Chambeshi River

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The Chambeshi (or Chambezi) River of northeastern Zambia is the most remote headstream of the Congo River (in length) and therefore considered its source. (However, by volume of water, the Lualaba River is the greater "source" of the Congo.)

The river is 480 km (300 mi) long, a headstream of the Congo River. Rising on a plateau some 1,830 m (some 6,000 ft) above sea level in northern Zambia between Lakes Tanganyika and Malawi, it flows for 480km into the Bangweulu Swamps, which are part of Lake Bangweulu, and by the end of the rainy season in May, it delivers a flood which recharges the swamps and inundates a vast floodplain to the southeast, supporting the Bangweulu Wetlands ecosystem. The water then flows out of the swamps as the Luapula River.[1]

For more than 100 km of its length as it flows to the east of Kasama the river consists of a maze of channels in swamps about 2 km wide, in a floodplain up to 25 km wide. Further downstream, where it is bridged by the Kasama-Mpika road and the Tazara Railway, the permanent main channel is about 100 m wide, and up to 400 m wide in flood.[2]

References

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  1. Brian Leith (Director):"Congo", Television Documentary broadcast by British Broadcasting Corporation, London, 2001.
  2. Google Earth accessed 4 February 2007

External links

Coordinates: 11°28′S 30°21′E / 11.467°S 30.350°E / -11.467; 30.350