Difference between revisions 44361 and 44366 on enwiki{{River|Congo|[[Image:ISS007-E-6305.jpg|275px|thumb|right|Image of Kinshasa and Brazzaville, taken by NASA; the Congo River is visible in the center of the photograph]]|4,380||41,800|3,680,000||[[Atlantic Ocean]]||[[Democratic Republic of the Congo|Dem. Rep. of the Congo]],<br> [[Central African Republic]],<br> [[Republic of the Congo]]}} The '''Congo''' is the largest [[river]] in Western Central [[Africa]]. Its overall length of 4,380 km (2,720 mi) makes it the second longest in Africa (after the [[Nile]]). If the [[Chambeshi River]] is taken as the source, the overall length increases to 4,670 km (2900 mi). The river and its [[tributary|tributaries]] flow through the second largest [[rain forest]] area in the world, only the [[Amazon Rainforest]] being (much) larger. The river also has the second-largest flow in the world, behind the [[Amazon River|Amazon]], and the second-largest [[watershed]] of any river, again trailing the [[Amazon River|Amazon]] and slightly ahead of the [[Mississippi River|Mississippi]]. The Congo also gives its name to the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]] and the [[Republic of the Congo]], both countries lying along its banks, and to the ancient [[Kingdom of Kongo]]. Between [[1971]] and [[1997]] the government of then-[[Zaire]] called it the '''Zaire River'''. The sources of the Congo are in the [[Highland (geographic feature)|highland]]s and [[mountain]]s of the [[East Africa Rift]], as well as [[Lake Tanganyika]] and [[Lake Mweru]], which feed the [[Lualaba River]], which then becomes the Congo below [[Boyoma Falls]]. The Congo flows generally west from [[Kisangani]] just below the falls, then gradually bends southwest, passing by [[Mbandaka]], joining with the [[Ubangi River]], and running into the [[Pool Malebo]] ([[Stanley Pool]]). [[Kinshasa]] (formerly [[Léopoldville]]) and [[Brazzaville]] are on opposite sides of the river at the Pool, then the river narrows and falls through a number of [[cataract]]s in deep canyons (collectively known as the [[Livingstone Falls]]), running by [[Matadi]] and [[Boma]], and into the sea at the small town of [[Muanda]]. The mouth of the Congo was visited in [[1482]] by the [[Portugal|Portuguese]] [[Diogo Cão]], and in [[1816]] a British expedition went up as far as [[Isangila]]. [[Henry Morton Stanley]] was the first [[Europe]]an to navigate along the river's length and report that the Lualaba was not a [[source of the Nile]] as had been suggested. Nearly the entire Congo is readily navigable, and with [[railway]]s now bypassing the three major falls, much of the trade of central Africa passes along it, including [[copper]], [[palm oil]] (as kernels), [[sugar]], [[coffee]], and [[cotton]]. The river is also potentially valuable for [[hydroelectric power]], and the [[Inga]] facility below Pool Malebo is the first to exploit the river. In February [[2005]] [[South Africa]]'s [[Nationalisation|state-owned]] power company, [[Eskom]], announced a proposal to drastically increase the capacity of the [[Inga]] facility through improvements and the construction of a new [[Hydroelectric|hydroelectric]] dam. The project would bring the maximum output of the facility to 40 GW, double that of [[China]]'s [[Three Gorges Dam]]. [http://www.guardian.co.uk/congo/story/0,12292,1425023,00.html] ==Tributaries== Sorted in order from the mouth heading upstream. * [[Inkisi River|Inkisi]] ** [[Zadi River|Zadi]] * [[Nsele River|Nsele]] (south side of Pool Malebo) * [[Bombo River|Bombo]] * [[Kasai River|Kasai]] (between Fimi and Congo, known as Kwa) ** [[Fimi River|Fimi]] ** [[Kwango River|Kwango]] ** [[Sankuru River|Sankuru]] * [[Likouala River|Likouala]] * [[Sangha River|Sangha]] * [[Ubangi River|Ubangi]] ** [[Giri River|Giri]] ** [[Mbomou River|Mbomou]] ** [[Uele River|Uele]] * [[Ruki River|Ruki]] ** [[Busira River|Busira]] ** [[Momboyo River|Momboyo]] * [[Lulonga River|Lulonga]] * [[Mongala River|Mongala]] ** [[Ebola River|Ebola]] * [[Itimbiri River|Itimbiri]] * [[Aruwimi River|Aruwimi]] ** [[Ituri River|Ituri]] * [[Lomami River|Lomami]] * [[Lindi River|Lindi]] * [[Tshopo River|Tshopo]] * [[Lualaba River|Lualaba]] ** [[Lowa River|Lowa]] ** [[Ulindi River|Ulindi]] ** [[Luama River|Luama]] ** [[Lukuga River|Lukuga]] ** [[Lufira River|Lufira]] ** [[Lubudi River|Lubudi]] ** [[Luvua River|Luvua]] == References == * [[H. Winternitz]], ''East Along the Equator: A Journey up the Congo and into Zaire'' (1987) == External Links == *[http://earthtrends.wri.org/maps_spatial/maps_detail_static.cfm?map_select=289&theme=2 Information and a map of the Congo's watershed] [[Category:African rivers]] [[Category:Congo]] [[Category:Geography of the Democratic Republic of the Congo]] [[da:Congofloden]] [[de:Kongo (Fluss)]] [[eo:Kongo (rivero)]] [[fr:Congo (fleuve)]] [[ja:コンゴ川]] [[nl:Congo (rivier)]] [[pl:Kongo (rzeka)]] [[pt:Rio Congo]] [[ru:Конго (река)]] [[sl:Kongo (reka)]] [[sv:Kongofloden]] [[zh:刚果河]]Is this really an encyclopedia article? And if you ''can'' justify an article about something so trivial and context-dependent, how can you possibly omit any mention of Jamaica, which would seem central to the phrase? --LDC ---- The fact that you associate it with Jamaica and I associate it with Nigeria is interesting in itself. Look, there are maybe 100 such phrases in the world, and people *do* ask "what the hell does that mean?" about these things all the time, especially if they don't speak English as a first language. It's an idiom. Even if we defined all 4000 English idioms here, that wouldn't be too much for any encyclopedia. 4000 out of 100,000 is only 4% of the grand total but they are probably 15% of English usage itself. Dictionaries can't cover them so encyclopedias should. All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=44366.
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