

9,013 ft (2,747 m) MapJ8

> A.KAN

A

Largest lake: L. Scutari, Yugoslavia/Albania, maximum size 205 sq miles (531 sqkm) Map H7

the mountains that dominate this area, as shown here in

Montenegro. However, thin mountain soils are not well-suited

0

50 T

0

25

100

10

opje, Macedonia Jan 34°F (1°C)

150 km

T

50

75

July 73T (23°C) Jan 1.5 in (39 mm) July 1.1 in (29 mm)

100 niiUks

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Titov Vru, Macedonia,

coniferous trees cloak the slopes of

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Highest point:

Forests of deciduous and

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8

Ti t o v Ve l e s

Slovenia/Croatia/Bosnia

to agriculture and only in the fertile plains surrounding the Danube, are crops grown in large quantities. Arange of vegetables, such as cabbages, peppers, and beans, is grown there, while cattle graze on mountain pastures.

7 f . O

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ON THE MAP

LANDSCAPE

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KOSOVO, ^roSevac

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EUROPE

ssi

M A C E D O N I A

11

AND

BOSNIA

AND

HERZEGOVINA

Yugoslavia

Y U G O S L AV I A

When the eormer Yugoslavia broke up in 1991, the states of Serbia and Montenegro combined to form the new Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Its capital city, Belgrade, lies on the Danube River, which winds its way across at farmland. The new country claimed to be the successor state of the former Yugoslavia,

TJERZEGOd^NA V

s

Y U G O S L AV I A

Capital city; Belgrade

and helped local Serbs ght in Croatia and

Area: 39,449 sq miles (102,173 sq km ) Population: 10,580,892 Of cial language: Serbian

Bosnia. Since the war ended, the future seems

People

more hopeful, and recent elections point

More than 60 percent of the people are Serbs, with Hungarians in the northern region of Vojvodina,

toward areturn to peaceful conditions.

Major religions: Christian 70%, Muslim 19%, other 11%

and Albanians in and around the

Industry in Yugoslavia

Government: Multiparty

Pancevo

Belgrade

democracy

i A ® = 0 =

Currency: Dinar

*

No gures available for remaining statistics BOSNIA

S

« ■

Kragujevac 4Chemical aMetallurgy ^Light engineering OHeavy engineering :(j; Electronics

AND

H E R Z E G O V I N A

Capital city: Sarajevo Area: 19,741 .sq miles (51,130 sq km)

*

Te x t i l e s

II

Food processing

9

A

O

Paracin

southern region of Kosovo. Most people speak Serbian, which can be written in two ways. Serbs write in the Cyrillic alphabet, as used for Russian. Croats write using the Roman alphabet, as used for English. Voting ballots, being handed in here, are printed in both versions.

Krusevac Green and DISHES

red peppers

Pharmaceuticals

Population; 4,200,000 Croat

WS^ grilled lamb with

Serbia was once the industrial heartland

of the former Yugoslavia, with extensive engineering, food, and textile industries. Reserves of coal, as well as hydroelectricity

50%, Muslim 40%, other 10%

Government; Multiparty

SERBIA

iHf in Serbia. Raznjici,

INDUSTRY

Major religions: Christian

OF

Awide variety of tasty dishes are eaten

Of cial language: Serbo-

sweet peppers, shown here, is usually served with abowl of yogurt. Meatballs

Raznjici is made with skewers of griiied lamb. Skewer

democraq'

from the Danube and Drina rivers,

served with onions and cream,

Currency: Bosnian dinar

provided power, while oil deposits in the

called cevapcki, and vegetables such as cabbage stuffed with meat, onions, herbs, and garlic, are all popular dishes.

north supplied one-third of oil needs.

No gures available for

However, tire pressure of sanctions has

remaining statistics

now severely damaged Serbian industry.

Bosnia and Herzegovina The TWIN state of Bosnia and Herzegovina

ETHNIC

CLEANSING

was the last of the former republics of Yugoslavia to declare independence, in 1992. For centuries,

Serbs ghting in Bosnia undertook apolicy of ethnic cleansing. This involved removing, or “cleansing,”

the area contained amixture of Muslim Bosnians,

Muslims and Croats from areas

Catholic Croats, and Orthodox Serbs, andjews. After independence, outbreaks of violence eventually led to acivil war. Although apeace treaty was signed in Dayton, Ohio, at the end of 1995, an uneasy peace

they inhabited alongside Serbs. Thousands of non-Serbs were

murdered. Others were frightened into leaving their homes and seeking safety in more welcoming countries. Many Muslims sought refuge in Germany and Turkey. Bosnian refugees in Europe 1995

prevails here.

Germany: 330,000 Sweden:

Tu r k e y : 36,800

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81, 124

aprimitive existence, often with no food, heat, or proper housing.

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86,445

B r e a k u p o f Yu g o s l a v i a :

killed. Those that remained led

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Muslim girls and women traditionally w e a r a h e a d s c a r f t o c o v e r t h e i r h a i r.

CITY OF SARAJEVO By 1990, the ancient town of Sarajevo had grown into alarge, modern city. But war exposed the city to Serb gun re from the surrounding ^hills, and many citizens were

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♦ Y U G O S L AV I A

EUROPE

Religions: 274-275 Danube river: 79

I

M A C K D O M A

*MACEDONIA

AND

ALBANIA

MACEDONIA The landlocked country of Macedonia has had astormy history and now faces many threats to its survival. Yugoslavia and Bulgaria both claim it is part of their culture, while Greece is sensitive to what happens to its neighbour. Outbreaks of

M A C E D O N I A

Capital city: Skopje Area: 9,929 sq miles (25,715 sq km) Population: 1,900,000

Of cial language: Macedonian

Major religions: Christian 86%, Muslim 14%

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Dcnar No gures available for remaining statistics A L B A N I A

Capital city; Tirana Area: 11,100 sq miles (28,750 sq km) Population: 3,300,000

Of cial language:

v i o l e n c e h a v e o c c u r r e d b e t w e e n t h e d i ff e r e n t

ethnic groups within Macedonia. In this part of the Balkans, the warm climate allows the

carp

its location also means that fuel, machinery, and manufactured goods have to be imported.

Lakeland areas The mountainous area of southwestern Macedonia

Earthquakes

contains two of Europe's most

The capital city of Skopje

When the country had more

beautiful freshwater lakes.

is located where several s

tourists, visitors

geological fault lines meet, i

enjoy the scenery and visit the ancient towns along the shores.

earthquakes. In fact, earth | tremors in Skopje ar

&

Both lakes are teeming with

frequent, and the city has *

Major religions: Muslim

in its history. In 1963 an 3

70%, Christian 30%

earthquake registerin

Government; Multiparty democracy Currency: New lek

6.8 on the Richter scale

t

ocked to Lake

Ohrid, and to Lake Prespa, to

making it alikely place for J!

been destroyed four times d

No gures available for

Freshwater

cultivation of early fruit crops and industrial crops such as rice, cotton, and tobacco. However,

Albanian

remaining statistics

sh, particularly carp, trout, and eels, which are used for local

j

sh dishes. Colonies of

pelicans and cormorants also

feed on sh from Lake Prespa.

destroyed much of the city. Fortunately, the Turkish area, parts of which date from 1392, survived the destruction.

Albania

Employment in 1994 Jobs are scarce in Albania, and rates of pay are low. About two-thirds of those with jobs work in agriculture, while the rest work in industry or sen/ices, such as education. Recently, thousands of people

One of the poorest countries in Europe,

Albania is mostly rugged mountains. For much of its history, the country was ruled by the

have moved to

Greece or Italy to

Ottoman Turks, who withdrew in 1913 leaving

look for work.

no roads, railways, or industries. During this century, Albania has been ruled by afascist king a n d a c o m m u n i s t d i c t a t o r. S i n c e e l e c t i o n s i n FA M I LY

1991, the move toward democracy has been

^ A

marred by corruption, and unrest has forced

many Albanians to ee the country.

Sewices: Industry 1 8 %

2 6 %

Agriculture: 5 6 %

C O M M U N I S M

From 1944-198.5, .Mbania was led by the communist leader Enver Hoxha. Under his rule, Albania was cut off from the rest of

LIFE

Tlie family is an important part of Albanian life and, until recently, men were encouraged b) the state to father large families. From an early age, Albanians are taught the importance of the promised

word, Gown as besa. To break one’s word, in abusiness deal for

example, is considered adisgrace.

Europe. The borders with Yugoslavia and Greece were sealed, and no contact with Italy

was permitted. .Ml trade after 1960, through ports in Dunes and Vlore, was with China. The

Communists developed heavy industi-y at the expense of agriculture, leaving the coimtiy poor and undeveloped. This mural at Tirana Museum represents the people’s struggle.

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EUROPE

Find out mor

Earthquakes: 13 Hydroelectric power: 108 Mediterranean c;limate: 15 PolitiCjM. systems: 270-271

BULGARIA

Divided by the mighty Danube River, which

T O U R I S T AT T R A C T I O N S

Picturesque landscapes and colorful folk traditions make Romania popular with tourists. The legend of Count Dracula, from the forested region of Transylvania, shown here, attracts tourists

ows eastward along most of the shared border

to the Black Sea, Romania and Bulgaria have much in common. The most fertile land is found

rf,

in the valley of the Danube, while forests of oak,

who come to visit his castle. Black Sea beaches as well as mountain ski resorts cater to both summer and winter visitors.

pine, and r grow on the sides of the Carpathian and the Balkan mountains. For hundreds of

years. Black Sea ports, around areas such as to trade routes and they remain important for international shipping. A

B

ON D

E

F

G

I I

I

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2

(2,850 km) MapFl Highest point: Musala, Bulgaria, 9,597 ft (2,925 m)

Jan 1.8 in (46 mm) July 2.1 in (53 mm)

Map FI

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ir Si

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MAP

Germany/Austria/Hungary/ Yugoslavia/Romania/ Bulgaria, 1,771 miles

'M' July 73°F (23°C)

,

THE

Longest river: Danube,

^Jan 27”F (-3“C)

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Bucharest, Romania

R O M A N L V

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THINGS TO LOOK FOR

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Constanta and Burgas, have provided access

3

Largest lake: L. Razim, Romania, 151 sq miles (390 sq km) Map L8

K R A 1 N E

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Suceava?

^Baia Mare

10

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11 R h o d e s

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iSigns of Greece's rich classical past are revealed in its many ANCIENT

GREEK

HISTORY

ancient ruins, such as this

temple of Apollo at Delphi.

The remains of temples and other buildings from Greece’s long and complex history can still be seen today. From about 2000 BC,

Find

advanced civilizations existed on Crete and on

the mainland at Mycenae. By the 5th century BC, powerful city states emerged, including Athens and Sparta. Philosophers, mathematicians,

A

out

more

European union: 81, 273

a;

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Mediterranean landscape: 79 Orthodox

architects, and dramadsts contributed to arich

church:

274

Wine making: 99 «

culture that spread around the Mediterranean.

I 131

A S I A :

ASIA

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Stretching from the frozen Arctic to the

A,.;

hot Equator, Asia is by far the world’s largest

2

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and most mountainous continent. Much of

the land is barren, with vast, empty^ deserts in southwest and central Asia, and the remote,

windswept plateau of Tibet to the north of the Himalayan mountains. Asia also has some of the world’s most fertile plains and valleys beside rivers that include the Mekong, Indus, and Euphrates. In Southeast Asia, the land is mainly mountainous or covered in tropical rain forests that are teeming with wildlife. Away from the mainland,

3

Siberia

4

Most of Siberia, the Asian part of Russia, is bitterly cold in w i n t e r. I n t h e n o r t h l i e s t h e

tundra, where part of the soil

k>

of the last Ice Age. Beneath its surface there are vast supplies

side of the Equator,

o f m i n e r a l s . To t h e s o u t h l i e s

as

6

the world’s largest coniferous

of islands, many of them volcanic.

o 5

has been frozen since the end

ittered on either lie thousands

Jnqpic^F

forest. This cold forest makes

way for adry grassland area, known as steppe, which forms Russia’s main farming region.

Highest temperature: Tirat Zevi, Israel, 129°F (54'’C)

(rgJ 7 K H J R G H I Z S T E P P E

V

THE

-■

YA N G T Z E

RIVER

From its source in the Tanggula Mountains on the plateau of Tibet, the Yangtze River ows through mountainous land for most of its course. On its nal stages, it follows the southern edge of the Great Plain of China until it reaches the East China Sea. In the

atter

areas, the Yangtze .supplies water for irrigation. In the past, ooding has caused thousands of deaths. ABactrian

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I R A N I A N P L AT E A U

camels has

CENTRAL DESERTS Unlike most deserts, the Ta k l a M a k a n a n d G o b i in central Asia have hot

%

summers, but extremely cold winters. Much of .j

their landscape is made ' up of bare rock, with

B I A J ^

huge expanses of shifting sand. Vegetation is sparse except in river valleys, as shown here in the Takla Makan.

Some animals, including wild camels, can survive cold winters in the Gobi.

f . n k s h a d v

T h E H I M A L AYA S The Himalayas, right, form amassive land barrier between the Indian Subcontinent

and Tibet. The range is permanently snowcapped and contains the world’s highest peak. Mount Everest. The mountains began to form about 50 million years ago when amoving plate, carrying the Subcontinent, began to push against the Eurasian plate. When the plates collided, the edge of the Indian plate was forced under the Eurasian plate, and the seabed in between was folded up to form the Himalayas.

EURASIAN P L AT E A

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A S I A

250 500 750 1000 1250 km

Lowest temperature:

PENINSULA

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K A Z A K H UPLANDS

TO THE

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MAP

3

Area: 17,251,315 sq miles (44,680,718 sq km) Highest point: Mt. Everest, China/Nepal, 29,029 ft (8,848 m) Map HI I

j

Longest river: Yangtze, China, 3,430 miles

(5,520 km) Map KIO Largest lake: Caspian Sea, Azerbaijan/Iran/ Tu r k m e n i s t a n / K a z a k h s t a n / Russian Federation,

%

146,101 sq miles (378,400 sq km) Map D8 Largest island: Borneo, 286,969 sq miles (743,250 sq km) Map K14

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The ring of

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Volcanoes erupt so often on the rim of

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land and islands around the Paci c that the ' . i n e a B A N D A

1

A R A F U R A S E A

region is called the “Ring of Fire.” The most famous eruption took place in 1883, when the volcanic island of Krakatoa, west of Java, erupted. The explosion was so loud it was heard in Australia. In 1928, anew volcano burst into life on the island. It was named

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Anak Krakatoa, meaning “son of Krakatoa.

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OfALLTHECONTINENTS,Asiahasthelargestpopulation with the greatest variety of cultures. The history of civilization here stretches back for many thousands of years. Cities and writing, the development of which are closely connected, rst appeared in Asia. More than 5,000 years ago the earliest cities, such as Babylon, emerged in the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, an area that is now known as Mesopotamia. Today, Asia contains two-thirds of the world’s population, much of which is concentrated in the

'

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t':

stone reliefs in Persepolis, capital of the ancient Persian Empire E A R LY

C I V I L I Z AT I O N S

The world’s earliest civilizations grew up around river valleys in Asia in an area known as the fertile crescent, which stretches in an arc from the Persian Gulf to the

Mediterranean Sea. Many cities here can trace their history back for several thousand years.

southern and eastern regions of the continent. Although most of the people are farmers, city populations are growing very rapidly.

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Population: approximately 3,497,760,000 people {This gure includes the whole of

R

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the Russian Federation.) Number of countries: 48

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Largest country: Russian Federation -the Asian part covers 5,190,909 sq miles (13,444,468 sq km)

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Mongolia, 4people per sq mile (1 per sq km)

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Most densely populated country:

Hong Kong, 15,017 people per sq mile (5,798 per sq km)

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116 sq miles (300 sq km)

P H I L I P P I N E S

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;INGAP0RE

EMPTY

PLAINS

Although Asia has ahuge population,

many areas are hardly peopled at all. At just \, 4people per sq mile (1 per sq km), Mongolia has the world’s lowest population density.

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ASIA

Growing cities

Population density

P O P U L AT I O N

Alarge proportion of Asia’s population still lives in the countryside as farmers, but the number living in cities is rising steeply. The largest cities in Asia now have populations of more than 10 million. These super-cities, along with many other cities in the continent, are destined to grow even faster as people move from the countryside to towns.

The gures on the

Large areas of the Middle East and central Asia are empty wilderness, unsettled by people

chart show the number

of people per sq mile (per sq km). Countries outside Asia are included as a

Bangladesh: 830(2,150)

China:

capital, New Delhi. India is one of the world's most densely populated countries.

because of their extreme

dryness or cold temperatures. Most of the population is concentrated in the fertile river

comparison.

This crowded street scene is in India's

DENSITY

W o r l d ;124(321)

valleys and coastal lowlands of south and east Asia. Apart from the two island city-states of Hong Kong and Singapore, Bangladesh is the most densely populated country in Asia with 2,150 people per sq mile (830 per sq km).

O m a n

LARGEST CITIES IN ASIA

Tokyo, Japan

18,1 million

Shanghai, China Calcutta, India

13.4 million

Bombay, India

11 . 2 m i l l i o n

Seoul, South Korea

11 . 8 m i l l i o n

11 m i l l i o n ABedouin man in Jordan

may have more than one wife and many children .

Population

growth

Two out of every three people in the world live in Asia. Seven of the world’s ten most populated countries are located here, with China and India

heading the list. Between them these two countries account for about 40 percent of the world’s population. In mainland China astrictly enforced government policy to restrict family size to just

In China, afamily with just one child receives

one child has slowed the rate of

free education and a

population growth, but elsewhere in the continent it is still very high. By the year 2000, India’s population

housing allowance

will have risen to over 1billion and

Indonesia’s will be over 220 million.

4^.-- fctfr -.

RfVER

VA L L E Y S

The rst peoples settled in fertile river valleys where they could grow crops. They built irrigation systems to channel water from rivers to the crops. Today, rivers are still important to the people of southern and eastern Asia. In addition to irrigation, rivers are used for shing and for drinking, and are dammed to produce hydroelectric power. Rivers often provide acountry’s main means of transportation, and some

World’s top rice-growing countries (1991) Vietnam:

Rice

4%

Other: 20%

Thailand:

China:

4 %

36%

Half the world’s population depends on rice as a .principal source of food, so arice shortage can cause

\terrible famine. This plant, native to Southeast Asia, has been cultivated in the region for at least 7,000

^years. In recent decades, new varieties of rice have India: 21%

/been developed to help feed Asia’s growing population. These new strains of rice are part of the “Green Revolution,” which applies scienti c knowledge to plant

Bangladesh:

are the focus around which

breeding and uses technology to increase productivity.

Indonesia: 9%

countries have grown up.

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-SKsv

ASIA

Peoples oe asia ii Althoughsomeasiancountries,suchasJapanand China, have been independent for along time, others have only recently emerged from colonization. At the start of this century, much of the Middle East, the whole Indian Subcontinent, and large areas of Southeast Asia were controlled

by European powers. Nationalist movements grew up across Asia and the countries regained their independence. Many countries here have had very fast economic growth. Together with the recent pressures for change, this means that societies across the region are now evolving rapidly.

The

former

I N D E P E N D E N C E

Each year, many countries in the region celebrate

their freedom from colonial rule in independence day celebrations, like those in Pakistan shown above. Some countries, such as India, gained their independence through peaceful protest, while erce ghting occurred in others, such as Myanmar. These countries are now struggling to forge a sense of national unity.

USSR

This map shows the former USSR and the 15 republics that it divided up into. o

USSR (Much of this area is now the Russian Federation.)

Breakup The Soviet Union, or USSR,

was the world’s largest nation. However, in 1991, the USSR split up into 15 republics, which set up their own governments. Nine of the republics are in Europe and the other six are in Asia. They are no longer part of alarge, centralized economy, and so are struggling to compete in a world market. The USSR’s collapse also freed some eastern European countries from Soviet control. Chechnya's capitai, Grozny, was heavily bombed by the Russian Federation in 1994. WORLD

RELIGIONS

Ethnic groups

Asia was the birthplace religions, including

Fighting between ethnic groups is still continuing in several parts of the former

Hinduism, Buddhism,

USSR. The Russian Federation, for

Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Religious beliefs still have astrong in uence on the people of the region today. Religions often emphasize modesty

example, includes some regions where the Russian population is in the minority and greater numbers of people belong to native ethnic groups. In Chechnya, only about a third of the population is Russian. Since the breakup

of all the main world

in wealth and the

importance of donating to charity for spiritual

of the USSR, the Chechens

reward rather than

have been ghting for independence. However,

any personal gain.

the Russian Federation This temple is in Thailand, where

/Most young

Buddhism is the

is not prepared to grant independence to any of

main religion.

these territories. It could

lead to the breakup

men in Thailand live in a

of Russia itself.

monastery as monks for afew months.

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136

Pressures for change In Asian societies today, traditional rural ways of life and religious beliefs con ict with an increasingly money-oriented society, in uenced by the West. As Asian societies become more open to Western in uences, so the

pressures on traditional ways of life will intensify. Societies react to pressures for change in different ways. In Iran, for example, religious leaders \dolently opposed the growing in uence of Western ideas, leading to the setting up of arepublic based

OIL

These Islamic fundamentalists in Iran were supporting the government of Ayatollah Khomeini.

4

MIDDLE

EAST

of all the natural gas occur here. Countries have become wealthy through the export of oil and natural gas throughout the world. New cities have sprung up, such as Dubai (shown above), and foreign workers have arrived in great numbers.

under Ayatollah Khomeini. The in uence of the US and

THE

transformed their fortunes. More than half the world’s known reserves of crude oil and athird

on traditional Islamic values

capitalism can be seen on the streets of Tokyo, in Japan.

AND

Before oil was discovered, many desert countries in the Middle East were very poor. Oil has

Shaded areas

Asia’s tiger economies

on the map show Southeast

Asia's newly industrializing countries.

:EA

lONG KONG,

LITTLE TA I WA N

c? WESTERN

PHILIPPINES

INFLUENCE

In some societies, change happens gradually and without violent demonstrations. In Japan, for example, economic development was seen by its rulers as away of avoiding becoming dependent on European nations. Japan has therefore accepted Western capitalism while still managing to preserve many traditional Japanese values. Even China, so long closed to Western ideas, is now beginning to embrace capitalism.

AfLAND

MALAYSIA 's

TIGERS

In the last 20 years, following in the footsteps ofjapan, the economies of many Southeast Asian countries have developed at arapid pace. Because of the speed and dynamism of economic growth, these newly industrializing countries have been nicknamed the “Little Tigers.” Cheap and plentiful labor, along with very strict governments that sti e any unrest, have encouraged foreign investment and the development of manufacturing industries.

Kazakh people in northern China outside atent known as ayurt Women

Role of women

in

the

workforce

This chart shows the

Women’s lives differ hugely over such alarge condnent, in uenced by each nation’s culture, religion, and politics.

percentage of men and women in the workforce in

92%

ve

countries. 75%

In some areas, such as in India and the Islamic countries

of the Middle East, the vast

majority of the workforce

54%

i s m a l e . Ye t I s l a m i c w o m e n in Southeast Asian countries

such as Indonesia often work

I

outside the home. In other

areas, such as communist NOMADIC

China

EXISTENCE

The collapse of the USSR has led to arevival of traditional ways of life among the nomads of central Asia. Goods that were made in factories,

and

such as felt, which is used to line the inside of nomads’ tents, ceased to be

available and now have to be made by hand using traditional methods. The same is true when it comes to moving. In recent years, many nomads have moved their belongings around in vehicles, but gasoline is now in very short supply, so nomads have returned to using camels and horses.

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and

the

North

former

Korea

republics of the USSR, women make up a large proportion of the workforce and carry out most

household

chores.

7 i ff

38%

communist

31% 25%

North Japan Indonesia India)Saudi Korea

Arabia

ASIA

♦RUSSIAN

F E D E R AT I O N

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Jan 2°F (-17°C) July 65°F (19°C)

R U S S I A N

Stretching across two continents -

B

Europe and Asia -and extending halfway around the globe, the Russian Federation is by far the largest country in the world. Because of the bitterly cold climate and harsh living conditions, this vast land is sparsely populated. However, Russia has areas of fertile land, rich mineral deposits,

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federation

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F E D E R A T I O N

Janl.6 in (40 mm) July 3.5 in {89 mm

St. Petersburg Jan 14”F (-10°C) July63“F {17°0

't'.

Jan 1.4 in (35 mm ) July 2.8 in (72 mm) Murnransk* s K O L A

BARENTS

SEA

and abundant natural resources. The

I

country was once the head of apowerful

s

communist state, the Union of

Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). After the collapse of communism in 1991, many parts of the old Soviet Union declared independence. The government of the newly formed

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struggling to establish aWesternstyle democracy and economy.

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Surrounded by high red-brick walls, the Kremlin (fortress) contains four gilt-

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^Stavropol’

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MAP

Longest river: Lena, 2,648 miles

(4,261 km) MapN Highest point: KJyuchevsk, 15,585 ft

(4,750 m) Map T Largest lake; Baikal, 12,150 sq miles

(31,468 sq km) Map M

ii'

World’s largest straits: Tatar Strait, 497 miles (800 km) long Map S9

1

I J l

i-% VOLGA

Political change The Moscow Kremlin re ects the

northwest of Moscow and

I ows 2,193 miles (3,530 km)

changing political face of Russia. Once the home of the tsars (emperors), who ruled Russia for many centuries, it later became the headquarters of the world’s rst communist government in 1917. The government created the USSR, which became an industrial and military superpower, but at great cost to its people. The communist state collapsed in 1991, and the Kremlin is now the symbolic home of

Mtsouthward to the Caspian

■■'J 'ISea. The Volga is th most important inland a* waterway in Russia. Hundreds of ships use it every day to transport goods to vast industrial

^sites that lie alongside the 'river. Six huge dams have created astring of reservoirs providing water and electricity for the people who live on or near its banks.

the new rulers of the Russian Federation.

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RIVER

The mighty Volga River rises

ASIA

♦RUSSIAN

F E D E R AT I O N

K

U

1 Franz Josef Land

a

2

o

C. Navarin

Pioner ^ October ^ Revolution

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3 Bolshevik II

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P t N I N . ' i U .

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Israeli leaders, giving Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), which represents the

A

( 1

kStrip. In 1967, Israel captured and reached between Arab and /



1

Many went to live in the neighboring Arab

M,occupied these areas. Recently, peace agreements have been

A

A

)

I

were driven from their homes and land.

Israeli settlements \

y

●Major cities

A

below sea level. Salt deposits rise up like pillars out of the water. No sh can live there, which is how the

lake got its name. Mud from the shore of the Dead Sea is said to

have healing properties.

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ASIA ♦THE MIDDLE EAST I

ASIA ♦THE MIDDLE EAST I

A

B

C

D

E

Haifa, Israel

1

Jan57°F(14°C) July 82”F (28”C) Jan 6.9 in (175 mm; Inly 0in (0 mm 2

3 L E B A N O N

4 THINGS ON

5

TO

LOOK

THE

FOR

MAP

Longest river; Euphrates, Iraq/Syria/Turkey, 1,749 miles (2,815 km) MapK Highest point: Mt. Qornet es Saouda, Lebanon, 10,127 ft

B E I R 1

I S R A E L

S Y R I A

(3,087 m) MapF 6

Dayr az Zawr, Syna

Largest lake: Dead Sea, Israel/ Jordan/West Bank, 405 sq miles (1,049 sq km) Map E

D A M A s r ; i y 5 5

Jan 44"F (7°C) July 92"F (34°C)

G O Z v LV

SHEIGHTS

J a n 1 .6 in (41 mm) July 0in (0 mm)

World’s oldest walled town:

Jericho, West Bank Map E8

Dar‘a



As Suwayda'

7

A1Mafraq* Petah 1iht M o s u l

^6'7 ” ●i

p

Qazvtn ●

Kara

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M - ' f

Jan 1.8 in (46 mm) July 0.1 in (3 mm)

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s ■

QoHeh-ye-Damavand

Bakhtaran

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KUWAIT

^ S f f T- E K AV I R :■!» B A H R A I N

r* Kerman





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Zahedan* UNITED ARAB EaMIRATES

._/az M m: Salt Lake

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-

OMAN

S C A T

SAUDI ARABIA

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia 10

Jan 58°F (15°C) July 93°F (34°C) Jan 0.1 in (3 mm) July 0in (0 mm)

11 y i : m e n

0

12

A1

Miikha

Muslims, the followers of Islam, believe in one God, Allah, and in Mohammed,

his prophet. Mohammed was born in Mecca, in modern-day Saudi Arabia. The Muslims’ holy book is the Koran, which contains Allah’s teachings as revealed to Mohammed. Adevout Muslim reading the Koran

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0

ASIA ♦THE MIDDLE EAST II

CITIES

The Middle East has some of the most rapidly growing cities in the world. This is because of the enormous wealth brought to the region by the discovery of oil and by the growth in population. These large cities are built along the lines of many modem cities in Western countries, with high-rise apartment and of ce buildings of glass, steel, and concrete.

ASIA ♦IRAQ

IRAQ

Iraq

This ziggurat is in Ur, once athriving city in Mesopotamia.

Iraq is one of the largest and most

L

i

IRAQ Capital city: Baghdad Area: 169,235 .sq miles (438,320 sq km) Population: 19,335,199

Of cial language: Arabic Major religions: Muslim 97%, other 3%

Government: One-party dictatorship Currency: Iraqi dinar Adult literacy rate: 62% Life expectancy: 66 years

powerful countries in the Middle East. Most of its people are Muslim and Arabic speaking. There are also around 4million Kurds living in the north. Apart from the fertile plains of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, most of Iraq is mountainous or covered in desert. Only about asixth of the country is suitable for farming and much of Iraq’s food is imported. Since Iraq became arepublic in 1958, it has experienced great political unrest. During the 1980s abitter war was fougbt against Iran, and Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait led to the Gulf War

(1990-91) and to intervention

The fertile crescent extends

through Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Into northern Egypt. M E S O P O TA M I A

Many ancient peoples settled in Mesopotamia (part of which is now Iraq) because it lay in the fertile crescent of land formed by the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. The area has many ancient ruins, including stepped, pyramidlike structures called ziggurats, found at Babylon and Ur. The steps led to atemple at the top.

by an international force.

People per doctor: 1,810

Saddam hussein Since 1979, Iraq has been

Televisions: 72 per 1,000 people

ruled by Saddam Hussein. Under his dictatorship, many ordinary Iraqis, especially the Kurds, have suffered badly. The government is backed by the army and the secret , service, which help

prevent any politica I opposition. Saddam’s / invasion of Kuwait jWU

some

Baghdad, the capital of Iraq, lies

countries, and led

on the banks of the Tigris River. It

to Iraq’s isolation

is the largest city in Iraq and the country’s center of business and government. Acity of contrasts, it is amixture of ancient mosques,

modern high-rise buildings, and packed bazaars. Baghdad has been acenter of Islamic culture

for more than athousand years.

Iraq’s most important natural resources are oil and natural gas. Oil production began on alarge scale in 1945 and now dominates

was condemned by the West and by B A G H D A D

Piping oil

the economy. Because Iraq has only ashort stretch of coastline along the Persian Gulf, it relies on pipelines through Turkey, Syria, and Saudi Arabia to export its oil.

Arab

in world affairs.

The Marsh Arabs wind their way The huts, or mudhifs, are made of reeds

bound tightly together.

Marsh Arabs The Marsh Arabs have hunted and

shed

in the marshes of southern Iraq for more

than 5,000 years. Today, their lifestyle is threatened by

the government’s decision ( to drain the marshes, using the water for growing crops. The unique emironment

and

wildlife of the

Find

marshes will also

drainage plans continue.

The white pelican is one rare species of bird that makes its

Jhe reed huts are

Dictatorship: 271 Kurds: 144

built on platforms

h o m e i n t h e m a r s h l a n d s i n w i n t e r.

made of mud.

On.: 137, 152, 281

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154 l

more

Ancient SITES: 134

vanish if the

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out

I r a n Iran is the largest NON-ARAB country in the Middle East; its people are Persian in origin. In ancient times, Iran was called Persia, and it was at the center of agreat empire. The Persian Minaret

ilanguage has survived from that time and is spoken by

Imost Iranians. The country consists of ahuge, central plateau ringed by the Zagros and Elburz I R A N

mountains. In 1979, tbe last Shah, or

Capital city: Tehran

Population: 61,600,000

king, of Iran was overthrown by an Islamic revolution and the country was declared a republic. Today, oil is Iran’s biggest export.

Of cial language: Farsi Major religions: Muslim

Mosque

Area: 636,293 sq miles (1,648,000 sq km)

99%, other 1%

Mosques are Muslim places of worship. All mosques have at least one tall tower, or minaret, from which the faithful are called to prayer. Many mosques are beautifully decorated with abstract patterns and verses from the Koran, the ,holy book of Islam. Artists avoid representing living things because Muslims believe nothing

Government: Islamic

republic Currency: Iranian rial Adult literacy rate: 56% Life expectancy: 67 years People per doctor: 3,140 Televisions: 65 per 1,000 people

*should be worshiped apart from God, and that HGod is the only creator of life.

QANAT IRRIGATION Less than half of the Iranian countryside is suitable

for farming, and then only if it is well irrigated, or watered. Traditional irrigation methods include dams, wells, and qanats. Aqanat is an underground channel that transports water from asource to an area that can be farmed. Some qanats are more than 25 miles (40 km) long. The wells are used as ventilation and

repair shafts, as well as to draw water.

Shepherds leading their ock of sheep through the Elburz Mountains

In recent years, Iran has tried to become less dependent on food imports and has started growing more crops, such as cereals, tea, and cotton. Herds of cattle, sheep, and goats continue to be kept by many farming families.

i

kvV

"1-

A G R I C U LT U R E

Islamic fundamentalists carrying posters of Ayatollah Khomeini

The ayatollah Ayatollah Khomeini was a key gure in the Iranian

Rainwater runs down

and seeps into the

ground.

The water

ows along an underground channel that

slopes gently downward.

Aseries of wells

are used to dig

Asettlement often

revolution and remained

grows up near the mouth of aqanat

Iran’s political and religious

the channel and then to draw water from it.

PERSIAN

Persian carpets. Each consists of thousands of pieces of wool knotted into elaborate patterns. The weavers always make adeliberate mistake in their work because, as Muslims, they believe that nothing is perfect except God. Carpets are Iran’s second largest export, after oil.

I

Y

Graceful patterns f

of

This woman is weaving a carpet on avertical loom.

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owers and leaves

combined with abstract shapes are afeature of Persian carpets.

155 fl

leader until his death in

1989. The Shah had tried to introduce Western ideas to

Iran, but Khomeini wanted

the country to be governed by traditional Islamic laws

CARPETS

Iran is famous for its handwoven

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ASIA ♦IRAN

and values. His ideas still dominate

Iran.

Find out mor

Carpet making: 144, 165, 210 Irrigation: 156, 217 Islam: 275 Political swtems: 270

O

Saudi Arabia

'

Saudi Arabia is by far the largest country in S A U D I AHARt.A

SAUDI ARABIA

Capital city: Riyadh Area: 829,995 sq miles (2,149,690 sq km) Population: 15,431,000

Of cial language: Arabic Major religion: Muslim

the Arabian Peninsula. Some 90 percent of this Muslim nation is covered by the hot, dry, sandy Arabian Desert, including the vast Rub‘Al Khali, or Empty Quarter, in the south. There are no permanent rivers, and years may pass without any rainfall. The discovery of huge oil reserves has made Saudi Arabia extremely rich and powerful, and has enabled it to develop and improve its

industry, agriculture, and standard of living.

100%

O P E C

Saudi Arabia has the largest oil reserves in the world. Oil accounts for almost 90 percent of the country’s exports. Saudi Arabia is akey member of OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries). OPEC sets guidelines for the production and export of oil, and protects the interests of its member countries.

Government: Absolute

monarchy

Currency: Saudi riyal

Mecca

Adult literacy rate: 64%

Mecca, the birthplace of the prophet Mohammed and the holiest city of Islam, is in the west of Saudi Arabia. Each year, more than amillion pilgrims from all

Life expectancy: 69 years People per doctor: 660 Televisions: 269 per 1,000 people

over the world

women

wear

ock to Mecca to visit the

sacred Ka’ba shrine in the Great Mosque. Muslims are expected to undertake the hajj, or pilgrimage to Mecca, at least once

Many Islamic a

veil, or burqa

in their lives. a - .

The Ka'ba stands on the remains of an ancient shrine, which, according to the Koran (the Muslim holy book), was built by Abraham. WAT E R I N G

Women’s role

and unsuitable for

growing food. Farmers rely on irrigation to water

Itheir Recent elds.

projects have been so

traditional Muslim dress, with

successful that farmers

along robes and veils covering 3their heads and faces. In Saudi IArabia, women are not allowed

.can now grow melons,

^tomatoes, wheat, and ^barley in the desert.

'! to work with men nor to drive

■|\ Disk-shaped elds are crea

Icars, although every girl has

8by sprinklers that rotate to

Ithe right to agood education.

For centuries. Bedouin

Camels are ideally

ABedouin tent is

suited to desert life

made from long strips of tightly woven goat hair.

and are highly valued by the Bedouin.

LAND

Aland is scrubby, barren,

estricted lives by Western standards. Many women wear

The bedouin

THE

Much of Saudi Arabia’s

Women in Saudi Arabia and some other Muslim countries live

Swater the land. The tent is divided

Modern Bedouin use cars and

into male and

trucks for transportation as well as camels and horses.,

female quarters.

nomads have roamed the deserts of Saudi Arabia in search of food and water for their animals. Some Bedouin are

camel herders; others

keep sheep and goats. The Bedouin

traditionally live in tents that are light and easy to transport. Today, their way of life is endangered because the government is encouraging people to settle in towns

Bedouin

and cities.

camels and horses.

Find women

weave tent cloth.

drapes, and cushion covers, and saddle

bags for their

Long, loose-titting robes protect the skin U from sun, and keep the body cool during the day.

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ASIA ♦SAUDI ARABIA

out

more

Desert nomads: 181, 209 Deserts: 13, 132, 152 Islam: 275

Oil: 137, 152, 281

A S I A ♦ K U W A I T, B A H R A I N , A N D Q ATA R

O

K u w a i t

'

K U W A I T

Kuwait lies at the northern end of the Persian Gulf. It is asmall country, largely covered by sandy desert. Huge oil reserves have made Kuwait rich, and oil re ning has become its chief industry. In 1990, at the start of the Gulf War, Kuwait was occupied by Iraq. It was liberated in 1991 by

B.AHRAIN.

QATAR.

K U W A I T

Capital city: Kuwait

an international force.

Kuwait ’swealth

Of cial language: Arabic

Until the discovery of oil in the 1940s, Kuwait was apoor, underdeveloped country. The wealth gained by selling

Major religions: Muslim 85%, other 15% Government: Absolute

oil has transformed it into one of the

monarchy with parliament Currency: Kuwaiti dinar

most prosperous nations in the

world. Its people enjoy ahigh jA standard of living, with fre Q ® '

Adult literacy rate: 74% Life expectancy: 75 years

education, free health care and social services, and no income tax W k m '

People per doctor: 690 Televisions: 271 per 1,000 people

m S*;.

P O L L U T I O N

Kuwait suffered badly during its invasion by Iraq. Many of its oil wells were set on re, causing enormous damage to the economy and the environment. Ahuge slick of oil spilled into the Gulf, poisoning the water and killing wildlife. Abandoned ammunition and unexploded mines littered the desert. The cleaning up process continues today.

Area: 6,880 sq miles (17,820 sq km) Population: 2,212,000

V,

Kuwait's wealth is re ected in

its impressive buiidings, such as these water towers that

M

u

dominate Kuwait City's skyline.

B A H R A I N

B a h r a i n

Capital city: Manama Area: 263 sq miles (680 sq km) Population: 518,000 Of cial language: Arabic

Bahrain is made up of asmall group of

Major religions: Muslim

islands in the Persian Gulf. Little rain falls,

85%, Christian 7%, other 8%

so farming is only possible on irrigated, or watered, land. Bahrain was one of the

Government: Absolute

monarchy Currency: Bahrain dinar

oil reserves are now running out.

Adult literacy rate: 79% Life expectancy: 71 years

Linked islands

PEARLING

People per doctor: 930

The main island of Bahrain is linked

As Bahrain’s oil runs low, traditional

Televisions: 414 per 1,000 people

industries, such as pearling, are once again growing in importance. The pearl season lasts from June to September. Divers descend on weighted ropes, equipped only with nose-plugs, knives, and collecting bags. The most valuable pearls are bright white, tinged with pink.

Q ATA R Capital city: Doha Area: 4,247 sq miles (11,000 sq km) Population: 500,000 Major religions: Muslim 95%, other 5%

Qatar

Government: Absolute

monarchy

Currency: Qatar riyal Adult literacy rate: 76%

Qatar is along peninsula of

land jutting out into the Persian Gulf It is mainly desert with a hot, dry climate. Oil production and re ning form the basis of its economy. The government is trying to encourage the growth of shing and agriculture to reduce the country’s dependence on oil.

Life expectancy: 70 years People per doctor: 530 Televisions: 445 per 1,000

people

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by aseries of road causeways to the neighboring islands of A1 Muharraq

A

and Sitrah, and to the Saudi Arabian mainland, with which Bahrain has

close relations. Bahrain island is only 30 miles (48 km) long, and the other

Apearl taken from an oyster shell.

Of cial language: Arabic

fi

rst

Arab states to discover oil in the 1930s. Its

islands are even smaller.

An Indian

WORKERS

construction

In the 1940s, the smaller oil states such as

worker

Qatar and Kuwait encouraged workers from other parts of the Middle East, India, and Pakistan to work in their rapidly growing oil

FROM

ABROAD

industries. Their own labor forces were

simply too small to cope. Today, these migrant workers outnumber the local Qatari people.

Find out mor Deserts: 15, 132, 152 Gulf war: 152, 154 Irrigation: 155, 156, 217 Oil: 137, 152, 281

O

E M I R AT E S A N D

OMAN

United arab emirates

'

I

XHEUNITEDARABEMIRATES(UAE)liesonthesouthern coast of the Persian Gulf. Three-quarters of this U A E

O M A N

2 UNITED

ARAB

E M I R AT E S

Capital city: Abu Dhabi Area: 32,278 sq miles

(83,600 sq km Population: 1,630,000

Islamic country is sandy desert, with ahot, dry climate all year round. Only atiny proportion of the land is suitable for farming and most food has to be imported. Oil was discovered in 1958 and has turned the UAE into one of

the world’s most prosperous countries, with a high standard of living for most people. There are many huge oil re neries along the coast.

I

Of cial language: .Arabic

Abu Dhabi

Major religions: Muslim

T O U R I S M

96%, other 4%

The UAE has agrowing tourist industry. Some 50,000 people arrive each year, mainly from Europe and Japan. Most visit in

Government: Federation of monarchies

Currency: UAE dirham Adult literacy rate: no gures available

Seven states The United Arab Emirates is a

federation of seven small states, or

emirates, each ruled by an emir, or sheik. The emirs have absolute power over their own states, but they also meet regularly to make decisions affecting the whole federation. Abu Dhabi is the largest of the emirates and its capital is also that of the UAE.

winter when it is warm, but not too hot. Attractions

Life expectancy: 71 years People per doctor: 1,020

include luxury hotels and duty-free shops, traditional

Televisions: 110 per 1,000 people

markets,

ne beaches, and

trips into the desert. Al Mamza Beach Park, Dubai

O M A N

Capital city: Muscat Area: 82,030 sq miles (212,460 sq km)

Islamic festivals

Government: Absolute

The two most important festivals of the Islamic year are Id al-Fitr and Id alAdha. Id al-Fitr literally means “the breaking of the fast.” It celebrates the end of the holy month of Ramadan, during

monarchy

which Muslims must fast from

Currency: Omani rial

dawn to dusk. Id al-Adha is the

Adult literacy rate: 41 % Life expectancy: 69 years

festival of sacri ce. Prayers are followed by the sacri ce of a sheep, cow, or camel.

Population: 1,618,000

Of cial language: Arabic Major religion: Muslim 100%

People per doctor: 1,060

Televisions: 755 per 1,000 people

AMusiim famiiy ceiebrating Id al-Fitr (ieft) The feast consists of typicai Middie Eastern foods, such as those shown on the right.

Apricots and dates Dried apricots

Lentiis are used

to make soups.

LOST

Oil is Oman’s

^Fishing iK The Oman coasdine is 1,056 miles food. Omani

shermen catch

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tted with outboard

motors for greater speed. 1 5 8

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SANDS

border. Some experts believe that this is the lost city of Ubar.

(1,700 km) long, and shing is a

canoes

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THE

valuable source of income and

ianchovies, cutde and cod, sh.

shermen

OF

a b o u t 3 0 0 0 B C n e a r t h e Ye m e n

They use traditional dugout

Omani

CITY

Archaeologists have excavated awatering hole and the remains of acity dating from

^large amounts of sardines, tuna,

main export.

eaten with amain

sands of southern Oman.

Much of the land is desert, dotted with oases, but

People also raise goats, sheep, and cattle.

Zucchini is often

lies buried under the desolate

southeastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula.

limes, tobacco, and wheat.

appetizers.

According to Arabian legend, amagni cent city called Ubar

The sultanate (kingdom) of OMAN lies on the parts of the coastline are more fertile. Here farmers grow dates, pomegranates,

are often eaten as

meat dish.

Oman

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ASIA ♦UNITED ARAB

Find out mor

Deserts: 15, 132, 152 Islam: 275

Oil: 137, 152, 281 Oil wealth: 137,278

YEMEN

Ye m e n The COUNTRY OF YEMEN was formed in 1990 w h e n N o r t h a n d S o u t h Ye m e n w e r e r e u n i t e d .

Yemen lies at the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula. It is more fertile than other

Y E M E N

Capital city: San’a Area: 203,850 sq miles (527,970 sq km) Population: 12,533,000 Of cial language: Arabic Major religions: Muslim 97%, other 3%

Middle Eastern countries, with good farmland in the western highlands where there is regular rainfall. The coast and mountains of the east are hot, dry, and barren. Yemen is apoorer, less developed country than its neighbors, although the discovery of oil in the 1980s may help increase its prosperity in the future.

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Yemen riyal

T r a d i t i o n a l Ye m e n i

The upper oors are used as living quarters.

tower houses are

Adult literacy rate: 41 %

scattered throughout

Life expectancy: 52 years

the terraced hills.

THE

PORT

OF

ADEN

Aden is one of the biggest cities in Yemen and the country’s main port. Because of its location on the Gulf of Aden, it has been the region’s chief trading city since ancient times. Today, it is an important industrial center, with ahuge oil re nery, factories, and an international airport.

The terraces are built up into the mountains

People per doctor: no

gures available Televisions: 29 per 1,000 people

The

rst

oor is

often used for

storage.

Ye m e n i t e r r a c e s In many places the mountain slopes of Yemen are terraced to provide extra space for crops. Some terraces are more than 1,300 years old. More than half the people of Yemen are farmers. They grow cereal crops, such as wheat and sorghum, along with citrus fruits and dates, and raise

sheep, goats, and cattle. Coffee and cotton are grown mainly for export.

Animals, such as goats and sheep, are kept on the ground oor of ahouse.

Coffee is often served in

Avariety of crops, such as coffee and cotton, are grown o n t h e Ye m e n i t e r r a c e s .

traditional Bedouin pots.

Tribal society

COFFEE AND QAT Coffee is thought to have originated as adrink in Yemen I ' “V and the country produces

lit:''

a

I

Most Yemeni people are Muslim Arabs belonging to various tribal groups. Each

Jsome of the world’s nest

yquality beans. Yemen is also

*

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'famous for aplant called qat. Its leaves contain amild drug and are often chewed. Qat parties are an important part

people live in large, closely knit, extended families. Tribal men often wear aceremonial dagger, or jambiya strapped to the waist.

San’a

A

I ,jiQ

|l!Uar»aj 'j

decorated with friezes. An international conservation effort has been launched to

protect this unique city and preserve it for the future.

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Several generations of the same family usually share the same house. The tribal

San’a, the capital of Yemen, is an ancient city famous for its traditional Yemeni-style architecture. In the old city you can still see clusters of 400-year-old multistory mud and asB-;’" brick tower houses, their outer walls often

%

tribe elects asheik as its leader and has its own

customs, costumes, and folklore. Within atribe.

o f Ye m e n i s o c i a l l i f e .

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ASIA*

tradition is particularly strong in northern Yemen. Find out mor Ancient sites: 134

Coffee: 50, 62, 66 Oil: 137, 152, 281 Terr/VCE farming: 173, 201

ASIA

I

♦CENTRAL ASIA

Central asia

i

Centralasialiesfarfromtheworld’soceans.Thewinds|

i

I i 41 5

are dry and there is little rainfall, so the area is generally arid. | With cold, dry winters, and hot, dry summers, lack of water is a problem for farmers. The north consists of a at, grass-covered plain, or steppe. In the center of the region are two vast deserts, the Kyzyl Kum (“Red Sands”) and the Kara Kum (“Black Sands”). In the south are long chains of snowcapped mountain ranges that join the neighboring Himalayas. The entire region, apart from Afghanistan, used to be part of the Soviet Union. Industrialization and collective farms brought huge changes

Abillboard displaying acommunist poster in Uzbekistan I N D E P E N D E N C E

In 1991, the communist state of the Soviet Union

fell apart and the central Asian countries became independent. While the countries were under

Soviet rule, many Russian people setded there,

to aregion once occupied mainly by nomads.

and Russian replaced the local languages. Today,

the peoples of central Asia are reestablishing their own languages and national identities.

Nomadio herders in the hilis

of Afghanistan This girl’s hat from Uzbekistan is embroidered with

goid thread.

Chad's hat from Afghanistan

ALAND OF MANY PEOPLES

There is agreat variety of people living in central Asia. The original inhabitants i n c l u d e t h e K a z a k h s , Tu r k m e n s , a n d

Uzbeks, related to the Turks, and the Tajiks and Afghans, related to the Iranians. Each group has its own distinctive style of hat, often woven in silk with brightly colored geometric patterns. Silver ornaments adorn

Nomadic lifestyle Many people living in central Asia are nomads, moving

this Turkmen girl's hat. The Aral Sea in 1960

from place to place with their animals in search of new pastures. Nomads live in tents and have few belongings,

making traveling easy and quick. They live by herding animals such as camels, goats, and sheep, which give

them milk, meat, and wool, some of which they sell, but most of which they use themselves. Nomads mostly stay in the open country, but they visit the towns and cities occasionally to sell their products. DRILLING

FOR

Fishing village Fishing village on the coast /

stranded inland

The Aral Sea in 1995

central Asia are sitting on huge reserves of oil and gas. Kazakhstan is slowly exploiting one of the world’s biggest oil elds under the Caspian Sea,

The lake is about half Its

original size. By 2010, It L may have almost disappeared.

Shrinking sea

while Turkmenistan is

The Aral Sea, once the fourth

beginning to make use of a vast reservoir of natural gas trapped beneath its land. Exploitation of these riches is hampered by lack of investment and apoorly

largest freshwater lake in the world, is shrinking. Fishing villages that once stood on the sea coast are now stranded inland,

depriving villagers of their livelihood. This environmental disaster has been caused by water being drained for irrigation projects from the Amu Darya River, which ows into the Aral Sea. Fluge areas of useless land have been laid bare. Wind storms are common, sweeping up polluted dust and dumping it on the surrounding countryside.

skilled workforce. - ● p . t * - .

Miners drilling for oil in the Tengiz oil eld in Kazakhstan

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Islam Caviar served

home to avariety of sh, such as sturgeon, from which atype of caviar ( sh eggs) comes. However, pollution of the waters by industrial waste has led to adrop in the numbers

of

on

toast

Throughout central Asia, Islam is the main religion. It arrived in the region in the early 8th century. While central Asia was part of the Soviet Union, Islam was suppressed. Traditiona « Muslim wedding ceremonie C were forbidden. Throughou i this time, however, people continued to worship in secret. With the end of communism, Islam

sh.

has gained strength in every country.

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(378,400 sq km) Map B 683 miles (1,100 km) MapES

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countries. The lake is

(7,495 m) Map H

K a r a k u m C a n a l , Tu r k m e n i s t a n ,

11

The large.st inland lake in the world, the Caspian Sea covers 146,111 sq miles (.378,400 sq km) and borders live .41

Highest point: Communism

World’s longest irrigation canal: Gouul-e-Zereh

K4

Longest river: Amu Darya, Afghanistan/Tajikistan/

World’s largest lake: Caspian Sea,

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ASIA ♦CENTRAL ASIA

♦ K A Z A K H S TA N

ASIA

Kazakhstan

KAZAKHSTAN’

Stretching from the Caspian Sea to China, Kazakhstan is avast country, almost the size of western Europe. It is also one of the most underpopulated

I

countries in the world. With vast

mineral reserves, fertile soil, and astable K A Z A K H S T A N

Capital city: Astana Area: 1,049,1.50 .sq miles (2,717,300 ,sq km) Population: 16,536,511

Of cial language: Kazakh Major religions: Muslim 47%, other 53%

Government: Democracy Currency: Tenge Adult literacy rate: 98%

;

government, Kazakhstan has the potential to be awealthy country. However, industrial and agricultural pollution, and the presence of many ageing nuclear weapons left behind by the former Soviet Union, have caused considerable environmental problems.

The virgin lands In the 1950s the Russian government increased grain production by cultivating the vast grassland steppes, or plains, of Kazakhstan. Huge farms were set up to grow corn and wheat on

At the processing plant, the coal is cleaned and dried and sorted into different sizes

In the lter bed, any remaining pieces of rock

Life expectancy: 69 years

land that had been barren. Millions of

and clay are removed.

Russians migrated or were forced to move to this empty region, known as the “Virgin Lands.” The program

People per doctor: 250

Televisions: No

gures

available

Trucks transport the extracted coal along ahauling road.

Rich in

met with mixed success. It left

Kazakhstan self-suf cient in grain and other crops, but it led to enormous environmental damage.

M I N E R A L S

Mining is the most important industry in Kazakhstan. The country has huge coal and iron-ore reserves, the world’s

largest chrome mine, one of

its biggest gold elds, an

g

plentiful supplies of copper g zinc, lead, uranium, an

K

other minerals. Most coal in

Kazakhstan comes from open-pit mines, where coal is extracted near

the surface of the ground, rather than from deep mine shafts.

Machines dig the coal out

of the pit. Surface rock is loosened

Agovernment building in Almaty, the former capital of Kazakhstan.

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Steps are cut into the sides of the pit so that

by explosives so that the digging machines can

the coal can be

remove the rock and

reached safely.

reach the coal.

S PA C E

RACE

hf-'i-

Hi.stoiy was made in Kazakh.stan in 1957, when the world’s

THE

W'.’

rst

arti cial .satellite,

.Sputnik /, was launched

from

farmers and have worked hard to the

preseive the natural beauty of the

Baykonur

jland, setting up reserv'es to protect

Cosmodrome, or

Ithe wildlife and environment. The

space station, in

’rest of the population consists

the center of the THE

CITY

OF

mainly of Russians, Germans, and

coimtiy. The rst person in space, Yuri Gagarin, was

APPLES

Ukranians.

Almaty means “father of apple trees,” and the sent into orbit former capital is known for its apple orchards. around the Earth The city nestles at the foot of the Tien Shan from Baykonur in mountains in the far south of the countiy. It has 1961. The site is still many parks and fountains, and narrow' canals called aryk.t run along the sides of streets to cool used today by the the city during the hot summers. The capital was Russian government for recently moved to Astana (Akmola) in the north. its space program.

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KAZAKHS

Native Ktizakhs make up only about 40 percent of the total population of their countr)' and live mainly in the west and south. Many are

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Find out more '3

CKRF.At„s: 34, 122 Coal mining: 96, 114 P o i ’ u i AT i O N d e n s i t y : 1 3 5

Steppe (grassiands): 15

AND

TA J I K I S TA N

i

Uzbekistan

,UZBEKISTAN

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[TAJIKISTAN





Uzbekistan is one of the wealthiest and one of the more populated countries in

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central Asia, It also has avaried landscape. While two-thirds of the land is made up of

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desert and arid steppe land, there are also fertile areas, fast- owing rivers, and snowy

U Z B E K I S TA N

Capital city; Tashkent Area: 439,733 sq miles (1,138,910 sq km)

mountaintops. The ancient cities of the Silk Road are beginning to attract large numbers

N AT U R A L

of tourists, and foreign investors are helping

and uranium. Ahuge pipeline used for

78%, other 22

develop the country’s huge mineral and energy resources. Uzbekistan is also the world’s fourth largest producer of cotton,

Government: Democracy

known locally as “white gold.

Population: 19,905,158 Of cial language: Uzbek Major religions: Muslim

GAS

Uzbekistan is rich in natural resources. It has

plentiful supplies of oil, natural gas, coal, gold, exporting natural gas stretches from Bukhara to the Urals in Russia. Much of the local

industry, producing machinery, chemicals, and aircraft, is based on energy from gas.

Currency: Som

Adult literacy rate: 97%

Islamic cities

Life expectancy: 69 years

The Silk Road is an old trading

People per doctor: 280 Televisions; No gures

route that linked China with

available

central Asia, the Middle East, and

Europe. Ancient Islamic cities,

Capital city: Dushanbe

once major trading centers, are found along its route. These

Area: 55,251 sq miles

include Samarkand, which

TA J I K I S TA N

(143,100 sqkm

contains many ne examples of

Population; 5,108,576 Of cial language: Tajik

Islamic architecture, Bukhara, an

Major religions: Muslim

Muslims, and Tashkent, the

85%, other 15%

capital of Uzbekistan, known as

Government: Democracy

the “city of fountains.”

important place of pilgrimage for

Currency: Rouble Adult literacy rate: 97% Life expectancy: 70 years People per doctor: 350 Televisions; No

gures

TA J I K I S TA N

M e a n

available

The poorest of the former Soviet Union states, Tajikistan is amountainous country with only about six percent of its land available for farming. Most people work on the land, growing ^ In the Pamir mountain

region, adifferent tribal group is found in almost every valley.

fruit, cotton, and tobacco and herding animals, or work in small factories producing textiles, silk, and carpets. Since

independence in 1991, Tajikistan

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.

has been split by armed con ict between the government and Irebel groups.

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BPamir VALLEY PEOPLES 100,000 people live in the ;Pamir mountain region, growing

grain and fruit in the deep valleys, or herding sheep and yaks on the bleak high plains in the east. Because

^of the remoteness of the area and the

isoladon of the valleys from each other, ff- there is abewildering variety of peoples, languages, and dialects.

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♦ U Z B E K I S TA N

ASIA

Pistachios FERTILE

VA L L E Y S

In spring, melted snow from the Ti e n S h a n a n d P a m i r m o u n t a i n s

ows down into the Fergana and other river valleys of Tajikistan, bringing with it rich, fertile mud. Irrigation channels direct this water into the surrounding elds, enabling farmers to grow avariety of crops, such as those above.

Find out mor

Cotton: 36, 215, 216 Gas: 198, 211 Islvm: 275 Islamic architecture: 155

T U R K M E N I S T A N

I"

♦ T U R K M E N I S TA N

AND

K Y R G Y Z S TA N

Turkmenistan Almost 90 percent of Turkmenistan

c K V R G r a S TA N

consists of the vast Kara Kum (“Black Sands”)

Desert, where temperatures reach more than 122°F (50°C). Afertile strip of land stretches around the southern borders of the desert; T U R K M E N I S TA N

Capital city: Ashgabat Area: 188,455 sq miles (488,100 sq km) Population: 3,533,925

Of cial language: Turkmen

Major religions: Muslim

here people grow cotton and other crops for export. Since Turkmenistan became independent in 1991, Turkmen has replaced Russian as the state language, and Islam is once again the major religion. The country is poor and isolated from the rest of the world, but possesses huge reserves of natural gas.

A S H G A B AT

In 1948, the bustling market town of Ashgabat was totally destroyed by ahuge earthquake. The town was completely replanned and rebuilt, and is now the capital city of Turkmenistan. Ashgabat is acenter for food processing and silk, lace, and carpet manufacturing.

85%, Christian 10%, other 5%

Government: Democracy Currency: Manat Adult literacy rate: 98% Life expectancy: 66 years People per doctor: 290 Televisions: No

gures

available K Y R G Y Z S TA N

Capital city: Bishkek Area: 76,640 sq miles (198,500 sq km) Population: 4,290,442 Of cial language: Kyrgyz Major religions: No gures available Government: Democracy Currency: Som Adult literacy rate: 97% Life expectancy: 68 years People per doctor: 280 Televisions: No available

gures

The TURKMENS

A .

The Turkmen people live in various parts of central Asia and many follow a nomadic lifestyle. In

Ashgabat

Karakum

Canal

Turkmenistan, however,

many Turkmens have settled as farmers and

expert horse breeders. They visit local horse fairs and buy and sell horses for export to neighboring countries. The Turkmens

are known for producing prized racehorses, such as the Akhal-Teke, abreed

able to move quickly in desert conditions.

●Main towns

1^ Cotton

KARAKUM

CANAL

The world’s longest irrigation canal stretches from the Amu Darya River in the east to beyond Ashgabat in the west, adistance of 683 miles (1,100 km). Known as the “River of Life,” the Karakum

Canal provides water for alarge area of arid land so that cotton

and other crops can be grown.

Gold nugget

Kyrgyzstan Known as the Switzerland of central Asia because of its mountainous landscape, over half of Kyrgyzstan is 8,200 ft (2,500 m) or more above sea level. The

The Kyrgyz people practice Islam. They speak aTurkic language and live anomadic life in the countryside.

snowcapped Tien Shan Mountains dominate the countryside, but the river valleys are fertile and green. Most people are farmers. Animal breeding is particularly important because there is so little land to farm.

The KYRGYZ PEOPLE The population is more than half native Kyrgyz. These nomadic people are

M O U N TA I N

RICHES

The mountains of Kyrgyzstan are rich in minerals. Cold and mercury are mined for export, while coal, oil, and gas are exploited for domestic use. The fast- owing rivers are ideal for generating electricity, and new hydroelectric power stations have been built.

known for their skilled horsemanship.

The largest minority group are Russians, who live in the towns and, until

independence in 1991, ran the economy. As aresult of rising nationalist feeling among the Kyrgj'z, many Russian people have now returned to Russia.

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ASIA

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Deserts: 15, 132, 152 Gas: 163, 198, 211 Nomads: 160

USSR breakup: 136, 160

ASIA

♦ A F G H A N I S TA N

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Afghanistan

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Afghanistan occupies an important position between central Asia to the north and the Indian A F G H A N I S TA N

a

Subcontinent to the south. As aresult, the country

has been fought over for centuries, especially by Russian and British armies. Afghanistan is aland of L A F G H A N I S TA N

Capital city: Kabul Area: 251,770 sq miles (652,090 sq km) Population: 20,500,000

contrasts, made up of high, grassy plains, low, at, stony desert, and high mountain peaks. The country has few roads and no railroads, and almost three-quarters of this bleak land is inaccessible. In the last 20 years, the country has been in the grip

ISLAMIC

government. Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world.

99%, other 1%

Government: Islamic

republic Currency: .Afghani Adult literacy rate: 32% Life expectancy: 43 years

Some mujahideen groups are based in the hills of Afghanistan Mujahideen comes

People per doctor: 6,430

from the Arabic

Televisions: 8per 1,000 people

word for “ ghter."

The Turkmen nomads in the north

of the country live in reddish-brown, dome-shaped tents.

The mujahideen

The Pushtoon nomads of the south live in black

In 1979, the Soviet Union invaded

tents spread low over the ground.

Afghanistan to prop up the new communist government. Islamic rebels, known as the mujahideen, retaliated hy launching afull-scale war. By 1989 they had forced the Soviet army to withdraw, and by 1992 had taken over the entire country. Once in power, they introduced strict Islamic laws. However, ghting between the main mujahideen groups has led to a

1

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T E N T S

Some Afghans are nomads, or kochis as they are known locally. The different groups can be distinguished by the unique designs of the felt or animal-skin tents they live in, each design having been passed down through countless generations.

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Highest point: Mt. Everest, on border of China/Nepal/Tibet, 29,029 ft (8,848 m) Map DI2 Largest lake: Qinghai Hu, China 1,722 sq miles

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M O N G O L I A

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Berber wedding

M o r o c c o

c e r e m o n y

Morocco’s warm climate, sandy beaches M O R O C C O

\

M O R O C C O *

Capital city: Rabat I

Area: 269,757 sq miles (698,670 sq km) Population; 27,()()0,000 Of cial language; Arabic Major religions: Muslim 99%, other 1%

Government: Monarchy with democratic system Currency: Moroccan dirham

and stunning mountain scenery make it a popular destination for vacationers. Tourism, along with agriculture and phosphate production, is vital to the country’s economy. In 1956, Morocco gained its independence from the French, who had governed it since 1912. It is one of the few Arab countries to

be ruled by aking, Hassan II. Since coming to the throne in 1961, King Hassan has won international recognition for his strong leadership. The main issues facing Morocco today are Islamic fundamentalism and the undecided fate of the Western Sahara region

Berbers S i n c e t h e A r a b i n v a s i o n s o f t h e 11 t h

century, the local Berber people have lived in villages high up in the Atlas Mountains.

Most

Berbers

converted

to Islam, but kept their own culture and way of life. They call themselves Imazighen, or “people of the land.” Today, about athird of Moroccans are Berber-speaking, although most also speak Arahic

and

i

French.

in the south.

Adult literacy rate: 52% Life expectancy: 63 years People per doctor: 4,840 Televisions: 74 per 1,000 people

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*Figures include Western

,

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An ISLAMIC CITY The ancient Moroccan jU

city of Fez is agood example of atraditional Islamic town. Each part V has been designed with aa

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Carpets with symbolic patterns and ornate

■ ■

^

purpose, as set out in the ^ i

metalwork lanterns are

made by local people.

Koran, the Muslim holy

book. The streets are narrow

i-NVs. ‘

to provide shade, but wide enough to let apair of fully laden camels pass through. Houses have small, high windows on street walls to guard their owners’ privacy. In the city center stands the largest mosque, surrounded by the souks, or markets.

ARTS

V ●

AND

CRAFTS

Millions of tourists visit Morocco each year to relax on the beaches along the Atlantic coast or to explore the historical cities of Fez and The numerous, carefully planned streets in the old city of Fez look chaotic from adistance.

Marrakesh. The cities’ colorful .soi/fa, or markets,

are atreasure chest of traditional goods and handicrafts, such as Moroccan leather, silver

jewelry', and handwoven carpets.

E C O N O M Y

WESTERN

Morocco’s economy depends on three major industries -tourism, agriculture, and phosphates. Farm products make up about athird of exports. The main crops are cereals, vegetables, citrus fruits, and dates. Irrigation systems pipe water to many dry areas for farming. Morocco is the world’s third largest producer of phosphates, which are

SAHARA

This is adesert region south of Morocco with

apopulation of some 200,000 people. It was formerly ruled by Spain.

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Since 1976, Morocco has

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been ghting awar for control of the region

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and its valuable mineral

used to make chemicals and

fertilizers. Large factories process the phosphates for export.

resources. Opposing the Moroccans

are

the

Polisario, aguerilla force

Asupporter of the Polisario in the Western Sahara

want complete independence for the Western Sahara.

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Aphosphate-processing factory in the south of Morocco

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of desert tribesmen who

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AFRICA

C/VRPET vlxking: 144, 155, 165 Irrigation: 155, 156, 217 Isiam: 275 Mon/VRCHy: 270-271

i

♦ALGERIA

Algeria Stretching from the mediterranean coast deep

A L G E R I A

Capital city: Algiers Area: 919,590 sq miles (2,381,740 sq km) Population: 27,100,000 Of cial language: Arabic Major religions: Muslim 99%, other 1%

Government: Milltaiy government

into the Sahara Desert, Algeria is the second largest country in Africa. It won independence from France in 1962, after abitter, eight-year struggle that claimed one million lives. During French rule, tens of thousands of Europeans arrived, many of them later leaving after independence. Since then, Algeria has played an important part in world affairs as amember of the United Nations and the Arab League. The main challenge facing the military government today comes from the rapidly growing number of Islamic fondamentalists wbo

Currency: Algerian dinar Adult literacy rate: 61 %

support tbe setting up of an Islamic government.

People per doctor: 2,330 Televisions: 74 per 1,000 people

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ALGIERS

Algiers, the capital of Algeria, is the countiy’s largest city and most important port. The city was founded in the 10th century by Muslims from Arabia. It was seized

by the Turks in 1518 and by the French in 1830. The French

Life expectancy: 66 years The leaves of

Arabs selling local produce

date palms

at amarket in

are used for

Ghardaia,

thatching.

Algeria

in uence can still be seen in these

buildings in the modern part of the city along tlie Bay of Algiers. The old city, with its narrow streets, mosques, and markets, stands on the slopes of the Sahel Hills.

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Algerian exports 1991 Gas and gas products: 60% Oil and oil products: 3 6 %

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Other: 4% ETHNIC

MIX

About 27 million people live in .Algeria. Although the vast majority of Algerians are Arabs, about a fth of the ]oopulation is

T

Dates

descended from the earlier Berber settlers.

can be

Arabic is the of cial language and Islam the main religion. Of the million or so Europeans who settled in Algeria before independence, only afew thousand remain. These include people of French, Spanish, and

eaten in

(many ways.

Wood is 1 u s e d f o r t i m b e r.

Date palms are grown at desert oases, where water comes up to the surface.

Italian descent.

Farming Algeria cannot grow enough crops to feed its rapidly increasing population and has to import about three-quarters of the food population earns its living by farming. Major crops include cereals, citrus fruits, grapes, olives, and tobacco. Figs and dates are important, too. Algeria is one of the world’s leading producers of dates and of cork, which is made from cork oak bark. Dates are

eaten fresh, dried, or ground into our. Roasted and ground date stones are made into date coffee.

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Algeria’s economy is dependent on its oil and gas resen-es. These come from

large deposits in the Sahara Desert. Oil production began in 1958. By 1979, it reached

1.2

million

barrels aday. Although falling world oil prices in

the 1980s and 1990s caused

E1B15 TERRORIST

adrop in oil production, the exploitation of natural gas has since increased. Algeria supplies both France and Spain with gas. Find out mor

AT TA C K S

Islamicfundamentalists,likethesemembersofth^Islamic

Salvation Front (FIS), are in open revolt against Algeria’s militaiy government. Thousands of Algerians have died in recent years as aresult of terrorist violence. Westerners have also been attacked

and bombs have been planted in Baris and other French cities.

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Economy

had

it needs. However, about half the

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AFRICA

C O L O N LV L p e r i o d : 2 0 7 Islam: 275

On. &gas: 137, 152, 163, 211 Sahara: 204, 209

♦TUNISIA

Tunisia T U N I S I A

Northwestern Africa’s smallest country, Tunisia lies between Libya to the south and Algeria to the west. Throughout its history, Tunisia has had close links with Europe. It was

at the heart of the ancient empire of Carthage in the 4th century BC, and later became part of

T U N I S I A

the mighty Roman Empire. In the 7th century

Capital city: Tunis Area: 63,170 sq miles (163,610 sq km) Population: 8,600,000

Of cial language: Arabic Major religions: Muslim 98%, Christian 1%, other 1%

ad, Tunisia was colonized by Muslim Arabs, and in the early 1880s by Erench forces. It became independent in 1956. The government has since been restructured and amulti¬

TUNISIAN

Adult literacy rate: 68% Life expectancy: 67 years People per doctor: 1,870 Televisions: 81 per 1,000 people

Bnghtiy dyed wooi

with roast chicken

win soon be woven

and sausages

into carpets.

A■'

FOOD

Industry

Traditional food is in uenced by Arabic, Turkish, and French cooking.

Until the collapse of world oil prices in the 1980s, Tunisia’s major exports were oil and gas. Today, textiles and agricultural products have become much more important. Tunisia is

The national dish is couscous, amix o semolina, meat, and vegetables. Spicy stews cooked in clay pots, called tajines, are also popular. For dessert, people eat fruit, dates stuffed with almond paste, or baklava, asweet nut and honey pastry. To drink, there is strong black coffee or mint tea. Many Tunisian men go to cafes in the evening to meet friends and drink coffee.

also one of the world’s

leading producers of calcium phosphates, used to make

Agiass of strong,

To u r i s m

Germany: 15%

couscous served "a "

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N I Q E R I

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Bauchi

NIGERIA

●Minna

●Ilorii

ABUJA

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Dimlang

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*Oshogbo Lokoja Ibadan

M a k u r d i

B B E N I N

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Kano, Nigeria J a n 81”F (27”C)

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^July 78.5°F (25.5°C)

S e k o n d i

Ta k o r a d i

Jan 1.1 in (28 mm) July 11 in (279 mm)

7^ IVORY COAST

G H A N A

Food crops The cereals millet and rice are grown widely across West Africa. Millet is common in the drier north, but where

there is more rainfall, rice and root vegetables such as yams and cassava can be grown. Among the region’s popular dishes are peanut stew and Jollof Rice, a Senegalese recipe that mixes rice with tomatoes, onions, and spices and is served with fried meat. Cassava and yams are also favorites, boiled and eaten with goat, chicken, or sh.

Y a m s

Millet grains

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TO

P

Highest point: Dimlang, Nigeria, 6,400 ft (2,042 m) Map Oil

N i o r o

J

O

Sierra Leone, 2,548 miles (4,100 \.m)MapE9, Mi

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N

Heanuts (groundnuts)

♦ M A U R I TA N I A

AND

NIGER

.

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'srr 1 ■V . M A U R I T A N I A

Mauritania

#2

Covering an area twice the size of Spain, but with

M G E R

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'C

i:

u

t

apopulation smaller than Madrid’s, Mauritania is one

V

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of the emptiest countries in the world. In recent years, many of the people have left the countryside to live

^ L '

and work in the towns, and Nouakchott, the capital, M A U R I T A N I A

Capital city: Nouakchott Area: 395,953 sq miles (1,025,520 sq km) Population: 2,200,000 Of cial language: French Major religion: Muslim 100%

Government: Multiparty democracy

has grown from 20,000 people in 1960 to 500,000 today. The country is dominated by the Arab Maures (Moors) from the north, but their political control is

resented by the black peoples from the south. Mining is an important industry -Mauritania is rich in phosphates, copper, gold, and other minerals. Drought is amajor problem in this region.

4

iloSJ

FISHING Fleets from all over tlie world come

to

sh off the coast of Mauritania,

where some of the richest

sh

stocks in M'est Africa are found. V

Currency: Ouguiya

5

Adult literacy rate: 35% Life expectancy: 47 years

Projects like this one for planting ^ 'trees and grass

to hold the soil in

piace are heiping stop erosion.

People per doctor: 11,900 Televisions: 23 per 1,000

By law, all sh caught here must he landed and processed in Mauritania before they are exported to overseas markets. However, over shing of the seas by eets of trawlers has led to concern

about the future of the industry.

people Areas at risk of deserti cation N I G E R

Capital city: Niamey Area: 489,188 sq miles (1,267,000 sq km)

M A U R l T . < t M A M A L I

N I G E R

Population: 8,500,000

Of cial language: French Major religions: Muslim 85%, traditional beliefs 14%, other 1%

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: CFA franc Adult literacy rate: 31% Life expectancy: 46 years People per doctor: 33,330 Televisions: 5per 1,000 people

The SAHEL Two-thirds of Mauritania is covered by the Sahara, and only the land along the Senegal River is suitable for farming. The semi-desert land in between, known as the Sahel, is the grazing land for nomadic farmers. This area suffers from frequent droughts and from soil erosion, made worse by people cutting down the few trees for rewood and by overgrazing cattle. For

S^BVery high risk High 1risk

This map shows the areas

Medium 1 risk

of West Afrioa that are at

risk of turning into desert.

these reasons -both natural and human -the Sahel

is gradually becoming more desertlike.

. N i g e r TheVASTSTATEOFNIGERiscompletely

THE

TUAREG

As aresult of frequent droughts in northern Niger, many Tuareg lost all their animals and were forced

to give up their nomadic lifestyle. Many moved south to the towns in search of food and work. In reaction

to this enforced move, .some

Tuareg are campaigning for acountrv of their own.

surrounded by other countries. Its main link to he sea is the Niger River, the only major river in the country. Most of Niger’s 8million people live in the semi-desert Sahel region, which stretches in anarrow ribbon across the south of the country. North of the Sahel lies the vast and inhospitable Sahara, home to the nomadic Tuareg peoples. Niger has few natural resources apart from uranium, which brought in considerable wealth during the 1980s. Most of the people, however, remain poor, earning their living herding ocks or growing crops in the few fertile parts of the country.

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[

AFRICA

FA R M I N G

Every year, the Niger River As the

oods.

oodwaters retreat, local

farmers quickly plant crops of cereals, rice, vegetables, peanuts, and cotton in the fertile soils left

behind. The banks of the Niger also provide pasture for cattle and other livestock reared for meat and milk.

Find out mor Niger river: 205 Sahel: 220

Soil erosion: 55, 244 Tuareg: 209

XT

M a l i The landscape of mali ranges from the vast desert plains of the Sahara in the north, through the semi-

M A L I

desert Sahel region in the center, to wetter savanna in the south. Athin belt of fertile

M A L I

Capital city: Bamako

land stretches on either side

Area: 478,837 sq miles (1,240,190 sq km) Population: 10,100,000

of the Niger and Senegal rivers. The country gets its name from the great Muslim empire of the Malinke people,

Of cial language; French Major religions; Muslim 90%, traditional beliefs 9%, Christian 1%

Government: Multiparty democracy

Currency: CFA franc Adult literacy rate: 36% Life expectancy: 45 years People per doctor: 20,000 Televisions; 1per 1,000 people

which

Mosques Islam arrived in Mali with merchants traveling across the Sahara from the Arab north. By the 13th century, Mali was entirely Muslim, with mosques built in most towns. Mosques like this one at Mopti are constructed of clay around awooden framework that sticks out in

ourished in this

turrets above the roof. The wooden beams jutting out

region in the 13th and 14th centuries. Today, Mali is a poor country where most people make their living from farming or herding cattle.

through the walls allow villagers to climb all over the building to carry out its annual repairs. T I M B U K T U

Founded by Tuareg nomads

:

i n 11 0 0 , Ti m b u k t u b e c a m e

^.one of the most famous

i" cities in Africa. Because of its position on the trade route

The Niger River at Bamako, in southern Mali

across the Sahara, it soon

developed into amajor town. Arab traders from the north

brought salt, cloth, and horses to exchange for gold and slaves from the south. By 1400, Timbuktu had become amajor center of Islamic learning.

Granaries are built of thick

clay to keep the grain cool and free of rats.

Dogon houses are made of clay, often with terraces above the main living area. V W r. - t '

GROWING

■ t'T :■ ■ A



f'

Outer wall

THE

to store pots and baskets.

Compound

Entrance

7

DOGON

In the center of Mali, the

S o u t h o f Ti m b u k t u , t h e

Niger River splits into several

plain gives way to sandstone cliffs surrounding the Bandiagara plateau. Living in the cliffs are the Dogon people, who rst settled in the area in the 1500s. The Dogon worship their own gods, and have many legends about the creation

branches. This area is called

the river ’s inland delta, and is

one of the most fertile regions of the country. Here, as the river begins to ood, farmers plant aspecial “ oating” rice that grows up to 12 in (30 cm) aday to keep pace with the rising waters. \\Tien the crop is ready, the farmers harvest it

conditions in which they live, the Dogon are expert farmers, using every available strip of land to grow crops of rice, millet, and corn.

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at river

of the world. Because of the harsh

from boats.

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onions and

'A

The Niger River is the lifeline of Mali, owing through the country from west to east before turning south to pour into the Atlantic Ocean. Most people in the country live along its banks, using the river as asource of water and food and as amain means of transportation. The capital of Mali, Bamako, on the upper reaches of the river, is amajor port, shipping cement and fuel downriver, and receiving rice and peanuts for export in exchange. RICE

The

rooftops are used to dry

The NIGER

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i

/

♦MALI

AFRICA

The Dogon live in walled compounds built on steep hillsides for protection against attack from their enemies.

Find out mor Islam: 275 Malinke people; 225 Niger river: 203

Rice growing: 135, 176, 197

AFRICA

♦SENEGAL

AND

GAMBIA

Senegal The mighty SENEGAL RIVER dominates large areas of this country. Every year the

SENEGAL

river oods, and seasonal crops are grown on the fertile land that the

oodwaters leave

behind. Senegal is wealthy compared to

G A M B I A

1

other countries in this region. It was once an

important part of French West Africa, and

SENEGAL

Capital city: Dakar

still maintains close links with France. Among the mix of ethnic groups, such as the Wolof and Mandinke, there are still many French

Area: 75,950 sq miles (196,720 sq km) Population: 7,900,000

inhabitants. There is asimilar mix of

Of cial language: French Major religions: Muslim

religions -Islam exists side-by-side with traditional beliefs. Senegal’s beautiful, palm-fringed coastline makes tourism an important economic force here.

92%, traditional beliefs 6%, Christian 2%

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: CFA franc

D A K A R

The lively city of Dakar, Senegal’s capital,

perches on arocky peninsula that forms the westernmost point of Africa. This major port was once the capital of French West Africa, as can be seen from its grand colonial buildings. Today great poverty is found alongside the expensive restaurants and modern hotels on t h e s t r e e t s o f D a k a r.

Adult literacy rate:

Musical

Life expectancy: 49 years

People per doctor: 20,000

storytelling

History is aliving thing in West Africa. For centuries, history and other information has been passed on by word of mouth, from one generation to the next, through stories, poems, and songs. In Senegal, storytellers called griots travel from village to village. They play avariety

Televisions: 36 per 1,000 people G A M B I A

Capital city: Banjul Area: 4,363 sq miles (11,300 sq km) Population: 900,000

Of cial language: English Major religions: Muslim 90%, Christian 9%, traditional beliefs 1%

of traditional

Farming and

instruments, such

Nearly three-quarters of Senegal’s people work in agriculture. In the north, cereals such as millet and sorghum are the main food crops, and peanuts are avital cash crop. Rice

as the kora.

Government: Multiparty democracy

The kora has

21 strings.

is common in the wetter southern areas.

Currency: Dalasi

Front

Adult literacy rate; 30%

view of kora

Life expectancy: 44 years People per doctor: 11,690

The soundbox

Televisions: no

is made from a

available

gures

I

holiowed-out

Peanuts were once grown on nearly half the farmland, but sh is now taking over as the If \country’s main export. Acommon sight is

«''Lj shermen setting out in dugout canoes called pirogues, made from local trees.

M

gourd.

Gambia

T O U R I S M The tourist trade is the fastest

growing part of the Gambian economy. More and more Europeans are coming here to escape cold winters, attracted by the magni cent beaches. Gambia is particularly popular with visitors from the UK, because English is widely spoken in this former British colony. But fears are already mounting that the easy¬ going local lifestyle will soon be ruined by advancing tourism.

TheTINYCOASTALCOUNTRYofGambiaisalong, thin sliver of land carved out of Senegal, which surrounds it on three sides. At its widest point, Gambia measures no more than 50 miles (80 km)

from north to south. Like Senegal, Gambia has a wide ethnic mix and Islam is very important. Most of the people work in agriculture, relying heavily on the peanut crop. Women play amajor role in agricultural life. Rice growing is their main occupation, but near the coast, large areas of swampy rice land have been ruined by the buildup of salt in the soil. Many women now grow vegetables to sell in local markets.

Find out mor African cities: 206 Most tourists stay aiong the coast, but many take trips iniand to see the crocodiles, monkeys, and many species of birds that live along the Gambia River.

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shing

Colonial period: 207 Religion: 274-275

Rice GROWING: 135, 176, 197

GUINEA BISSAU

Guinea GUH

Once afrench colony, this fertile, hilly

EA

country is rich in minerals and has perfect weather conditions for growing many crops, including bananas, citrus fruits, and rice.

BISS. U

These factors could make Guinea arich G U I N E A

G U I N E A

Capital city: Conakry Area: 94,926 sq miles (245,860 sq km) Population: 5,600,000 Of cial language: French Major religions: Muslim 95%, traditional beliefs 4%, Christian 1%

country, but it is one of the poorest in the world, with alife expectancy of just 44 years

and only very basic medical and educational facilities. This is largely the result of the French leaving Guinea without nancial

support, poor management of the economy, and years of harsh political rule under Sekou

THE

GUINEA

HIGHLANDS

Thick forest covers the mountainous Guinea

Highlands in the south of the country. In addition to providing timber products, conditions in this highly fertile area are ideal for growing various crops, including coffee. Three of the region’s major rivers -the Niger, the Gambia, and the Senegal -have their sources here. Rich iron deposits exist here, and the whole area is nourished by abundant rainfall.

Toure, who was president from 1958-84.

Government: Provisional

government

Currency: Guinea franc Adult literacy rate: 27%

About three-quarters of Guinea's population lives in small villages like

Y

this one.

Life expectancy: 44 years

t

People per doctor: 50,000 Televisions: 7per 1,000 people GUINEA

BISSAU

Capital city: Bissau Area: 13,940 sq miles (36,120 sq km)

M I N I N G

Population: 1,000,000

mineral ore called bauxite. Ores are substances

Of cial language: Portuguese

from which metals can be obtained, and bauxite

The mountainous areas of Guinea are rich in a

is used to make aluminum. Guinea is the

world’s second largest producer of bauxite, after

Major religions: Traditional beliefs 54%, Muslim 38%, Christian 8%

People oe guinea

Government: One-party

Avaried mix of peoples, including the Malinke, Fulani,

Slate

Australia, and it accounts for more than 80

and Soussou, live in Guinea. Most of them are Muslim.

Currency: Guinea peso

The Malinke make up about athird of the population

Adult literacy rate: 39%

and are named after amountainous area on the Mali

Life expectancy: 43 years

border. This was once part of the great Mali Empire,

People per doctor: 7,260

which dominated West Africa in medieval times.

Televisions: no

Today, the Malinke are famous for their centuries-old storytelling and musical skills.

gures

available

Guinea bis sal

percent of the country’s earnings from exports. Guinea’s mountain regions yield other valuable minerals, including iron, gold, and diamonds.

PGanuts.

FEAN

Sandwiched between Senegal and

ALONG

THE

COAST

Like its neighbors, Guinea Bissau has spectacular beaches. Its coastline is

edged with mangrove swamps, mud ats, and estuaries leading to amaze of inland waterways. Ahuge variety of sh are found off the coast, and many people in this coastal region make their living from shing.

sold in local markets, but most are

used to extract peanut oil, used in food production, or crushed to make peanut butter.

poor, and heavily dependent on nancial aid from other countries. The people are a mix of ethnic groups, the largest of which is

Find out mor

the Balante, from the south. Most people ^

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and skinned. Some of the nuts are

independence, in 1974. Today it is very

scrape aImng by growing coconuts, cotton, peanuts, or cashew nuts. Timber and shing are also important.

UIS

As the name suggests, the actual nuts of the peanut, or groundnut, plant grow underground. The nut pods are pulled out of the ground and left to dry before being shelled

Guinea, this low-lying, swampy country is aparticularly unspoiled place. Once ruled by Portugal, Guinea Bissau was the rst Portuguese colony to gain

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AFRICA ♦GUINEA AND

Colonial period: 207 Islam; 275 Life expectancy: 276 Rich and poor: 298-299 Cashew nuts

♦SIERRA

LEONE

AND

LIBERIA

T

Sierra leone

/

In1787,THEBRITISHcolonizedthisregion

L I B E R I A

and created asettlement for freed African

slaves. This is how Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown, got its name. Today, there are still SIERRA

afew descendants of the freed slaves, known

LEONE

as Creoles, living here. The main peoples, however, are the Mende in the south and the

SIERRA LEONE

Capital city: Freetown

Temne in the north. In recent years, con icts between the various ethnic groups have led to civil war. Sierra Leone is one of the poorest countries in the world, and three-quarters

Area: 27,699 sq miles

(71,740 sq km Population: 4,500,000 Of cial language: English Major religions:

of the people make their living ^

Traditional beliefs 60%, Muslim 30%, Christian 10%

from small-scale farming

'

A

Farming Sierra Leone’s main cash

Government: Military

crops are cocoa, coffee, nuts, and palm kernels (seeds from

government Diamonds

Currency: Leone Adult literacy rate: 24%

" - r

Life expectancy: 42 years

which oil is extracted). The main U-S-'' '■●iff'

People per doctor: 14,290

M I N I N G

Rice

Sierra Leone’s ^

grains

food crop is rice, which is grown in the river valleys. “Dry” rice is grown in the soil on the valley sides, and “wet” rice is grown in ooded elds on the valley oor. Attempts have been made to raise production -for example, clearing mangrove swamps to make way for extra rice elds.

rich mineral

Televisions: 10 per 1,000 people

1

j■i ' * '

^

L I B E R I A

m

Capital city: Monrovia Area: 43,000 sq miles (111,370 sqkm) Population: 2,800,000 Diamonds

Of cial language: English

Cut diamond

found among the grave/ in

Major religions: Christian 68%, traditional beliefs 18%, Muslim 14%

deposits have made mining avital industry, with diamonds among the main products. Diamond mining methods vary from using fully mechanized diggers, to chipping gemstones out of rock by hand, or panning

for them in rivers. Other mineral

exports include gold, iron ore, bauxite (from which aluminum is made), and rutile (from which titanium is made).

rivers are called alluvial diamonds.

Government: Military

f-

government

Currency: Liberian dollar Adult literacy rate: 42% Life expectancy: 55 years

Liberia

People per doctor: 9,340 Televisions: 18 per 1,000 people

V ■-7 ■*- 'a*.

Liberia became an independent country

r-y- i:

in 1847 and has never been colonized,

making it the oldest independent republic in Africa. In the 19th century, the American

\

||M Colonization Society helped thousands of freed African slaves return from the US and

settle here. They gave Liberia its name, which means “freed land.” Links between the US

and Liberia remain strong today. Since 1990,

Tl'j Liberia has suffered from civil war, and the economy has virtually collapsed. C m L W A R

In recent years there have been clashes between Liberia’s different ethnic groups, which include the Kpelle, Bassa, and Kru peoples. These problems erupted into civil war in the early 1990s, which did agreat deal of damage to an already weakened economy. The war has forced about half the population to leave their homes, and many people have start'ed because of food shortages.

This camp at Pern is home to refugees from the war.

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AFRICA

THE

RUBBER

TRADE

One of Liberia’s strongest links with the US is its extensive, American-owned rubber

plantations. Over the years, these have employed huge numbers of people and have accounted for avery large slice of the country’s income from exports. The American Firestone company, which makes world-famous tires, has been at the forefront of this rubber production. Rubber is made from asticky substance called latex, which can be “tapped” from rubber trees by cutting slits in the bark. Find out mor

Diamonds: 150, 248 Refugees: 207

Rice growing: 135, 176, 197 Rubber: 194

AFRICA ♦IVORY COAST

s. i .' 'o ●'*

t.

1

Ivory coast

These

I h

IVORY

IVORY

C O A S T.

COAST

Capital city: Ya m o u s s o u k r o

Area: 124,503 sq miles (322.463 sq km)

*

Population: 13,400,000

Of cial language: French Major religions: Traditional beliefs 63%, Muslim 25%, Christian 12%

Ivory coast has areputation for

hardwoods

being one of the most politically and economically stable countries in Africa. Some of this may be explained by the fact that it had the same president, Felix Houphouet-Boigny, for 33 years, until his death in 1993. He encouraged the export of awide range of products, which can often help keep an economy healthy.

from Ivory

UMBER

Mahogany

cocoa plantations. Aprogram was recently started to help save the forests and plant new ones.

c o t t o n , f r u i t , t o b a c c o , a n d t i m b e r.

Life expectancy: 52 years

ties with France.

INDUSTRY

Ivory Coast once had vast areas of forest, containing ebony, mahogany, and other hardwood trees. Today hardly any is left. For years the country’s economy was heavily dependent on the timber industry. Timber exports were seen as vital for paying off foreign debts, and large areas of forest were cleared to make way for coffee and

crops. Other products include

Adult literacy rate: 56%

Currency: CFA franc

Coast.

Coffee and cocoa are the main cash

Ivory Coast was once aFrench colony, which gained independence in 1960, and still has strong

Government: Multiparty democracy

all come

People per doctor: 16,670 Televisions: 61 per 1,000 people

ETHNIC

GROUPS

More than 60 ethnic groups live sideby-side in Ivory Coast, with relatively few dashes. The Dan people, for example, live deep in the heart of the western forests and are famous for their carving skills. They make wooden masks that are worn by the members of special secret societies to keep their identities hidden. Only members of these societies are allowed to take part in the Dan stilt dances.

Pineapple

Ya m o u s s o u k r o The dome of the world’s largest Christian church rises up above the rooftops of Yamoussoukro, asmall town in the center of the country that recently became Ivory Coast’s capital city. Personally overseen by former president Boigny, the cathedral was completed in 1989 at huge cost. It seats 7,000 people and has an open-air area for another 350,000 -three times the city’s population. There has been much controversy about undertaking such an extravagant project in acountry with widespread poverty.

Coffee beans

Many of Abidjan’s banks and businesses are based in th i

The economy Compared to much of West Africa, Ivory Coast is afairly prosperous country. This is partly the result of a policy of growing avariety of crops. Ivory Coast is the world’s leading cocoa grower -in some years, it has produced about athird of the world’s cocoa exports. However, competition from southeast Asia may change this. It is also Africa’s biggest coffee producer and grows vast numbers of pineapples and bananas.

skyscraper

j

of the Platea

i|

World’s top ve cocoa producers

district

(1992/3) Figures show the share of total world cocoa

production.

O )

l O Cvl

C .O 0)

a CO

CO

c

?

historical ties with France. It was

c

o

-

CO

ABIDJAN This modern port, with its glittering glass skyscrapers, is the country’s largest city. Abidjan is fdled with smart shops and restaurants that show apowerful French in uence, reminding visitors of Ivory Coast’s

CO

-

also the countiy'’s capital until the

§

1 9 9 0 s , w h e n Ya m o u s s o u k r o

\took over that role.

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_Find

out

more

Christianity: 274

Cocoa: 228, 234 Coffee: 50, 62, 66 Logging: 69, 244

AFRICA

♦GHANA

Ghana Ghana should be arelatively wealthy '*'-A

G H A N A

G H A N A

Capital city: Accra Area: 92,100 sq miles (238,540 sq km) Population: 16,400,000 Of cial language: English Major religions: Traditional beliefs 38%, Muslim 30%, Christian 24%, other 8%

country. Its many riches include fertile farmland, reserves of gold, bauxite, and oil, and ayoung population that is among the best educated in Africa. However, years of unstable government, low earnings from exports, and bad management of the economy have hindered Ghana’s development. More than 50 different ethnic groups live in Ghana, each with its own language and traditions. Among the largest groups are the Akan peoples, who include the Ashanti in the south of the country, the Dagomba

THE

from its colonial rulers. Ghana’s

who had led the resistance to British

rule. At rst Nkrumah was very popular, but he lost favor as the economy declined, and was eventually overthrown in 1966.

AKOSOMBO

DAM

the Akosombo Dam on the

Adult literacy rate: 63% Life expectancy: 55 years

IVolta River. When the dam

People per doctor: 25,000

I85,000 people had to be

’i

i \

tmoved from areas ooded by the lake. The dam’s power station generates electricity for factories in the city of Tema and for domestic use. Some power is exported to Togo and Benin. M A R K E T S

The ASHANTI

tr a d e r s a r e w o m e n , o f te n i n v o l v e d

because “marketing” is part-time and leaves the rest of the day free for other work. Many traders are monetarily very successful.

Amature cocoa tree

produces 20-30 fruit

oods ayear.

Cocoa pods grow directly from the trunk. They are harvested once

p?.

Ashanti gold head showing adefeated enemy general.

Every Ghanaian town has abustling market, drawing people in from the surrounding area. Here they can buy and sell awide range of goods, from food and animals to household supplies and even false teeth. Many of the market

Wo m e n t r a d e r s a t t h e m a r k e t i n A c c r a

■f .

was built in the 1960s, about

Televisions: 15 per 1,000 people

When Europeans rst visited Ghana in the 15th century, they named it the Gold Goast because of the gold offered to them in trade by the local people. The main gold workers were the Ashanti. The symbol of Ashanti unity was a golden stool, which they believed had come down from the sky. Gold from the Ashanti mines is still an important export for Ghana.

.■ ’ - A .

they have ripened to ayellow color.

Cocoa

rst

prime minister was Kwame Nkrumah,

One of the world’s largest arti cial lakes. Lake Volta, is formed by

Currency: Cedi

K

Cocoa trees need plenty of shade when they are young and water when they are mature. This is why they grow so well in

/

74

Each pod contains up to 40 pale pink beans 1covered in a

pink pulp.

the humid forests of southern Ghana.

Roasted

Here young cocoa plants are grown between rows of other food crops, which provide the necessary’ shade. The trees only begin to produce fruit after about seven years. Cocoa production is a major industry, accounting for up to 80 percent of the country’s exports, but Ghana now faces stiff competition from neighboring Ivory Coast and

cocoa beans I !

Cocoa beans are

fermented, roasted, and ground to produce achocolate liquid. This Is used to make cocoa

butter for cosmetics, or is reheated and molded to make blocks

from Southeast Asia.

of chocolate.

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In 1957, Ghana became the rst black African country to gain independence

in the north, and the Ewe in the southeast.

Government: Multiparty democracy

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I N D E P E N D E N C E

Find out mor

Cocoa; 227, 234 Colonial period: 207 Gold mining: 253 Trade dependency: 281

AFRICA

♦BURKINA

AND

TOGO

B u r k i n a

>■

B U R K I N A

Landlocked Burkina (formerly known as Upper Volta) is one of the world’s poorest countries. Like the other countries in the

sahel region, Burkina is at constant risk from TOCQ-

B U R K I N A

Capital city: Ouagadougou Area: 105,870 sq miles (274,200 sq km) Population: 9,800,000 Of cial language: French Major religions: Traditional beliefs 65%, Muslim 25%, Christian 10%

drought, and in recent years large amounts of grazing land have turned to desert as the Sahara has expanded southward. Burkina has few cities, and most of the people live in villages, making aliving from farming and herding. Burkina’s economy has suffered badly from political unrest. Because the country is so poor, almost one-third of the workforce must go abroad to nd jobs.

Adult literacy rate: 20% Life expectancy: 48 years People per doctor: 33,330 Televisions: 5per 1,000 people

fertilizer. The new

Capital city: Lome

Area: 21,927 sq miles

(56,790 sq km

Life expectancy: 54 years People per doctor: 12,500 Televisions: 6per 1,000 people

colonial ruler, France, and from the

European Union. The money is used for both large-scale projects, such as dams to generate hydroelectric power, and smaller schemes, like this well that

The Fulani carry many of their possessions in iarge bowis cailed calabashes, which are

t'-' -1

made from the dried

sheils of gourds.

eld can

Then it has to be left for at

The calabash

least another

rests on aroll

to tfj

Population: 3,900,000

Adult literacy rate: 45%

much of it from Burkina’s former

only be used for four to ve years before it is exhausted.

T O G O

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: CFA franc

million of aid comes into the country,

Lack of water and poor soil cause huge problems for Burkina’s farmers. Before any crops can be planted, afarmer has to clear the land, burning the scrub and plowing the ash into the ground to act as a

Currency: CFA franc

Traditional beliefs 70%, Christian 20%, Muslim 10%

aid. Each year more than $US400

A G R I C U LT U R E

democracy

Major religions:

Burkina is very dependent on foreign

provides clean water for avillage.

Government: Multiparty

Of cial languages: French, Kabye, and Ewe

Foreign aid

ve years _

of cloth.

recover.

- i i - .

Many farmers have avegetable garden where they grow food for their families. t :

The fulani The

Fulani

are

nomadic

cattle herders. They travel wherever there is grazing land, pitching huts or tents when they want to sleep. The Fulani live off the produce of their animals, eating mainly milk, butter, and cheese. Their wealth is measured by how many animals they own, so they rarely kill and eat them. Many Fulani have now abandoned this nomadic way of life and have settled in one place.

\The Fulani's

animals are mainly cattle, like these zebu, but they also keep goats, sheep, and, in the north of the region, camels. FARMING

TOGO Benin, Togo is aformer French colony that gained its independence in 1960. The population is amix of about 30 different ethnic groups; the two largest are the Ewe in the south of the country and the Dagomba in the north. Phosphates -minerals used to make fertilizers account for half of Togo’s exports, but the economy has been badly affected by changes in world phosphate prices. Togo’s capital city, Lome, is one of the major ports in West Africa.

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FISHING

^country, it produces nearly all its

Sandwiched between Ghana and

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AND

Although Togo is avery poor own food. About three-quarters of the population lives in the countryside and is employed in farming. Corn, yams, rice, and cassava are grown to eat, and cocoa, coffee, and cotton

to sell and export. Along the coast, many people make aliving from shing. Find out mor Fulani: 207 Phosphates; 210 Rich and poor: 278-279

Sahel: 220, 222

AFRICA

u

♦NIGERIA

Nigeria

; *■, /■

Nigeria is home to an amazing mix of more than 250 different peoples. The largest groups are the Hausa-Fulani, in the north, the

JNHU-RU

Yoruba in the west, and the Ibo in the east.

Nigeria could be one of Africa’s most successful economies. It has large reserves of oil, gas,

B E N I N

N I G E R I A

and minerals, and abundant farmland. The

Capital city: Abuja

population of 88 million is the largest of any

Area: 356,668 sq miles (923,770 sq km)

African country, and one of the best educated. Yet aseries of military coups has weakened the government, and con icts between the ethnic

Population: 88,514,501 Of cial lanEpiage:

English

groups led to civil war in 1967. Today, Nigeria

Major religions: Muslim 50%, Christian 40%, traditional beliefs 10%

is struggling to pay off huge debts and to modernize its industry and agriculture.

Government: Military

¥

-IB

L A G O S

The city of Lagos is situated on acoastal island in

the southwestern corner of Nigeria. The island was rst settled in the 15th century by local Yoruba people. The town grew

rapidly as atrading port used by European merchants, and became the capiul of independent Nigeria in 1960. In 1992, the capital was moved to Abuja, in central Nigeria, but Lagos is still the largest city.

government

O i l

Currency: Naira Adult literacy rate: 52% Life expectancy: 52 years People per doctor: 66,670 Televisions: 32 per 1,000 people B E N I N

Capital city: Porto-Novo Area: 43,480 ,sq miles (112,620 sq km) Population: 5,100,000 Of cial language: French Major religions:

Main exports in 1992

Oil was rst produced in Nigeria in 1956, and within 20 years, the new industry dominated the economy. Today, it makes up about 98 percent of the country’s exports. Nigerian oil is high quality with alow sulfur content, making it ideal as aircraft fuel. However, it is dangerous for acountry to rely on just one product. When world oil prices fell in the 1980s, Nigeria suffered badly. Efforts are now being made to develop other products and lessen the country’s dependence on oil.

Oil: 98%

Traditional beliefs 70%, Christian 15%, Muslim 15%

The Niger Delta in the south of the country contains huge oil reserves, enough to last for at least another 25 years. Four huge re neries prepare the crude oil for export.

Government: Multiparty democracv

Currency: CFA franc Adult literacy rate: 25%

Others: 2%

o

Life expectancy: 46 years People per doctor: 14,290 Televisions: 5per 1,000 Farmers clear and

people

plow the land ready to plant crops.

Plantations In recent years huge plantations have been set up throughout Nigeria to produce crops in large quantities, mainly for export. Plantations make use of modern machinery to plant, grow, and process

^the crops, which include cotton, coffee, sugar,

cocoa, and oil palms. Today, Nigeria is one of the world’s largest producers of palm oil. Oil from the eshy ber of the palm nut is used in cooking oil, margarine, soap, candles, and paint. Fleshy

ber.

Kernel Palm nuts grow

in large bunches. When they are ripe, they are cut ^ ■>' 7,^c

oil palm tree

down and taken J to

factories

where

the oil Is extracted.

^xwt'vr'

Cross-section

m .

of apalm nut

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230

SMALL

FARMS

Most Nigerian farmers work on their own small farms. They use hoes, plows, and other simple tools to grow food crops such as cassava, rice, yams, and corn to feed their families. They also grow crops such as cocoa, oil palms, rubber, and peanuts (groundnuts) to sell. These are known as cash crops. Despite the recent investment in plantations, most of Nigeria’s cash crops are still grown on these small farms.

♦NIGERIA

AND

BENIN

Village life Most Nigerians are born and die in the same village, and think of it as home even if they move to abig city. Most of the villagers work as farmers, although each village usually has atraditional doctor, blacksmith, and carpenter. Villagers are almost self-suf cient, growing much of their own food, building their own houses, weaving cloth for clothes, and making pots for cooking. Anything they cannot make, they buy with money earned by selling goods in the local market.

I'fV,

Corrugated iron has

replaced traditional

building iin tf -f*i Cti:—-t-is '■ *

■* .

»

materials in

many villages.

■ns

It' *■-'

4b «?' ^JSl^ .^.^4

Migrants add to the overcrowding in Nigeria's cities,

Villagers return in the local town

part of the diet, is pounded in aclay pot j'l

and are often

with chickens,

to make '%

forced to live in

cloth, and other

shantytowns without proper

goods.

from the market

facilities or water

supplies. MOVING

TO

THE

CITY

Many young Nigerians leave their villages for afew years and move to acity. They go to study, or to earn money that they can send back to their families when pro ts from farming are low. This money may be used to buy food or books for a child going to school. Once the “migrants” have nished their studies or saved up enough money, they return home to their villages.

In the south of Nigeria most meals include yams or other vegetables. Yams have to be peeled, boiled, and mashed before they can be eaten.

W o m e n

carry babies in slings made of cloth.

rj Religion Nigeria is divided in its religious beliefs. In the north, people follow I s l a m , w h i c h w a s i n t r o d u c e d by A r a b

One of the main dyes is indigo, ablue color produced by pulping the leaves of the indigo vine.

traders from across the Sahara Desert

during the 11th century. Religious festivals, such as this Sallah procession

D Y E I N G

The Yoruba people of southwestern Nigeria

to

are skilled cloth

mark

the

end

of

Ramadan

(the Islamic month of fasting) a r e important local events. Five hundred years later, European merchants brought Christianity into the south. Many Nigerians, however, still follow traditional African religions.

dyers, making intricate patterns from arange of

natural dyes. The cloth is usually dyed in earthenware pots, although the Hausa people in the northern city of Kano use large pits in the ground lined with alocal cement.

Benin

C O A S TA L

REGIONS

For centuries, the inhabitants

of stilt houses like these along

Squashed up against the western

the shores of Lake Ganvie have

border of Nigeria, Benin is along, thin country that stretches north from its

-i» made their living from

lagoons have become partly fsilted up, and many of the

Niger River. Originally called Dahomey (it was renamed Benin in 1975), the country gained its independence from France in 1960. Since then Benin has had aseries of military governments and been aone-party state. In 1991 it became the rst African nation to move from one-party rule to amultiparty democracy. Although it is apoor country, Benin has agrowing economy based on agricultural products such as cotton, cocoa, and coffee. r i j r - K S S T L

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shing.

But many former lakes and

narrow Atlantic Ocean coastline to the

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AFRICA

shermen have had to take

tup sea

shing or move to

the towns to

nd work.

Find out mor African citif.s: 206

Cocoa: 227, 228, 234 Oil: 132, 152, 281 Religion: 274-275

♦CENTRAL

AFRICA

Central

AFRICA

Africa

Faya, Chad 1

Jan 69°F (21°C) July 93°F (34“C) Jan 0in (0 mm) July 0in (0 mm)

In fertile central Africa, steaming

I

rain forests cluster around the Equator, and the mighty Congo River snakes its

2

/ V

way through Congo and the Democratic Republic of Congo (Zaire). In the

-

"A QS

●mVck,

1400s, Europeans began acruel slave trade here; by the late 19th century, the region was colonized. Independence

3

«~aya

I I

came in the 1960s, but democracy has C

been slow to arrive. The area

H

A

D

has met with mixed fortunes.

Countries range from stable

4

C H A D

THINGS TO LOOK FOR ON «Mao

J

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B o i

prosperous Cameroon to the

A

H

E

Btldnc

L

Abeche^

'iful

Central African Republic, which has been crushed by poverty

THE

MAP 5

Longest river: Congo (Zaire), Zaire/Congo, 2,900 miles

Cc

(4,666 km) Map GI

DJAMENA '

Highest point: Mt. Stanley Democratic Rep. of Congo (Zaire), 6

16,765 ft (5,110 m) MapKll Largest lake: L. Tanganyika,

and harsh dictatorships. ,

Dem. Rep. of Congo (Zaire),

-

12,700 sq miles (32,893 sq km) Map KI2

Btrao*^

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SAO TOME &PRINCIPE

P o r t - G e n d l

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C O N G O

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Various landscapes exist here. Close to the Equator, dense rain forests

v>5 /

*V:7 t n e

ourish in the hot, humid

climate with its year-round rains, although vast areas have been S leared for timber. Farther away )m the Equator, rain is seasonal, iucing scrub vegetation and and. Burning desert land lies in far north of the region, in Chad.

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Lubumbashi, Democratic

Republic of Congo (Zaire) Jan 72“F (22°C)

July SPF'tlg'C) ] Jan 10:5 in (267 mm) July 0in (0 mm)

H

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CABIN'D

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'CENTRAL

'Obo^

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BANGUI

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GUINEA

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M A L A B O

.

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Cameroon MI. aDouala

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A

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-■

f-'C 10

AFRICA

♦CAMEROON

Cameroon C A M E R O O N

In an area that has seen many troubles /

/

since independence, Cameroon is a relatively prosperous and stable success story thanks to sensible government

policies. Along with its southern neighbors, Gabon and Congo, the country has earned money from oil, and has used this to develop its economy. Many different peoples live in Cameroon, and its geography is just as varied. The humid coastal plain in the south gives

C A M E R O O N

Capital city: Yaounde Area; 183,570 sq miles

(475,440 sq km Population; 12,500,000

Of cial languages; French, English

.?

Major religions: traditional beliefs 51%, Christian 33%, Muslim 16%

Peoples With more than 130 ethnic groups,

^ drier central plateau,

Cameroon has one of the richest

while a nger of land points up to the marshes around Lake Chad.

mixes of peoples in Africa. These range from the Fulani cattle herders, who live in the north and follow

Government: Multiparty democracy

Islamic beliefs, to forest dwellers

farther south, who practice

Currency: CFA franc

Adult literacy rate: 57%

traditional religions. Most people are settled farmers producing enough for their

Women grind and sieve the miilet

Life expectancy: 55 years People per doctor: 12,500

grains to make acoarse

Televisions: 23 per 1,000 people

o u r.

r '

own needs, like this Hausa

!L *

Pearl millet grows to aheightof5-10ft (1.5-3 m).

I T

farmer tending his cattle.

Millet can also be used to make

beer. It is dried, pounded, and then brewed in large pots.

Growing millet Most farmers in Cameroon grow some crops, such as millet, for their own use

(subsistence farming), but also produce crops to sell. Millet is cultivated widely in northern Cameroon, where there is

less rainfall, because it grows well in poorer, drier soils. There has also been great investment in the production of commercial “cash” crops such as cocoa and coffee, oil palms, and bananas. This bow is basically awooden stick with

The gourds vibrate when

the strings are plucked or a piece of wood

strings stretched down its length and dried, hollowed-out gourds placed at

S O C C E R

intervals.

C a m e r o o n h a s A f r i c a ’s m o s t celebrated soccer team, known for

is drawn

some spectacular displays of skill on home territory and in the World Cup. The people of

■W

across them. ^

Cameroon love soccer -at M U S I C Traditional musical instruments of all

shapes and sizes, such as this bow, can be heard in

villages up and down the country. The most popular style of folk music in Cameroon is makossa, which mixes African sounds and soul music, and its

lively rhythms are perfect to dance to. Makossa is widely enjoyed by people all over central Africa.

Industry Cameroon has an expanding timber industry. The country has extensive forests, and

mahogany, ebony, and teak are all exported abroad. However, the industry is hampered by roads that are impassable during the rainy season. Much of the country’s wealth is based on its reserves of oil, and other natural resources

include bauxite, iron, and gold.

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lunchtime and in the evenings informal games spring up on any spare piece of open ground.

Find out mor Cocoa: 227, 228, 234 Logging: 69, 227, 244 Oil: 152, 230, 281 Oil palms: 230

Central

African

C E N T R A L A F R I C A N R E P U B L I C

REPUBLIC Situated at the core of Africa, the north of the Central African Republic (CAR) is

equatorial

arid, while lush rain forest covers the south.

G U I N E A

CENTRAL

AFRICAN

R E P U B L I C

Capital city: Bangui Area: 240,530 sq miles (622,980 sq km) Population: .3,300,000 Of cial language: French Major religions:

Drought and political unrest have caused great problems here. In 1965, Emperor Bokassa began a14-year reign of terror, which was followed by military dictatorship. The rst multiparty elections were held in 1993, but the economy is still

unstable, and this is

traditional beliefs 60%, Christian 35%, Muslim 5%

one of the poorest places in the world.

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: CFA franc

Small

Life expectancy: 47 years

RIVER

ROUTES

The CAR is surrounded by land and has no railroad system and few well surfaced roads, so its

Of cial language: Spanish Major religions: Christian 90%, other 10%

rivers are vital for transportation and trade. Nearly three-quarters of trading goods are shipped down the 4,350 miles (7,000 km)

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: CFA franc Adult literacy rate: 52%

also found here. Flooding caused by heavy seasonal rains, however, is aconstant threat

to any kind of mining.

huts

made

from

forests. These are the

EQUATORIAL GUINEA

Population: 400,000

developing other industries, too, since gold, iron ore, copper, and uranium are

deep in the country’s rain

Televisions: 4per 1,000 people

Capital city: Malabo

I N D U S T RY

Alarge part of the country’s income comes from diamonds. There is potential for

banana leaves are found

People per doctor: 26,000

Area: 10,830 sq miles (28,050 sq km)

This woman is sifting diamonds from ariverbed.

Pygmies

Adult literacy rate: 40%

of inland waterways. Many goods travel to Brazzaville in Congo. Here they are loaded onto trains

homes of apeople known as pygmies, called this because they rarely grow taller than about 5ft (1.5 m). Pygmies are “hunter-gatherers,” living on food collected from the rain forest. They are ashining example of people living in harmony with the natural world, not

damaging the environment.

and taken to the Atlantic coast.

Life expectancy: 47 years People per doctor: No gures available Televisions: 9per 1,000 people

Hippopotamus tooth

EQUATORIAL GUINEA

Animal bone

Cowrie ,, V' sheli 5

The economy and people of Equatorial Guinea have suffered badly because of brutal leadership. Macias Nguema ruled as acruel dictator during the 1970s, but amore moderate government came to power in the 1990s. This tiny, beautiful

country, which includes ve islands, is now working hard to rebuild its economy.

TRADITIONAL

MEDICINE

Tr a d i t i o n a l m e d i c i n e i s s t i l l

widely practiced in Africa. Animal bones, shells, and wooden sticks are used in

public healing ceremonies. The healer will often sing and dance around the

patient, using chants to cry out to the spirits for help.

Farming Although the hot climate and fertile volcanic soil of the largest island, Bioko, are perfect for

growing crops, there are few good roads and

the workforce is unskilled. Concentrating on

growing cocoa for export has left little land for people to grow food for themselves.

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A F R I C A ♦ C E N T R A L A F R I C A N R E P U B L I C A N D E Q U AT O R I A L G U I N E A

I

Find out mor

Cocoa; 227, 228 Diamonds; 150, 226, 248 Hunter-gatherers; 201 Political systems; 270-271

SAG

TOME AND

PRINCIPE

Chad

‘x;had

Much of chad falls inside awide belt of hot, dry

grassland called the Sahel, which extends across the

/

/

African continent. Drought is afrequent occurence in the Sahel. This has proved adisaster for the

-^SAO TOME^ AND

country because its economy is heavily dependent

PRINCIPE

on agriculture. Politically, Chad is an unstable place, and recent decades have seen aseries of military coups and civil wars.

C H A D

Capital city: N’Djamena Area: 495,752 sq miles (1,284,000 sq km) Population; 6,000,000

THE

KANIMBO

Chad’s northern deserts stretch up into the Arab lands of North Africa, so

the country is amixture of Arabic and

Of cial language: French

black African in uences. More than

Major religions: Muslim

Camels being brought to drink

44%, Christian 33%, traditional beliefs 23%

at the waters of Lake Chad

Govermnent: Multiparty democracy

100 languages are spoken. One of Chad’s many peoples is the Arabic and Muslim group made up of the Kanimbo nomads in the arid north.

Currency: CFA franc Adult literacy rate: 33%

1 ) !

People per doctor: 33,330

TOME

k

Of cial language:

Lake Chad today

Disappearing waters

P R I N C I P E

Capital city: Sao Tome

are left behind as the waters of the lake retreat

AND

Area; 372 sq miles (964 sq km) Population: 117,504

Areas of damp, fertile land

/

Televisions; 1per 1,000 people SAG

Original size of the lake, more than one million years ago

/

Life expectancy: 47 years

Lake Chad was once ahuge expanse of water that formed the meeting point of Chad, Cameroon, Niger, and Nigeria. In the past, water poured into Lake Chad from surrounding rivers, but as the climate has become drier (over

Portuguese

the past 10,000 years), the lake has dried up. The shrinking lake poses aserious problem for the local people, who rely on its sh for food.

Major religions: Christian 99%, other 1%

Government: Multiparty democracy

Gourds are one of the

crops grown on the fertile land surrounding Lake Chad. When cut and

dried, gourds can be carved and decorated. /

Currency: Dobra

Sao tome and

Adult literacy rate: No gures available Life expectancy: 67 years People per doctor: 1,940 Televisions: No available

PRINCIPE

gures

TheVOLCANICislandsofSaoTomeandPrincipe lie off the coast of Equatorial Guinea and Gabon. Dense tropical forest cloaks the upper slopes while lower down farms and large plantations growing cocoa and sugar can be found. The islands were

The creole people of Sao Tome and Principe are called lhos de terra, which is Portuguese for “sons of the earth."

ruled by Portugal until 1975. Today, the people make aliving from farming and shing, and cocoa remains avital crop.

m

Creole

&

z

culture

No one was living on these islands when the Portuguese rst landed in the 1400s. Soon apopulation was built of slaves imported from the mainland. Today, one of the main groups of people combine both African and Portuguese ancestry, and have created a“creole” culture with a

distinctive language and style of building.

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AFRICA ♦CHAD AND

VOLCANIC

LANDSCAPE

This part of Africa lies on afault line acrack in the Earth’s crust. Molten

rock can seep through this crack and cool to form volcanoes. These islands

are the peaks of such volcanoes. Their soil is enriched by volcanic ash, which makes it extremely fertile.

Find out mor Cocoa: 227, 228, 234 Peoples of Africa: 206-207

Sahel: 220, 222 Volcanoes: 13

AFRICA ♦GABON AND CONGO

iH tiaia..™.

Gabon

-V'i

11

G A B O N

Sitting astride the equator, with plentiful rain all year round, three-quarters

■m i

of Gabon is covered with tropical rain forest. Timber is an increasingly valuable resource,

C O N G O

I

although Gabon’s biggest earner is oil. This should have made Gabon awealthy country,

G A B O N

Capital city: Libreville Area: 103,347 sq miles (267,670 sq km) Population: 1,300,000 Of cial language: French Major religions: Christian 60%, traditional beliefs 40%

but most people are very poor. This is partly

LIBREVILLE

The capital city, Libreville, means “free town

because after independence in 1960, a

in French, and was founded in 1849 as a haven for freed slaves. French in uence is

one-party state was created that wasted much

strong because Gabon was colonized by

of the wealth. In 1990 Gabon became a

multiparty democracy.

France during the 1800s. Libreville is a bustling modern city, where some people enjoy great wealth, in contrast to the poverty suffered by most people on the city streets.

Mineral rich Oil and manganese became important exports in

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: CFA franc

the 1960s. This manganese mine is in southeastern Gabon. The country is one of the world’s biggest producers of the mineral, which is used to make paints, batteries, and steel. There are also large

Adult literacy rate: 62% Life expectancy: 53 years People per doctor: 2,790 Televisions: 37 per 1,000 people

reserves of uranium and iron ore, but these have

yet to be developed to their full potential.

C O N G O

m

Capital city: Brazzaville Area: 132,040 sq miles (342,000 sq km)

I'

I

Population: 2,400,000

PEOPLE

Of cial language: French Major religions:

Although just 1million people live in Gabon, there are about 40 different ethnic groups here, each speaking their otvn dialect. The largest group is the Fang, known for its warriors and skilled wood-carvers. Many people in Gabon

Traditional beliefs 50%, Christian 48%, Muslim 2%

Government: Multiparty democracy

moved here from other African countries in search of work.

Currency: CFA franc Adult literacy rate: 59% Life expectancy: 52 years People per doctor: 8,320 Televisions: 6per 1,000 people

Animal

Congo [

stretchea



Congo’s eastern border follows the course of

Oil is of vital importance to Congo, bringing in 90 percent of the country's export income.

skin

across the top and secured with pegs

the Congo River and the Ubangi, its main tributary, or offshoot. Oil reserves have made Congo one of the richest countries in Africa. Although ordinary people have bene ted from this -more than those in Gabon -many still scratch out aliving from farming, producing just enough to feed themselves. Cassava, astarchy root vegetable, is the major food crop.

i

D R U M B E A T

As in other parts ■, S

f.

of Africa, music is a

vital part of life, and drumbeats form the backbone of this

music. Many drums are wooden, and the one shown here is almost as tall as its

players. One popular style in the region is called Congo Music, which is similar to

Oil

■i W '

wealth

The government has wisely invested the money that comes from oil in the economy, in projects such as dams, paper mills, transportation systems, and reforestation. Although industry is limited, there is a

^1

skilled workforce. Most industries are

found around the towns and cities,

especially Congo’s capital, Brazzaville.

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236

*■-

soul music.

Find out mor

Cassava: 221, 240 Oil: 152, 230, 281 Political systems: 270-271

Rain forests: 15, 69, 204

'J

Democratic republic

Shells sewn onto material made from

vegetable

bers

OF CONGO (ZAIRE) ii^ocR.vncr

/

Jf ’Bl.lCOF/

f)N('.0 IZAlRl;)

D E M , R E P. O F C O N G O

Capital city; Kinshasa Area: 90.5,.563 sq miles (2,345,41 Osq km) Population; 41,200,000

Of cial language; French Major religions; Christian 70%, Miuslim 10%, traditional beliefs 10%, other 10%

Apart from atiny nger of land that stretches to the coast, the vast country of the Democratic Republic of Congo is landlocked. The Congo, or Zaire, River snakes its way through the country, providing awatery lifeline for its people. The climate is warm and wet, and most people are farmers. Since independence from Belgium in 1960, the Democratic Republic of Congo bas suffered from civil war, aharsh dictator, and falling prices for its products. These problems have made it one of the world’s poorest countries.

Government: Multiparty democracy

m m . AFRICAN

ART

The Democi atie Republic of Congo is famous for its distinctive art. The Kuba people of tlie country’s cential region, wliose ancestors date back many centuries, use shells, beads, and raf a ( bers from palm letives) to create geometric ]3atterns. AKuba chiefwould have worn the haunting mtisk shown above in ordei

to take on some of the power of agreat spit it. Boats stop at river ports for repair work and to refuel.

\

1,^., Ahydroelectric dam has

Currency: New zaire

been built on the Congo at Inga. The dam harnesses the power of the water to create electricity.

Adult literacy rate: 74% Life expectancy: 52 years People per doctor: No gures available

O p

O

f ● T.

V

/



9*

*

V

ji'Ji.J-, ■■

. i .

9''

Tugboat pushing logs along the river

Televisions: 1per 1,000 people

●Hi

14-

The course of

the Congo River

Congo (zaire) river The people here call the Congo River the Zaire. One of the largest rivers in the

t

Kisangani

world, this wide ribbon of water forms the

nation's transportation system, cutting a great upside-down “U” through miles of forest. People traveling from place to place crowd into motorized boats and )

;Traders taking /

EQUATOR'.

'A their produce to

■) ■(

¥ariver

People travel downstream in dugout canoes produced by

market

(

g.

V -

inshasa

ri 5^.

l o c a l c r a f ts m e n o r i n

J:

passenger boats with

dugout canoes. Some large boats are even

outboard motors.

oating health clinics or bars. The X1,000

river’s sh provide vital food, while crops

The curving Congo

are grown on the fertile riverbanks.

River crosses the

Equator tv/ice.

Mining wealth The Democratic Rep. of Congo’s mining industry seems to hold the key to greater wealth in the future. There are vast seams of copper,

-v!iNa«3

carats

Diamond

production in Dem. Rep. of Congo

r25.000

20,000

15,000

cobalt, gold, uranium, silver, and diamonds

here, and reserves of oil lie just off the coast. Copper mining, shown below, is very important,

■●.'I

10,000

but when the price of copper fell in the 1970s, the economy virtually collapsed.

5,000

i

1948 1970 1980 1990 1991

The Democratic Rep. of Congo is one of the biggest producers of diamonds in the world. Together with copper and cobalt, they provide nearly 80% of the country's export earnings.

MARKETS

Colorful, bu.stling river ports are meeting

points for trade and travel along the Congo

Find out more

River. Stores selling travel provisions or farming

Copi’F.R mining: 73, 245

tools nestle alongside markets where people from riverside villages come to sell their goods. Markets are ;iot only based on land. Traders

Diamonds: 150, 226, 248 Hydrof.i.f.ctricity: 108, 262

often sell their fresh vegetables and sh directly

Poi,rri(:.M. .systems: 270-271

from their dugout canoes.

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AFRICA ♦DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO (ZAIRE)

AFRICA

♦CENTRAL

EAST

AFRICA

Central east aerica ALINEOFDRAMATICHIGHLANDS,volcanicmountains,gorges, and vast lakes runs through this region from Uganda in the north to Malawi in the south. This is part of ahuge split in the Earth’s crust known as the Great Rift Valley. Much of the rest

of the landscape is at grassland, called savanna -the perfect environment for big game animals, which draw thousands of tourists to countries such as Kenya and Tanzania. Growing tea and coffee provides another important

Savanna landscape

source of income for the seven

Golden grasses that can grow up to 13 ft (4 m) tall cover the at savanna. Rains come only once ayear, so

countries of the region. Mining and small-scale farming have always been important, and other industries are now increasing.

the grasses make the most of whatever water is available by spreading long

roots deep into the soil. Needlelike leaves on acacia trees minimize water

loss, while baohab trees can store water

ANIMALS

OF

THE

S AVA N N A

Herds of giraffes, elephants, ;antelopes, and zebras wander

in their swollen trunks. To protect this landscape and its wildlife, vast areas have been turned into game parks, such as the Serengeti in Tanzania and the Masai Mara in Kenya.

across the savanna in search

Iof pasture and water. They are

Masai warriors and

iclosely watched by cheetahs.

women wear jewelry usualiy bead necklaces, large earrings, and copper bracelets.

lions, and leopards, waiting to ikill any weak animals. Finally, jackals and vultures will move

- A i * *

i t '

in to

Most Masai men have more than one wife. Each wife lives in a

nish off the rarca.s.ses.

separate hut with her children.

Farming in the highlands Most farmers in this region produce only enough food to feed their own families. either from small plots of land or from cattle herding. In the highland areas, which

Te a I S m a d e

from the leaves of the tea bush. Pickers have to

have acool, moist climate, the volcanic soils ar

^

particularly fertile and companies own large farm \

: \

push their way into the bushes

where tea and coffee are grown for export. However,

\

to reach the freshest

as the population has grown, farms have been divided up into impossibly small units. The soil has begun to erode, too, since farmers cultivate even the steepest slopes.

shoots, so they wear rubber aprons to protect themselves. i:. -:

..O'

i d o l a

Jan 2.6 in (66 mm) July 1.2 in (.31 mm)

Chipata

THINGS

C

K a b w e

ON

Kariba

LKariba ■

THE

LOOK

FOR

MAP

13

Highest point: Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania, 19,341 ft (5,895 in) MapJ6

Lnsaka, Zambia

ChSma

TO

Jan 71°F (22°C) July61°F (16°C)

victoria

Z A M B I A

14

Largest lake: L. Victoria, Tanzania/Ugancla/Kenya, 26,828 sq miles (69,484 sq km) Map G6

in (231 mm) July 0in (0 mm)

%

15

MAGAV\’I

A

D

E

F

G

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Longest river: Luangwa, Zambia/Mozambique, 500 miles (804 km) Map Gll

OI'USAKA

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AFRICA

I

,i

K

I ,

♦UGANDA

AFRICA

T

Uganda

U G A N D A

Before independence in 1962, Uganda was aprosperous country -Winston Churchill called it the “Pearl of Africa.” But by 1986, the country lay

shattered and bankrupt. From 1971-79, President Idi Amin ruled Uganda as adictator. Thousands of people were persecuted or murdered. Europeans and Asians were expelled and their property seized.

U G A N D A

Capital city: Kampala Area; 91,073 sq miles (235,880 sq km)

International aid was cut off when other countries

Population; 16,582,700

In 1979, Amin was deposed, but the disruption

Of cial language: English

c o n t i n u e d u n t i l 1 9 8 6 , w h e n P r e s i d e n t Yo w e r i

Major religions: Christian

Museveni came to power. His government restored peace and has begun to rebuild the economy and reestablish democracy.

realized how corrupt Amin’s government was.

66%, traditional beliefs 18%, Muslim 16%

Government: One-party state

Currency: New Uganda Shilling

Kampala is said to be

Adult literacy rate: 51% Life expectancy: 43 years

built on seven hills.

The cassava plant grows up to 3ft (90 cm) tall. It is grown for Its roots, which

People per doctor: 25,000

The city center lies on just one of them Nakasero Hill.

can be eaten as a

Televisions: 10 per 1,000 people

IN

LAKE

VICTORIA

Vast, shallow Lake Victoria is

shared by Uganda, Tanzania, and Kenya. Huge Nile perch sh were introduced to the lake 30 years ago to increase sh production and provide sport shing for tourists. Since then the perch have spread to every corner of Lake Victoria and have devoured most of its

original species.

vegetable or ground to make

FISHING

our.

Farming Fertile, volcanic soil and high levels of rainfall make more than four- fths of Uganda’s land suitable for farming. Large plantations produce the coffee, cotton, and tea that make up 90 percent of the country’s exports. Although 90 percent of Ugandans work on farms, most are involved in

small-scale farming, growing crops such as corn, millet, cassava, and

K A M PA L A

sweet potatoes for their

People in Uganda’s capital, Kampala, rarely go out without an umbrella, since most days see aheavy downpour in the afternoon. Kampala has an average of 242 days ayear with violent thunderstorms. By evening, the rain has stopped and the air is cool. Kampala suffered much destruction during and immediately after Amin’s period in power, but is now being restored with the help of foreign investment.

Sweet potato (lett) and cassava (right)

own use or to sell in

are

local markets.

common

vegetables in this region.

W h a t H a v e Yo u H e a r d About AIDS ? What

Does

It

Mean?

What We

Can

Do

For

People Who How

Does

Harm

Have It

Can

Be

It

Cured?

tli

Can

Get

It?

^What Does It \.\ Look Like? What

How

Causes

Can

It?

We

o

Stop It?

Don’t LEARN

W I L D L I F E

Uganda has one of the highest

GUESS

THE

the

TRUTH

Which

/

Of

Us

Ha-s It?

Answers! ABOUT

AIDS!

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li of hippos and pelicans. Much of

is infected. AIDS is |

sexually transmitte I disease, and as yet ther

*

Uganda’s wildlife was wiped out during the years of con ict, and today there are not many places in Mrica where you are likely to see so many hippos.

is no cure for it, so doctors

are trying to teach people how to avoid catching it. Special campaigns, like this poster produced by UNICEF, are aimed at educating children

2 4 0 fl

can take aboat trip down the kKazinga Channel to see thousands

the world. In some parts of the country about 20 percent of the populatio ;

of the risk of AIDS.

fi

In Ruwenzori National Park, tourists

numbers of AIDS sufferers in

Us?

How

Who

It?

Aids awareness

Find out mor

Coffee: 50, 62, 66 U\KE victoria: 204 Political swTEMs: 270-271

Tea: 172, 238

● V -

R W A N D A

\

B U R U N D I

♦RWANDA

AND

BURUNDI

Rwanda Since1993,Rwandahasrarelybeenout of the news. War between the two main

/

(

R W A N D A

Capital city: Kigali Area: 10,170 sq miles (26,340 sq km) Population: 7,164,994 Of cial languages: French and Kinyai'wanda Major religions:

ethnic groups -the Tutsi and Hutu -has torn Rwanda apart and wrecked its economy, leaving it one of the poorest countries in the world. Before the war, Rwanda’s main export was coffee. Today, although 95 percent of the people still work on the land, few crops are grown for export. The country’s instability has also hindered attempts to develop manufacturing and mining industries.

Traditional beliefs 50%, Christian 45%, other 5% There are only

Government: One-party

about 650

state

gorillas left in

Ciurency: Rwanda franc

the world. The

Adult literacy rate: 52% Life expectancy: 47 years

mountain gorilla is found only In this region of

People per doctor: 50,000

Africa.

Televisions: No

gures

Ethnic warfare The worst ethnic violence in Africa’s

recent history has dominated Rwanda and Burundi since 1993, resulting in the loss of at least 200,000 lives. This is not anew con ict, but one that has

continued over many centuries, as the minority but powerful Tutsi tribe struggles to maintain control over the majority but less powerful Hutu. The recent struggles have ruined Rwanda’s economy and sent 1.5 million people eeing from the country.

available B U R U N D I

M O U N TA I N

Capital city: Bujumbura

Volcanoes National Park in

Population: 6,000,000

H E A L T H

Of cial languages:

Rwanda is one of Africa’s most densely populated countries and the population continues to grow.

French and Kirundi

Major religions: Christian 60%, traditional beliefs .39%, Muslim 1%

Government: Multiparty democracy Currency: Burundi franc

GORILLAS

One of the last known refuges for the mountain gorilla is the

Area: 10,750 sq miles (27,830 sq km)

Rwanda. Even though the gorilla is protected here, it is still in danger of extinction by poachers, and its habitat is threatened by farming.

Most Rwandan women have at least six children,

compared to an average of only one or two in developed countries. However, few Rwandans live to be over 50. Diseases such as malaria and AIDS are

common, and medical facilities are in short supply and are rarely free, so few people can afford them.

Adult literacy rate: 52% Life expectancy: 48 years People per doctor: 16,670 Tele-visions: 1per 1,000 people

Burundi ●Mlf.

Until independence in 1962, Burundi and neighboring Rwanda formed one country. Like Rwanda, Burundi is home to both

Tutsi and Hutu people, and the wars between these tribes have been part of Burundi’s history, too. In 1972, about 10,000 Hutu were killed by Tutsis. Almost as densely populated and poor as its neighbor, Burundi is struggling to cope with the huge numbers of refugees who have

DRUMMING

ed from war-torn Rwanda.

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£ \ "'Vi P O P U L AT I O N

PRESSURE

Most people in Burundi make aliving from farming. So many people live in the most fertile areas that land is very scarce. Plots of land are usuallyjust large enough to support afamily in good years, but bad weather or disease can lead to widespread famine. In some areas, the land is so over-used that the soil has begun to erode. Find out mor

GROUPS

In Burundi, stories, songs, and music are passed down from generation to generation rather than written down in aformal way. Tutsi folk dancing is one of the highlights of traditional culture, as are the groups of 12 to 15 drummers who play together with no other instruments.

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AFRICA

Health:

276

Popuuvtion: 16-17, 206 Refugees: 207

Soil erosion: 55, 244

AFRICA

K E N YA

♦ K E N YA

Kenya

■< u s r - ‘ t

Unlike many AFRICAN countries, Kenya has been stable and relatively democratic since it gained its independence from Britain in 1963. Under British rule, large farms were created in many areas to produce cash crops,

N A I R O B I

Lions, giraffes, and cheetahs roam the plains that surround Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, with the skyscrapers of the modern city as abackdrop. This is the largest city in eastern Africa, with apopulation of about amillion people. It developed after European colonization as a convenient stopping place on the railroad from Uganda to Kenya’s main port of Mombassa.

and anetwork of roads and railroads was K E N Y A

Capital city: Nairobi Area: 224,081 sq miles (580,370 sq km) Population: 26,100,000 Of cial language: Swahili Major religions: Christian 66%, traditional beliefs 26%, Muslim 6%, other 2%

Government: Multiparty democracy

built to link ports and towns. Today, Kenya is one of Africa’s richest countries, producing crops such as coffee and tea for export, and welcoming tourists to its vast game reserves. Side-by-side with this, many people still make their living from small farms or cattle herding. Kenya has one of the world’s fastest growing populations, which has led to increasing poverty, rivalry over iite''

Currency: Kenya shilling Adult literacy rate: 71%

land, and some ethnic violence.

Life expectancy: 59 years

Kenya’s main crops

■11 On game

People per doctor: 71,430 Televisions: 10 per 1,000 people

reserves such

as Kenya's

The main farming area, shown enlargea on the map beiow, is

Masai Mara and

K E N Y A

Amboseii Natiohai

in the southwest of



Coffee

Park, tourists can photograph wild animals close up.

the country.

Te a

□ o □

Sisal



Forest

Rice

Other

C o ff e e ^ beans

Farming THE

4

.'ft.

(1,

M,

Y 'j

(if?

A

felt

To u r i s m

Sugarcane

AND

● 1 . ^

\

ECONOMY

Tropical beaches and some of Africa’s best game reseives attract thousands of tourists to Kenya. Tourism is vital to the country’s economy, and the government has invested in roads, airports, and hotels to make Kenya one of the easiest and most comfortable African countries for

■a

/

tourists to visit. Because most people come to see the animals on game reserves, the government has placed ahigh priority on protecting wildlife and stamping out poaching.

Farming is Kenya’s chief export earner,

but much of the country is far too dry to C grow crops. In the highlands -where there is more rain -tea, coffee, wheat, corn,

sisal, and sugarcane are grown. Where less water is available, dairy and meat cattle are

farmed on large ranches. Dams and lakes provide water to irrigate land for growing market garden

beans

crops, such as green beans, which are exported

K E N YA N

AT H L E T E S

_Athletes from Kenya’s Rift Valley area

^excel at running long-distance races.

by air to foreign supermarkets.

„They have won ve out of the last seven Olympic 3,000-m steeplechase

i

K E N YA N

Wi

j f- events, and Kenyan Moses Kiptanui,

PEOPLES

shown here, holds the world records for the 3,000-m and the 3,000-m

These villagers belong to Kenya’s largest tribe, the Kikuyu, who live around Mount Kenya. The Kikuyu god, Ngai, is believed to live

●Ip Ilf.



- 2

■I i.f.

steeplechase. The runners’ skill may stem from the high altitude they live and train in, or perhaps from years of running long distances to school.

on the mountain, so the

Kikuyu traditionally built their houses with the doors

Find out mor

facing the mountain. Like nvo-thirds of the country’s 70 tribal groups, the Kikuyu speak Bantu. Small numbers

African cities: 206 Highland farming: 238

Population: 16-17, 206

of Asians, Arabs, and ■'it

Rift valley: 204

Europeans also live in Kenya.

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242

Ta n z a n i a

;

Tanzania was created in 1964, when

T A N Z A N I A

the mainland country of Tanganyika and the island of Zanzibar united. Until recently, Tanzania had asocialist government that

tried to encourage people to work together

1

O L D U VA I

on schemes such as state-run plantations. Although some of these schemes have been successful, Tanzania is much poorer than neighboring Kenya, and is one of the least

TA N Z A N I A

Capital city: Dodoma Area: 364,900 sq miles

(945,090 sq km

different peoples live here, most of whom speak Swahili, alanguage developed as a

Of cial languages: English and Swahili Major religions: Traditional beliefs 42%, Muslim 31%, Christian 26%, other 1%

.1 i

I

r, li

GORGE

The steep sides of Olduvai Gorge in northern Tanzania were carved out of the at Serengeti Plain hy the ow of water over millions of years. Here, archaeologists have unearthed fossils of the earliest humans, dating back 2million years. Yet more ancient footprints of humanlike creatures have been discovered, too, left by two adults and achild walking across the still-soft

urbanized countries in Africa. About 120

Population: 25,635,000

I

!t

lava that formed the plain 3.5 million years ago.

I

Making sisal

ber

means of communication The outer leaves of

between Africans and

Government: One-party state

fx'jj;,]

foreign traders.

C u r r e n c y : Ta n z a n i a n

the sisal plant are cut off close to the

stalk when they

The sisal

ber is

usually obtained by crushing the leaves between

rollers. The pulp is removed, leaving strands of white

reach their full

shilling

ber over 3ft

length.

(1 m) long.

Adult literacy rate: 55% Life expectancy: 51 years

The strands of

People per doctor: 33,330

and then hung out to dry.

ber are washed

Televisions: 2per 1,000 people DAR

ES

SALAAM

Although Tanzania’s capital is now the inland city of Dodoma, the old capital, Dar es Salaam, remains the

country’s biggest city and port. It is also the end of the

The name Dar es Salaam means

Ta n Z a m r a i l r o a d , w h i c h c a r r i e s

goods from land-locked Zambia to the sea.

“Haven of Peace. ”The city is still fairly small, with few high-rise buildings and many low, red-tiled roofs.

Sisal One of Tanzania’s main crops is sisal, aplant with leaves that are used to make rope and twine, and also mats, brushes, hats, and baskets. Sisal ropes are particularly useful on board ships since they do not rot in seawater. However, Tanzania’s

string made from sisal

sisal trade is now under threat because many products made with sisal in the past can now be made with synthetic substitutes. Z A N Z I B A R O f f Ta n z a n i a ’ s c o a s t l i e s t h e i s l a n d of Zanzibar. In the 18th and 19th

centuries, the port of Zanzibar, on the island’s western side, was used

as an Arab trading post. African slaves passed though here, en route to the Arab world. The island’s

!

main crop, cloves, was also shipped out of the port. The clove tree was only introduced to the island in 1818, but today Zanzibar is the world’s largest producer.

Ta n z a n i a n v i l l a g e s The country’s population used to be scattered in small villages. Then, in 1970, the government started a program to resettle the population in larger villages of about 250 households. By grouping people together in this way, it is easier and more economic to provide schools,

Find out mor Early people: 206 Political systems: 270-271

water, and other services, and to distribute fertilizers and

seeds. Today, 75 percent of Tanzanians live in villages in the countryside, more than in any other African country.

.1

The buildings and style of clothes re ect Zanzibar's continuing Arabic avor.

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♦ TA N Z A N I A

AFRICA

P o p u i ATi O N d i s t r i b u t i o n : 2 0 6 TANZA.M R.A1LRO.AD: 245

Malawi Lying on aplateau at the southern end of the Great Rift Valley, Malawi is one of the most stable countries in this

M A L A W I

Capital city: Lilongwe Area: 45,745 sq miles (118,480 sq km) Population: 10,700,000 Of cial languages: Chewa and English Major religions: Christian 75%, Muslim 20%, traditional beliefs 5%

Government: Multiparty democracy

region of Africa. Its six major tribal groups live together peacefully. Malawi’s economy is based on agriculture, but the government is trying to encourage the growth of agricultural processing industries, such as food canning and cooking oil manufacture, as well as mining and other heavy industries. Although relations with its neighbors have been tense, Malawi still accepted more than amillion refugees during Mozambique’s recent civil war.

Lake nyasa More

than

one-

fth

of Malawi’s total area

is taken up by Lake Nyasa, one of the largest and deepest

Fishermen collect these

brightly colored sh, called cichUds, for export to aquariums around the world.

lakes in the world.

Ahuge

shing industry has developed

around the lake, which is home to more

than 500 species of sh. Asardinelike sh called the usipa is one of the main

Currency: Malawian

catches. The

kwacha

and sold throughout Malawi, providing the main source of protein for anation of nearly 11 million people.

Adult literacy rate: 54% Life expectancy: 45 years

Many people grow just enough food to feed

People per doctor: 50,000

family. If there Is any extra produce, they

Televisions: No available

gures

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themselves and their

sh are dried on the shore

sell it in local markets like this one.

Farming Farming is the most important business in Malawi. Tobacco, tea, and sugar make up 85 percent of exports, and more than

80 percent of Malawi’s population makes aliving by farming. To increase the land available to farm, swamps have been drained and woodland has been cleared.

Rivers have been dammed and wells dug to water dry grasslands. Poor harvests can lead to extreme hardship among Malawi’s people.

PEOPLE

OF

MALAWI

Malawi is one of the least urbanized countries in

Soil erosion

Wind blows Wa t e r r u n s d o w n

the hillside, washing the soil away to form gulleys.

Africa, with 88 percent of its population living in villages in the countryside, mostly near seasonal wetlands called dambos. Villages are small and are usually made up of people who are closely related. Unlike many other African countries, Malawi’s main ethnic groups, the Chewas, Nyanja, Tumbuka, Tonga, Ngonis, and Yao, live together peacefully.

HASTINGS

Iree

down, wind and rain

Iopinions were not tolerated and

wear away the soil.

tmany people were tortured or

Forests Forest and woodland cover nearly half the country, but huge areas have been cut down for fuel and to clear land for farming. Malawi has no oil and little coal, so the most popular fuel is charcoal, made by partially burning wood so that it becomes smokeless and slow-burning. Where more land is needed for farming, trees are cut down and burned, and crops are grown in the ashes. Such land is fertile for only ashort time because the forest soil is quickly eroded.

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BANDA

For 30 years after achieving independence in 1964, Dr. Hastings Banda was president of Malawi, ruling the country virtually alone. His government helped the country become strong Land self-reliant, but other political

roots

help bind the soil together.

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♦MALAWI

AFRICA

/imprisoned. In 1993, calls for democracy led to Banda’s downfall.

Find out mor

Deforestation: 69, 227, 233 Peoples of Africa: 206-207 Political swtems: 270-271 Refugees: 207

♦ZAMBIA

ZAMBIA Zambia occupies abroad plateau scattered with mountains and deep valleys. After

/

independence from Britain in 1963, political v i o l e n c e b a se d o n tri b a l d i ffe r e n ce s r o cke d

ZAMBli^

the country until 1972, when President

\

Kenneth Kaunda declared aone-party state. In 1991, Kaunda was defeated in the

Z A M B I A

Capital city: Lusaka Area: 290,563 sq miles (752,610 sq km) Population: 8,900,000 Of cial languages: English, Bemba, and Nyanja Major religions: Christian 63%, Hindu 36%, traditional beliefs 1%

Government: Multiparty democracy

rst

democratic elections in 19 years. Today,

the country is less affected by ethnic con ict than many African states, even though there are 14 main tribal groups. Zambia is the world’s fourth largest producer of copper, and the country’s economy depends almost entirely on the fortunes of this industry. railroad _

\

kwacha

Adult literacy rate: 75% Life expectancy: 46 years

Mineral deposits in

U'-'i



j

People per doctor: 11,110 Copper

Televisions: 31 per 1,000 people

The copper belt

Cobalt

railroad linking Zambia’s copper belt with the capital, Lusaka. The makeshift

K a s a m a

\

and disease is widespread. Most people here have jobs in the copper industry. In fact, 42 percent of Zambians live in the towns, making it one of the most urbanized countries in Africa. Many Zambian families have been citydwellers for three or four generations,

S-

Zambia

Cities Achain of shantytowns lies along the

shacks have no water, power, or drains, Ta n Z a m

Currency: Zambian

which is rare for Africa. Z A M B I A L u s a k a X '

Zambia’s

TA N Z A M R A I L R O A D Landlocked Zambia has to

exports (1990)

rely on roads and railroads i Copper:

Li\ingstone

85%

t