Malawisøen

Malawisøen
Satellitfoto af Malawisøen
Satellitfoto af Malawisøen
Overblik
LandMalawi, Mozambique og Tanzania
OmrådeSydøstlige Afrika
TilløbRuhuhufloden
AfløbShire
Oplandsareal6.593 km²
Maks. længde560-580 km
Maks. bredde75 km
Overfladeareal29.600 km²
Middeldybde292 m
Maks. dybde706 m
Vandvolumen8.400 km³
Vandspejlskote500 m
TilfrossetNej
ØerLikoma og Chizumulu

Malawisøen (Lake Nyassa, Lake Niassa eller Lake Malawi) er den sydligste i Great Rift Valley. Søen er den tredjestørste i Afrika og den ottendestørste i verden. Både Malawi, Mozambique og Tanzania grænser op til søens bredder.

Efter David Livingstones opdagelse af søen i 1859 døbte han den "Lake Nyasa". Området omkring søen blev senere koloniseret af Storbritannien, der navngav området Nyasaland.

Eksterne henvisninger

Koordinater: 12°11′S 34°22′Ø / 12.183°S 34.367°Ø / -12.183; 34.367

Medier brugt på denne side

Lake Malawi seen from orbit.jpg
Lake Malawi in Africa, photographed by astronauts aboard the Space Shuttle.

Original image courtesy of the Image Analysis Laboratory, NASA Johnson Space Center (eol.jsc.nasa.gov). Image ID: STS061-75-48. Image cropped, sharpened and gamma-corrected.

  • This low-oblique, southeast-looking photograph shows Lake Malawi, one of many elongated lakes that form part of the Great Rift Valley of east Africa. The lake, bounded by steep mountains on all sides except the southern end, is approximately 360 miles (580 kilometers) long, averages 25 miles (40 kilometers) in width, and has a maximum depth of 2316 feet (706 meters). Lake Malawi is drained at the south end by the Shire River, which eventually empties into the Zambezi River. The lake and its steep-sloped shoreline were created by faulting that caused a thrust upward as the valley floor subsided between the slopes. The darker area along the northwest coast of the lake is the Nyika Plateau, which has several elevations more than 8000 feet (2440 meters) above sea level. Landlocked Malawi extends along the entire west coast of the lake. The large Luangwa River basin is visible as it drains to the southwest. Immediately west of the Luangwa River Valley stand the northeast-southwest-trending Muchinga Mountains with their dark ridgeline and maximum elevations reaching 6000 feet (1830 meters) above sea level. Northwest of this mountain range, drainage is to the north and west into the much larger Zaire (Congo) River watershed.