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Boyoma Falls

Congo River waterfalls in Orientale Province, DRC


Summary

Congo River waterfalls in Orientale Province, DRC

FieldValue
nameBoyoma Falls
Chutes de Boyoma
Maporomoko ya Maji ya Boyoma
photo_captionBoyoma Falls.
locationLualaba River, Kisangani, Democratic Republic of the Congo
typeCataract
height200 ft
average_width4500 ft
average_flow16990 m3/s
<!--maximum_recorded_flow51933 m3/s--
watercourseCongo River
photoZaire kisangani stroom 11 copy.jpg

Chutes de Boyoma Maporomoko ya Maji ya Boyoma

Boyoma Falls (, , ), formerly known as Stanley Falls (French: Chutes Stanley; Dutch: Stanleywatervallen), is a series of seven cataracts, each no more than 5 m high, extending over more than 100 km along a curve of the Lualaba River between the river port towns of Ubundu and Kisangani (also known as Boyoma) in the Orientale Province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The seven cataracts have a total drop of 61 m. They form the largest waterfall by volume of annual flow rate in the world, exceeding both the Niagara Falls and the Iguazu Falls.

The two major cataracts are the first below Ubundu, forming a narrow and crooked stream that is hardly accessible, and the last that can be seen and visited from Kisangani. At the bottom of the rapids, the Lualaba is known as the Congo River. A 1 m portage railway bypasses the series of rapids, connecting Kisangani and Ubundu.

The last of the seven cataracts of the Boyoma Falls is also known as the Wagenia Falls (, ), referring to the local Wagenya fishermen, who have developed a special technique to fish in the river. They build systems of wooden tripods across the rapids fixed in holes carved in the rock by the water current. These serve as anchors for baskets that entrap large fish. The baskets are lowered in the rapids to “sieve” the waters for fish. It is a very selective fishing method, as these baskets are quite big, and only large fish are entrapped.

The falls were formerly named after Henry Morton Stanley, who explored the region and noted the fishing technique of the Wagenya. According to Stanley, "...by taking advantage of the rocks, the natives have been enabled to fix upright heavy poles, 6 in in diameter, to each of which they attach enormous fish-baskets by means of rattan-cane cable. There are probably sixty or seventy baskets laid in the river on each side, every day; and though some may be brought up empty, in general they seem to be tolerably successful, for out of half-a-dozen baskets...twenty-eight large fish were collected..."

References

References

  1. "Wagenia, Chutes, Congo, Democratic Republic of the - World Waterfall Database".
  2. (2017-05-02). "Mollusk communities of the central Congo River shaped by combined effects of barriers, environmental gradients, and species dispersal". Journal of Limnology.
  3. Stanley, H.M., 1899, Through the Dark Continent, London: G. Newnes, Vol. One {{ISBN. 0486256677, Vol. Two {{ISBN. 0486256685
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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