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Suguta Valley

Arid part of the Great Rift Valley in Kenya


Summary

Arid part of the Great Rift Valley in Kenya

FieldValue
nameSuguta Valley
photoSuguta ali 2011010 lrg.jpg
photo_captionSatellite view of the valley. Namarunu in lower left, Lake Logipi towards the upper right.
mapKenyarelief=1
coordinates
elevationelevation_m = 300elevation_ft =
elevation_ref

The Suguta Valley, also known as the Suguta Mud Flats, is an arid part of the Great Rift Valley in Kenya (Africa), directly south of Lake Turkana.

Location

The Suguta valley today is one of the driest parts of Kenya, with annual rainfall below 300 mm. Lake Logipi seasonally fills a small part of the northern end of the valley. The valley has a relatively flat floor about 300 m above sea level. It is bordered by land to the east and west rising to 1000 m and dotted with volcanic cinder cones. The Barrier Volcano, a broad volcanic complex, separates the valley from Lake Turkana. Mount Ngiro rises to the east of the Suguta valley. The Losiolo Escarpment, rising 2000 m above the valley floor on the east side near Maralal provides one of the most dramatic views of the Kenyan rift valley. Namarunu, a volcano active in historic times, extends into the valley from the western wall.

The Suguta Valley lies along the axis of the Gregory Rift, which has been faulting in this area since the Pliocene along a belt 35 km wide. The belt lies between the Ngiro basement uplift to the east and the Loriu Plateau to the west and is thicker in the eastern part. Exposed volcanic rocks include basalts, tuffs and ash formed between 4.2 and 3.8 million years ago, the products of trachytic volcanism from 3,8 to 2.6 million years ago and basaltic and alkali basaltic rocks created from that period until the present. In the early Pliocene the least horizontal stress direction - the direction of rift expansion - was NW-SE.

Hydrology

Lake Suguta once filled the valley, at times overflowing into Lake Turkana. The lake level rose and fell several times in the last 18,000 years due to changes in rainfall during the African Humid Period that lasted from 14,800 to 5,500 years ago. The lake level began to drop about 8,000 years ago, falling by 250 m.

The valley is drained by a seasonal stream, the Suguta River, which in the rainy season forms the temporary Lake Alablad, a playa lake that combines with Lake Logipi at the northern end of the valley. In the dry season saline hot springs help maintain water levels in Lake Logipi, which is about 3 m to 5 m at its greatest depth, about 6 km wide and 3 km wide.

Ecology

The saline waters provide food for cyano-bacteria and other plankton, which in turn are food for flamingoes. Due to the inaccessibility and harsh climate, with high temperatures, only the most determined tourists visit the site.

The valley is used as a hide-out by Pokot and Turkana cattle rustlers. It is considered a "no go" region by the police due to the extremely harsh environment and familiarity of the rustlers with the terrain.

November 2012 Police Killings

Main article: Baragoi Clashes

In November 2012 over 40 Kenya Police officers and reservists were killed in the Suguta Valley near Baragoi while on a mission to recover stolen cattle.

References

Sources

  • {{cite journal |url=http://jgs.geoscienceworld.org/content/150/4/751.abstract |url-access=subscription}}
  • {{cite web |url=http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/archives/specialreports/InsidePage.php?id=2000045328&cid=259& |access-date=2011-12-29}}
  • {{cite web |url=http://wldb.ilec.or.jp/data/ilec/WLC13_Papers/others/5.pdf |access-date=2011-12-29}}
  • {{cite web |ref= |url=http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=76430 |access-date=2011-12-29}}
  • {{cite web |ref= |url=http://www.bigearth.com/location/suguta-valley-crossing/ |access-date=2011-12-29}}
  • {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=99x5ea1Gq-cC&pg=PA606
  • {{cite web |access-date = 2011-12-29 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120426081400/http://www.wildhorizonsafaris.com/itinerary/jade_sea_journey.html |archive-date = 2012-04-26

References

  1. "How I survived raid that killed 42 policemen".
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