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Kinyeti River

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The Imatong Mountains (also Immatong, or rarely Matonge) are mainly located in Eastern Equatoria in southeastern South Sudan , and extend into the Northern Region of Uganda. Mount Kinyeti is the highest mountain of the range at 3,187 metres (10,456 ft), and the highest point of South Sudan.

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36-635: 4°45′53″N 32°28′00″E  /  4.76472°N 32.46667°E  / 4.76472; 32.46667 The Kinyeti River flows northward from the Imatong Mountains in the Imatong State of South Sudan , eventually dispersing into the Badigeru swamp . The Imatongs reach out from their highest central block around Mount Kinyeti into a northwestern, western and southwestern chain. The western chain, with peaks rising up to 2,500 metres (8,200 ft) high,

72-473: A few specimens, no European botanists had investigated the mountain range's flora before 1929. In that year the botanist Thomas Ford Chipp , then deputy director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew , reached the summit of Kinyeti peak. Later that year he published a report on the flora with several photographs. The biologist Neal A. Weber examined the ants in the area in 1942/1943. The mountains were

108-591: A group of peaks reach about 3,000 metres (9,800 ft), and the tallest, Mount Kinyeti , reaches 3,187 metres (10,456 ft). This central block group of high mountains around Mount Kinyeti are sometimes called the Lomariti or Lolibai mountains, and the high central part on the Uganda side is sometimes called the Lomwaga Mountains. The Modole or Langia mountains in the southeast of the central block are separated from

144-669: A haven for the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) during the Second Sudanese Civil War (1983–2005). In 1986 the government of Sudan started to provide arms, training and sanctuary for the LRA, who began to raid and plunder villages along the then Sudan–Uganda border. The rebel Sudan People's Liberation Army assisted the Uganda People's Defence Force in fighting back. The struggle dragged on for over twenty years. Over 400 people were massacred by

180-616: A hydro-electric scheme developed to power sawmills and other changes. As of 1984 only the steepest slopes had natural forest and there were plans to clear-cut most of the Kinyeti basin. A 1981 feasibility study assessed hydroelectric power potential in the Kinyeti River and the local power demand, but there was no follow-up. The most promising site seemed to be at Katire . Imatong Mountains The range has an equatorial climate and had dense montane forests supporting diverse wildlife. Since

216-475: Is a resting place for European songbirds en route to their overwintering places in East Africa. Birdlife includes the endangered spotted ground-thrush Zoothera guttata . The villages and settlements of the region are inhabited by Nilotic people including Lotuko in the east, Acholi in the west and Lango in the southern part. They practice subsistence farming and raise some livestock. The people of

252-520: Is known of the area before the arrival of Europeans. The explorer Samuel Baker was the first European to visit the region, travelling in the northwest and west of the area in 1863. He visited Tarrangolle (Tirangole) , and observed then unnamed mountains to the south. Later he passed through them, the present-day western Acholi sub-range of the Imatongs. Emin Pasha made a trip in 1881 in which he traveled along

288-456: Is rocky, with montane grassland and scattered, low ericaceous scrubs, low subshrub and herbs in rock crevices. One of the first Europeans to visit the mountain was the botanist Thomas Ford Chipp , who discovered Coreopsis chippii near the summit. Named after Mount Kinyeti is the Mount Kineti chameleon (Trioceros kinetensis), a threatened species. This South Sudan location article

324-580: Is usually known as the Acholi Mountains. The Kinyeti valley lies between the northwest and west ranges. The Kinyeti river, and others that drain the northern slopes of the mountains, feed the Badigeru swamps. These swamps, running in a SSW-NNE direction for 100 kilometres (62 mi), are discontinuous. They may be as wide as 25 kilometres (16 mi) in the rainy season, but average 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) in width. The swamps in turn may drain westward into

360-468: The First Sudanese Civil War (1955–1972), after the 1956 independence of Sudan . After 1972 an effort was made to rehabilitate the softwood tree plantations, with a new road built from Torit , a hydro-electric scheme developed to power sawmills, and other changes. As of 1984 only the steepest slopes had natural forest and there were plans to clear-cut most of the Kinyeti basin. In 1984 only

396-506: The Ugandan border. Kinyeti has an elevation of 3,187 metres (10,456 ft) above sea level. The group of high mountains that contain Kinyeti, extending to the border with Uganda, are sometimes called the Lomariti or Lolobai mountains. The lower parts of the mountain were covered with lush forest. These are the most northern forests of the East African montane forest ecoregion. The summit

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432-486: The Acholi mountains sub-range in the west, and the inaccessible area south east of Mount Kinyeti, were still relatively unaffected. The Second Sudanese Civil War (1983–2005) caused further ecological disruption and decline of habitats. Erosion was very visible on farms established on steep hillsides by people who had moved into the mountains after the 1940s. Fingermillet was the last crop, grown on what soil remained among

468-718: The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan published in 1922 only showed the outlines of the mountains. The first map to show the mountain range and give it the name Imatong Mountains was published in the Geographical Journal in May 1929. It was prepared from a compilation of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan Government Survey Department. The first detailed map of the mountain range appeared in 1931. Apart from a field visit by R. Good to Gebel Marra, that obtained only

504-573: The Bahr el Jebel section of the White Nile or eastward into the Veveno River . The British colonial administration began a forestry project in the Kinyeti basin in the 1940s, clearing the natural forest and planting fast-growing softwoods, Cyprus and Pine. In 1950 the mountains above 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) were made a forest reserve with no further settlement permitted, but the ban was not enforced during

540-622: The Imatong Central Forest Reserve, which lies within the range, into a National Park, designating the remainder as a buffer zone. The Imatong Forest Reserve was established in 1952, and covers an area of 1100 km . It adjoins Uganda's Agoro–Agu Forest Reserve to the south. Kinyeti Mount Kinyeti is the highest peak in South Sudan . It is located in the Imatong Mountains in Ikotos County of Eastern Equatoria , near

576-522: The Imatongs and the Dongotona Hills. Average annual rainfall in the Imatong range is about 1,500 millimetres (4.9 ft). Some of the mountain range's habitat is semi-protected within the Imatong Central Forest Reserve. The plains and the lower parts of the mountains are covered by deciduous woodland, wooded grassland and bamboo thickets to the north and west. The areas to the east and southeast are in

612-511: The Kenyan border town of Lokichoggio . The mountain range rises steeply from the surrounding plains, which slope gradually down from about 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) on the South Sudan-Uganda border in the south to 600 metres (2,000 ft) at Torit in the north. These plains are crossed by many streams, separated by low, rounded ridges, and dotted with small gneiss hills, outliers of

648-717: The LRA in the Imotong area in March 2002. The LRA finally withdrew from the region in April 2007. Years of civil war have made violence commonplace, most people have experienced the murder of a close family member. According to a 2010 report, "interviews suggested that at least every male community member over 20 years of age owns a gun in Ikotos, with some households having as many as eight to nine guns ... 33 per cent of all crimes were reportedly carried out with an AK-47 or similar automatic rifle". After

684-494: The Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry to evaluate the impact of humans on the mountain ecology and to develop a plan for land use that balances the needs of communities, commercial plantations and conservation of biodiversity. The project makes extensive use of satellite imagery, combined with field observations to map changes to forest coverage. This has confirmed continued forest clearance. A proposal has been made to convert part of

720-522: The Second Sudanese Civil War ended in 2005, more foreign aid workers began spending time in the region. The range became part of South Sudan when the country was established in 2011. The British colonial administration of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan began a forestry project in the Kinyeti basin in the 1940s. They cleared the native trees and natural forest habitats , to plant fast-growing softwoods, such as cypress-pines , for lumber. In 1950

756-437: The area mostly live on the plains at the foot of the mountains, but recently they have been forced to move into the mountains as high as 2,300 metres (7,500 ft) to find land for farming. Their agricultural practices have led to serious erosion of the steep slopes. Relatively small numbers of the people practice Christianity. Foreign Christian missionaries have been entering the remote mountainous areas since 2005. Little

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792-471: The civil wars. Forestry brought laborers into the mountains, and they started hillside farming in a wide area around the forest plantations. In 1949 fingerling trout supplied by the Kenya Game Department were put out in the upper Kinyeti River. By 1952 they had become established, and the forestry department was planning to stock other streams using trout from the Kinyeti. Shortly before independence,

828-568: The eastern foothills of the mountains and then southwest to the White Nile . J.R.L. Macdonald passed through the region in 1898 on a patrol towards Lado , and later the Ugandan colonial government established a post at Ikotos , just east of the mountain range. After 1929 the British established an observation post on the north side of the range, above the village of Gilo (1800 m) at an altitude of about 2,200 metres (7,200 ft). The official map of

864-455: The fires they have started have destroyed the forest on many hill tops. At the highest levels, the forest is replaced by Hagenia woodland, Erica (heather) thicket and areas of bamboo . According to a 1984 report, the mountains supported abundant wildlife, including healthy populations of colobus and blue monkey, bush-pig and a local sub-species of bushbuck. The south eastern Kipia and Lomwaga Uplands were least visited by hunters and had

900-511: The government announced that the Army's Equatoria Corps was to be transferred to the North, sparking a mutiny on 18 August 1955. 336 northerners died and 75 southerners, of whom 55 drowned in the Kinyeti after they fled in panic from Torit . Forestry was neglected during the First Sudanese Civil War (1955-1972). After 1972 an effort was made to rehabilitate the plantations, with a new road built from Torit ,

936-457: The largest populations of elephant, buffalo, duiker, hyaena and leopard. Mammals that normally inhabit a forest environment show greatest differentiation from similar mammals elsewhere, probably due to isolation of the Imatong forests from other forests by wide areas of semi-arid savanna. This isolation dates back to the last Pleistocene Pluvial period about 12,000 years ago. The forest contains many birds found in no other part of South Sudan, and

972-803: The lower Teretenya ridge to the east by the Shilok River, a tributary of the Koss river . Sub-ranges run to the northwest, west, and southwest of the central block, The northwest and west ranges are separated by the Kinyeti River valley, and the west and southwest ranges by the Ateppi valley. The ranges are generally about 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) high, with peaks rising to 2,400 metres (7,900 ft). The northwestern chain culminates in Mount Garia and Mount Konoro, both about 2,500 metres (8,200 ft) high, rising above

1008-470: The lower areas includes woodlands of Albizia and Terminalia , and mixed Khaya lowland semi-evergreen forest up to 1,000 metres (3,300 ft). Above 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) there is montane forest with Podocarpus , Croton , Macaranga and Albizia up to 2,900 metres (9,500 ft). The levels above 2,500 metres (8,200 ft) do not seem to have ever been inhabited by humans, but have been visited by honey-gatherers and hunters, and

1044-468: The main mountain range. The mountains are formed of crystalline basement rock that rises through the Tertiary and Quaternary unconsolidated deposits of the plains in the South Sudan-Uganda frontier zone. The most widespread types of rock are leucocratic gneisses rich in quartz . The mountains are sharply faulted and are the source of many year-round rivers. The mountains are highest in the southeast where

1080-470: The mid-20th century the rich ecology has increasingly been severely degraded by native forest clearance and subsistence farming, causing extensive erosion of the slopes. The Imatong Mountains massif lies mainly within Torit County (western part) and Ikotos County (eastern part) of Imatong State. It is located some 190 kilometres (120 mi) southeast of Juba and south of the main road from Torit to

1116-413: The mountain range's habitats above 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) were placed within the Imatong Central Forest Reserve, with no further settlement permitted. The reserve was not protected and the settlement ban was not enforced during the civil wars. Forestry brought laborers into the mountains, and they started hillside farming in a wide area around the forest plantations. Forestry was then neglected during

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1152-673: The rain shadow of the mountains, with dry subdesert grassland or deciduous or semi-evergreen bush. The mountains have rich diversity of flora, with hundreds of species that are found nowhere else in South Sudan. Their diversity is due to their position between the West African rain forest, the Ethiopian plateau and the East African mountains, coupled with their relative isolation for long periods during which new species could emerge. Vegetation in

1188-420: The rocks and giving a scanty yield. Erosion could have been greatly reduced by constructing agricultural terraces , but needed construction efforts were not done. The Imatong softwoods forestry project let farm laborers plant crops between young trees for two years, reducing erosion and improving crop yields while also producing wood, but only in the first years. Farming continued causing erosion, and in 1984

1224-624: The villages of Gilo and Katire. The western chain, with peaks rising up to 2,500 metres (8,200 ft) high, is usually known as the Acholi Mountains. The southwestern chain extending into Uganda is often called the Agoro Mountains. The Kinyeti River and other streams that drain the northern slopes of the mountains feed the Badigeru Swamps , which are 100 kilometres (62 mi) long and up to 25 kilometres (16 mi) wide at high water, but generally only 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) wide. Some of

1260-616: The water from the northern end of this swamp may filter eastward to the Veveno River, then via the Sobat River to the White Nile. Some of the water may filter westward to the Bahr el Jebel section of the White Nile . To the south and west the mountains are drained by the fast-flowing Aswa River / Ateppi system. To the northeast the mountains are drained by the Koss River , which flows between

1296-516: Was evident by muddiness of the Kinyeti River in the rainy season downstream from a potato project. A tea project was launched at Upper Talinga in 1975, opening a route for people to move into the mountains through the Ateppi valley. The result was an increase in hunting, hillside farming, and erosion. A project was launched in 2009 where the Wildlife Conservation Society worked with the Ministry of Wildlife Conservation and Tourism and

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