Today we’re going to the Mountains of the
Moon – but not those on the moon itself. We’re going to central Africa.
There isn’t really a mountain range specifically named the
Mountains of the Moon. The ancients, from Egyptians to Greeks, imagined or
heard rumor of a mountain range in east-central Africa that was the source of
the river Nile. In the 18th and 19th centuries,
explorations of the upper Nile found the sources of the Blue Nile, White Nile,
and Victoria Nile and identified the Mountains of the Moon with peaks in
Ethiopia as well as 1500 kilometers away in what is now Uganda. Today, the
range most closely identified with the Mountains of the Moon is the Rwenzori
Mountains at the common corner of Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and
Rwanda.
This location is within the western branch of the East
African Rift system, an 8,000-kilometer-long break in the earth’s crust that’s
in the slow process of tearing a long strip of eastern Africa away from the
main continent. We talked about it in the episode for
December 16, 2014.
The long linear rifts in east Africa are grabens, narrow
down-faulted troughs that result from the pulling apart and breaking of the
continental crust. The rifts are famously filled in places by long, linear rift
lakes including Tanganyika, Malawi, Turkana, and many smaller lakes.
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Virunga Mountains (2007 false-color Landsat image, annotated by Per Andersson : Source) |
When rifting breaks the continental crust, pressure can be
released at depth so that the hot material there can melt and rise to the
surface as volcanoes. In the Rwenzori, that’s exactly what has happened. The Virunga
volcanoes, a bit redundant since the name Virunga comes from a word meaning
volcanoes, dominate the Rwenzori, with at least eight peaks over 10,000 feet
high, and two that approach or exceed 4,500 meters, 15,000 feet above sea
level. They rise dramatically above the floors of the adjacent valleys and
lakes which lie about 1400 meters above sea level.
These are active volcanoes, although several would be
classified as dormant, since their last dated eruptions were on the order of 100,000
to a half-million years ago. But two, Nyiragongo and Nyamuragira, have erupted
as recently as 2002, when lava from Nyiragongo covered part of