Geography Notes Form 3
Geography Notes Form 3
Geography Notes Form 3
FORM three
Geography
TEACHing NOTES.
F 3 GEOGRAPHY
STATISTICS COMPOUND/CUMULATIVE/DIVIDED
BAR GRAPH
Major cash crops exported in Kenya in tonnes
CROP 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994
COFFEE 4500 5000 5200 6000 5900
TEA 1300 1100 2500 2100 2200
MAIZE 800 900 500 400 400
WHEAT 600 500 600 700 500
Steps
1. Set CROP 199 CT 1991 CT 1992 CT 1993 CT 1994
0
COFFEE 450 4500 5000 5000 5200 5200 6000 6000 5900
0
TEA 130 5800 1100 6100 2500 7700 2100 8100 2200
0
MAIZE 800 6600 900 7000 500 8200 400 8500 400
WHEAT 600 7200 500 7500 600 8800 700 9200 500
TOTAL 7200 7500 8800 9200 9000
cumulative totals for the data each year
Disadvantages
1. It doesn‟t show the trend of components (change over time).
2. Cant be used to show many components as there is limited space upwards
3. Tedious as there is a lot of calculation work involved.
4. Not easy to trace individual contribution made by members of the same bar
5. Poor choice of vertical scale causes exaggeration of bars length leading to wrong conclusions
Analysis
- Coffee was the leading export earner in the five years.
- Tea was the second leading export earner.
- Wheat had the lowest export quantity.
- 1993 recorded the highest export quantity.
- 1990 recorded the lowest export quantity.
nb-leave ahaif apage for example 2
PIECHART/DIVIDEDCIRCLES/CIRCLE CHARTS
- A circle which has been subdivided into degrees used to represent statistical data where component values
have been converted in degrees.
Major countries producing commercial vehicles in the world in 000s
USA FRANCE JAPAN UK GERMANY RUSSIA
1800 240 2050 400 240 750
Steps
a) Convert components into degrees
USA 1800×360/5480=118.2◦
FRANCE 240×360/5480=15.8◦
JAPAN 2050×360/5480=134.7◦
UK 400×360/5480=26.3◦
GERMANY 240×360/5480=15.8◦
RUSSIA 750×360/5480=49.3◦
b) Draw a circle of convenient size using a pair of compasses.
c) From the centre of the circle mark out each calculated angle using a protractor.
d) Shade the sectors differently and provide the key for various shadings.
Advantages
1. Gives a good/clear visual impression
2. Easy to draw.
3. Can be used to present varying types of data e.g. minerals, population, etc.
4. Easy to read and interpret as segments are arranged in descending order and are also well shaded.
5. Easy to compare individual segments.
Disadvantages
1. Difficult to interpret if segments are many.
2. Tedious due to a lot of mathematical calculations and marking out of angles involved.
3. Can‟t be used to show trend/change over a certain period.
4. Small quantities or decimals may not be easily represented.
Analysis
1. The main producer of commercial vehicles is Japan.
2. The second largest producer is USA followed by Russia.
3. The lowest producers were France and West Germany with.
PROPORTIONAL CIRCLES
This is use of circles of various sizes to represent different sets of statistical data.
Table showing mineral production In Kenya from year1998-2000
MINERALS QUANTITY IN TONNES
1998 1999 2000
Graphite 200 490 930
Fluorspar 30 255 450
Soda ash 270 300 350
Diamond 500 870 1270
TOTAL 1000 1915 3000
Steps
1. Determining the radii of circles by finding the square roots of the totals
1998 √1000=31.62=32
1999 √1915=43.76=44
2000 √3000=54.77=55
2. Scale:1cm represents 10 tonnes
1998=3.2 cm
1999=4.4 cm
2000=5.5 cm
3. Using a pair of compasses draw circles of different radii representing mineral production in Kenya
between 1998 and 2000.
4. Convert component values into degrees
Component value/ total value of data×360
1998: Graphite-200/1000×360=72◦
Fluorspar-30/1000×360=10.8◦
Soda ash-270/1000×360=97.2◦
Diamond-500/1000×360=180◦
1999: Graphite-490/1915×360=92.1◦
Fluorspar-255/1915×360=47.9◦
S 䃞艹
`300/1915×360=56.4◦
Diamond-870/1915×360=163.6◦
2000: Graphite-930/3000×360=11.6◦
Fluorspar-450/3000×360=54◦
Soda ash-350/3000×360=42.1◦
Diamond-1270/3000×360=152.3◦
5. On the proportional circle for each year use a protractor and mark out the angles
6. Shade the segments and then provide a key.
Advantages
1. They give a good visual impression.
2. Easy to compare various components.
3. Simple to construct.
4. Easy to interpret as segments are arranged in descending order.
5. Can be used to present varying types of data.
Disadvantages
1. Tedious in calculation and measurement of angles
2. Actual values represented by each component cant be known at a glance
3. Difficult to accurately measure and draw sectors whose values are too small.
4. Comparison can be difficult if the circles represent values which are almost equal.
Analysis/Conclusions
1. Diamond was leading in production.
2. The second leading mineral in production was graphite.
3. The mineral with the lowest production was fluorspar.
nb-leave ahaif apage for example 2
Best en d yr regard s,
Merry x-mass
By mr H. Geog d p t ib u b i 2 0 1 4
MAP WORK
Description of Relief
a) Describe the general appearance of the entire area e.g. hilly, mountainous, plain, undulating landscape, has
many hills, isolated hills, etc.
b) State the highest and lowest parts of the area.
c) Look out for valleys which are occupied by rivers.
d) Divide into relief regions such as plateau, escarpment and lowland.
e) Explain the type of slop e.g. gentle, steep, even or irregular.
f) Direction of slope.
g) Identify the land forms present in the area.
Gentle Slope
Slope is the gradient of land surface.
Gentle slope is one in which land doesn‟t rise or fall steeply
Contours are wide apart
Mocks, KCSE pastpapers, Notes, Form 1 to Form 4 papers available on www.kusoma.co.ke
7
Steep Slopes
- Where land rises or falls sharply
- Contours are close to each other
Even Slopes
- Shown by contours which are evenly spaced.
Uneven Slopes
- Indicated by unevenly spaced contours.
Convex Slopes
- One curved outwards
- Indicated by contours which are close together at the bottom and widely spaced together at the top.
Concave Slopes
- One curved inwards.
- Contours are close together at the top and widely spaced at the bottom.
A Valley
- A low area between higher grounds.
- Indicated by U-shaped contours pointing towards a higher ground.
A Spur
- Land which is projected from high to low ground.
- Indicated by U-shaped contours bulging towards lower ground.
Interlocking Spurs
- Spurs which appear as if to fit together.
Truncated Spurs
- Spurs in glaciated highlands whose tips have been eroded and straightened.
Conical Hills
Mocks, KCSE pastpapers, Notes, Form 1 to Form 4 papers available on www.kusoma.co.ke
10
Ridges
- A range of hills with steep slopes on all sides.
- A ridge can contain hills, cols, passes or water shed.
A Col
- A low area which occurs between two hills.
A Pass
- A narrow steep sided gap in a highland.
A Water Shed
- The boundary separating drainage systems which drains into different directions
- Escarpment and ridges often form water sheds.
Escarpment
- A relatively continuous line of steep slopes facing the same direction
- Has two slopes: a long gentle slope (dip slope) and short steep slope (scarp slope).
A Plateau
- A high flat land bound by steep slopes.
Description of Vegetation
Natural vegetation is classified as woodlands, thickets, scrubs or grasslands.
Symbols are given as pictures of vegetation.
Types present
Distribution
Reasons for distribution e.g. seasonal streams, scrub or grassland due to low rainfall.
a) Forests
Likely indications of the following in the area:
Heavy rainfall
Fertile rainfall
Cool temperature depending on altitude
b) Thickets and shrubs
Seasonal rainfall
Poor soil
High temperature
c) Riverine trees
High moisture content in the river valley
Describing Drainage
a) Trellis
Tributaries join the main river and other tributaries at right angles
of hard and soft rocks)
Common in folded areas where rivers flow downwards separated by vertical uplands.
b) Rectangular Pattern
-Looks like a large block of rectangles.
-Tributaries tend to take sharp angular bends along their course.
c) Parallel Pattern
-Rivers and tributaries flow virtually parallel to each other
Influenced by slope
-Common on slopes of high mountain ranges
d) Centripetal Pattern
-Rivers flow from many directions into a central depression such as a lake, sea or swamp.
-Examples are rivers flowing into some of the Rift Valley lakes such as Nakuru and Bogoria.
e) Annular Pattern
Streams (rivers which are small in size) are arranged in series of curves about a basin or crater
It‟s controlled by the slope.
f) Radial
-Resembles the spikes of a bicycle
-Formed by rivers which flow downwards from a central point in all directions such as on a volcanic
cone e.g. on Mt. Kenya, Elgon and Kilimanjaro.
Human/Economic Activities
Description of Human Activities
Identify types
Evidence –man made features
Reasons e.g. tea-cool temps and heavy rainfall
Agriculture
a) Plantation farming
Evidenced by presence of:
-“C”-coffee
-Named estates e.g. Kaimosi tea estate
b) Small scale crop farming
- Cotton ginnery or sheds
- Coffee hullerlies
- Posho mills for maize, millet, sorghum
- Tea factory/store
Livestock Farming
- Dairy farms
- Veterinary stations
- Cattle dips
- Creameries
- Water holes
- Dams
- Butcheries
- Slaughter houses
Mining
- Symbol for a mine/mineral works
- Name of the mine
- Particular mineral e.g. soda ash
- Quarry symbol
- Processing plant of a mineral e.g. cement indicates cement is mined in that area
Forestry/Lumbering
- Saw mills
- Forest reserves
- Forest station
- Forest guard post
- Roads ending abruptly into a forest estate used to transport logs to saw mills
Fishing
- Fish traps
a) Religious Services
- Church
- Mosque
- Temples
b) Education
- Schools
- Colleges
- Universities
c) Health Services
- Hospitals
- Dispensaries
d) Recreational Services
- Golf clubs/courses
- Stadiums
Description of Settlement
A settlement is a place with housing units where people live together
Densely distributed settlements- high concentration of settlements(black dots)
Moderately distributed settlements- settlements moderate in quantity
Sparsely distributed settlements-few settlements spread over a large area.
Very sparse if very few
Identify type of settlement patterns present
Type of Settlements
a) Rural settlements
Consist of villages and homesteads and homesteads in which people are involved in subsistence
agriculture and traditional activities such as pottery weaving, curving, etc.
b) Urban settlement
Consist of dense permanent and sometimes high buildings and population engaged in non agricultural
activities such as industrial activities.
Factors Influencing Settlement
1. Physical Factors
a) Climate
Areas with moderate temps and adequate rainfall are densely settled while those with extremely low or
high temps have fewer settlements.
b) Relief
Terrain: Steep slopes are less settled due to thin soils and difficulty to erect buildings.
Aspect: Slopes facing away from the sun in high latitudes are less settled than those facing the sun.
Wind ward slopes of mountains on the path of rain bearing winds are more settled due to heavy rainfall
making them ideal for agriculture.
c) Drainage
Rivers and springs attract settlements because they provide clean water.
Areas with drainage swamps are less settled because it‟s difficult to erect buildings and they also harbour
mosquitoes and snails which cause diseases.
d) Vegetation
Dense forests discourage settlements because of wild animals and also harbour disease vectors such as
tsetse flies e.g. Miombo woodland of Tanzania and Lambwe valley in Kenya.
e) Pests and diseases
Areas prone to pests and diseases are less settled because people like to live in healthy environment.
f) Natural resources
Settlements start where there is mineral extraction. e.g. Magadi
Lakes with abundant fish may also attract settlement.
g) Human Factors
i) Political factors
- 1967 TZ settled peoples in villages and the rest of land was left for farming (Ujamaa villages)
- After independence Kenya settled its landless in settlement schemes e.g. Mwea, Laikipia, Nyandarua.
- Settlement of refugees in refugee camps due to political upheavals
ii) Historical factors
- Weaker communities were forced to move elsewhere by wars.
- Settlement of communities in strategic sites such as hilltops or plateaus to see approaching enemies e.g.
Fulani of Nigeria in Jos plateau.
iii) Cultural factors
- Farming communities settled in agriculturally productive areas.
- Pastoralists settle in areas with enough land to provide pasture for their animals at ease.
iii) Economic factors
- Rural to urban migration for employment and trading.
- Mining activities may lead to development of settlements e.g. Magadi due to trona mining.
b) Linear Settlement
d) Radial Pattern
Gradient
Degree of steepness of a slope between two given points
STEPS
1. Identify the two points
2. Calculate difference in height between the two points(Vertical Interval) e.g. 500m
3. Joint them with a light line
4. Measure ground distance between the two points(Horizontal Equivalent)e.g.12 cm
G=V.I./H.E.
=500×100/12×50000=50000/600000=1/12=1:12
Interpretation
For every 12 m travelled on the Ground, there is a vertical rise of 1m
- People accelerate the rate of weathering by exposing rocks buried deep below by digging, blasting and
drilling.
Types of Weathering
1. Mechanical Weathering
- Physical break up of rocks without change in their chemical composition.
Processes
a) Block Disintegration/Separation
- Breaking of rocks into angular blocks due to repeated freezing and thawing.
- Common in temperate regions or mountainous regions of tropics where temperature fall below zero.
o Water from melting ice collects into small cracks of rocks.
o It freezes and expands and exerts pressure on cracks widening them.
o Repeated freezing and thawing causes the rocks to break into angular blocks e.g. on Mt. Kenya,
Kilimanjaro and Ruwenzori.
f) Crystal Growth
- Break up of rocks due to crystal growth.
- It occurs in arid areas.
o High rate of evaporation draws out moisture and dissolved minerals from the rock interior through
capillary action.
o The moisture evaporates when it gets to the surface of the rock leaving behind crystals in the cracks and
pores of rocks.
o The crystals continue to grow exerting pressure on the cracks or pores widening them and eventually
causing the rock to break down e.g. at Hells Gate near Naivasha.
g) Slaking/Rain Water Action
- Breaking up of sedimentary rocks due to alternate wetting and drying.
o When it rains, the rock absorbs water and swells.
o When dry season comes, the rock loses water and the outer surface shrinks.
o The process is repeated and the minerals become loosely attached to another e.g. in Kenyan Coast at Tudor
and Miritini areas.
2. Chemical Weathering
c) Animals excrete on rocks and release chemical substances which react with some minerals in rocks
causing them to break up.
d) Chemical substances released from the industries to rivers cause the water to act on rocks over which it
flows.
e) Gases such as CO2 emitted from motor vehicles and industries are
f) Absorbed by rain and acids such as carbonic or sulphurous which react with minerals causing rock to
decay.
Significance of Weathering
Positive
1. Leads to soil formation which is important for agriculture.
2. Produces other natural resources such as clay used in pottery, brick making, etc.
3. Weathered rocks form beautiful scenery for tourist attraction e.g. Hells Gate and crying stones of
Kakamega.
4. Weakens rocks easing their exploitation by quarrying and mining
Negative
1) May weaken the earths crust resulting in unstable foundations of buildings and roads and eventually lead
to their collapse.
MASS WASTING
- Movement of weathered material down slope under the influence of gravity
Factors Influencing Mass Wasting
a) Degree of slope
- Movement of weathered material is faster on steep slopes than on gentle slopes due to the influence of
gravity.
b) Climate
- Weathered material in areas receiving heavy rainfall move faster since wet materials have less cohesion.
c) Nature of the material
- Material saturated with water is more likely to move down slope as its heavy.
- Mass wasting is more likely to occur in areas where the weathered material is deep.
- Weathering is more likely where massive rocks lie on weak rocks such as clays, shale than where fine
materials lie over weak rocks.
Vegetation
- Surfaces with vegetation experience less mass wasting because it binds weathered material together.
Tectonic movements
- Earth movements such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions or faulting cause large and widespread mass
wasting.
Human activities
- Explosives used in mining and quarrying shake the ground initiating downward movement of materials.
- Mining and quarrying also interferes with the stability of the surface by loosening it making it easy for the
loosened materials to move down slope.
Types of Mass Wasting
1. Slow Mass Wasting
- Slow but steady movement of soil or loose rock debris down slope.
Processes
a) Soil Creep
- Slow and steady movement of soil and other fine materials along a very gentle slope.
Causes
1) Alternate heating and cooling causing expansion and contraction of particles causing them to change their
positions.
2) Alternate wetting and drying of soil whereby when it‟s wet its compact and when dry the particles are
loosened and tend to move away from each other.
3) Trampling and burrowing of animals.
4) External forces e.g. shaking by earthquakes, explosives, heavy vehicles, etc.
5) Ploughing down hill
6) Freezing of soil water causing it to expand which lifts particles at right angles to the slope in a process
called heaving.
b) Solifluction
- Movement of saturated soil, gravel and weathered rock down a moderate slope.
- Common in mountainous and very cold climates
o Thawing occurs during spring causing top soil to become saturated.
o Saturated soil begins to creep over the subsoil which still remains frozen(permafrost).
c) Talus Creep
- Slow and gentle movement of the mass of broken rock particles which accumulate at the base of cliffs
(scree) down hill.
d) Rock Creep
- Slow movement of individual rocks which lie on clay at a very low speed down slope in the presence of
moisture.
2. Rapid Mass Wasting
- Type of mass wasting involving large amounts of weathered material moving suddenly and fast down
slope.
a) Mud Flow
- Movement of oversaturated weathered material inform of liquid down slope.
- It occurs mainly in dry areas after heavy rains.
b) Earth Flow
o Erosion occurs on the weak rocks at the base of a cliff undercutting the weak rock.
o The overlying rocks break off causing the overlying rocks to slide down hill rotating around a curved
plane.
e) Debris Slide
- Sudden downhill movement of accumulated rock debris and other loose material downhill as a whole
f) Debris fall
- Sudden free fall of debris from a vertical or hanging cliff to the base of the slope.
g) Rock Slide
- Sliding down of masses of rock a steep slope along a bending plane, joint of fault.
h) Rock fall
i) Rain Wash
- Type of mass wasting involving removal of weathered materials by rain water.
o When rains come, the first drops scatter soil particles that have been loosened by drying.
o The increasing downpour then washes large quantities of loosened soil down hill.
Types
a) Sheet wash
- Uniform removal of soil from a large area.
o Rainfall with uniform drops fall on loosened soil on a land with uniform slope.
o The water from the rainfall then flows down slope.
o As it does so, it uniformly sweeps all the loose soil from the surface. Its common around L. Baringo and
Marigat.
b) Gulleying
1. Make the soil to become fertile where soil from fertile areas is deposited.
2. Leads to formation of new land forms such as scars, depressions, lakes, rock pillars, etc.
Negative
1. Soil creep may destroy walls built across the slope when creeping soil exerts pressure on them.
2. Decrease soil fertility where fertile soil moves down slope.
3. Makes the ground prone to soil erosion especially where scars have formed.
4. Hinders transport and communication by blocking railway lines making maintenance to be costly.
5. Hinders mechanisation of agriculture e.g. gulleying does not allow movement of vehicles and machinery
on farms.
6. Leads to destruction of property and loss of live by burying people in their houses and stones falling on
escarpments along roads causing accidents.
7. May Cause Rivers to change their courses e.g. mud flow.
HYDROLOGICAL/WATER CYCLE
Negative
1. May lead to shortage of water when evaporation rate exceeds precipitation.
2. May lead to decreased agricultural production as a result of excessive evaporation causing weathering of
crops.
3. May lead to flooding when excessive evaporation cause increased rainfall.
4. May lead to shortage of rainfall if there is less evaporation due to low temperature.
ACTION OF RIVERS
A river is a mass of water flowing over the land in a definite channel.
Work of a River
1. Drain excess water from the land.
2. Sculpturing land through erosion, transportation and transportation.
River Erosion
- Removal by river water of materials from the sides and bed of the river channel.
Factors Influencing River Erosion
1. River volume
- A river with a large volume has a greater kinetic energy to erode than one with a small volume.
2. Slope of land
- A river flowing on a steep channel has greater velocity and therefore more energy to erode its channel than
one flowing over gentle or flat land.
3. Rivers load
- A river with large, rough and heavy load e.g. tree trunks and boulders erodes more than one with light, fine
and smooth materials e.g. sand.
- A river carrying more load erodes more than one with less load as it has more abrasive tools.
4. Nature of bed rock
- Erosion is faster where a river flows over soft bed rock and less where it flows over hard rock.
Processes/Ways of river erosion
1. Solution/Corrosion
- River water dissolving soluble minerals and carrying them away.
2. Hydraulic Action
- Erosion by the force of river water when it thrusts itself into cracks and joints of rocks on the sides of the
channel dislodging lumps.
- Also by pushing air into the cracks, compressing it increasing pressure which widens the cracks eventually
dislodging lumps.
3. Abrasion/Corrasion
- Abrasion is scratching of the bed and banks by materials are carried away by the river.
- Corrosion is hurling of rock fragments carried by the river against rocks which weaken and eventually
break them.
4. Attrition
- Hitting against one another of rock fragments carried by river water breaking one another into smaller
pieces.
Types of River Erosion
1. Vertical Erosion
o In the source region a river cuts itself a channel which starts as a gulley.
o The channel is deepened by vertical erosion resulting into a v-shaped valley.
o In the middle stage lateral erosion widens and deepens the valley resulting in a more open v-cross section.
o In the old stage lateral erosion creates a very wide channel with a U-shaped cross section.
2. Gorges
- Narrow, deep, steep-sided valley.
Ways/modes of formation
a) Where a river flows along a fault or a section of soft rocks eroding the channel vertically through the soft
rocks or fault.
b) By headward erosion at a water fall when the river‟s erosive activity is increased due to increased gradient
causing the river to undercut at the base of the water fall, then the rock above the undercut base collapses
causing the waterfall to shift upstream resulting in a gorge below the water fall.
c) Where a river flows across a plateau with alternating horizontal layers of hard and soft rocks eroding them
resulting in a gorge with stepped sides called a canyon e.g. Grand canyon on R. Colorado in USA.
d) Due to river rejuvenation when the river‟s erosive activity is renewed causing the river to vigorously erode
deep into its channel.
e) Where a river maintains its course across land which is being uplifted gradually.
Rapids
- A section of the rivers course where the bed is suddenly steepened causing the water to suddenly flow
swiftly.
How they are formed
a) Where a less hard rock lies below a soft rock and the soft rock is eroded more resulting in a steep slope.
b) Where a water fall has been eroded by headward erosion reducing its height.
Water Falls
- A place on a rivers course where a river bed is vertical or nearly vertical.
Formation
a) Where a river descends over a sharp edge of a plateau encountering a sharp drop.
b) Where a river descends a cliff into the sea.
Pot Holes
- Circular depressions on a river bed.
- Form where a river flows over shallow depression and develops strong circulating currents which cause
the load to scratch the bed in circular motion.
Interlocking Spurs
- River carrying away materials that its water has eroded from the channel.
Factors Influencing River Transportation
a) Rivers Volume
A river with large volume of water has more energy and therefore greater carrying ability than one with a
small volume.
b) Gradient
A river flowing on a steep channel has greater ability to transport than one on a gentle slope because it flows
fast due to gravity.
c) Rivers Load
- Small and light particles are transported over long distances while heavy materials are transported for a
short distance.
- Dissolved load is carried all the way to the rivers mouth.
- Small amount of load is transported for a long distance while large amounts of load collide reducing the
speed and therefore rivers ability to transport causing some of the load to be dropped along the way.
Processes/ways of River Transportation
a) Suspension
- River transportation of light and insoluble materials in form of a mixture.
b) Saltation/Hydraulic Lift
- River transportation of large particles through a series of jumps and hops.
o Materials are lifted by force of moving water and pushed for a short distance and land back on the river
bed by gravity.
o The process is repeated causing the load to be transported downstream.
c) Traction
- River transportation of heavy materials like boulders by rolling them by the force of water.
d) Solution
- River transportation of load in solution form.
Load transported by suspension, Saltation and traction is called clastic load while that by solution is called
dissolved load.
Deposition
- Laying down of some of the load carried by the river when energy decreases.
Factors Influencing Deposition
a) Gradient
When gradient reduces the river‟s speed decreases and hence its energy is reduced causing it to drop some of
the heavy load.
b) Rivers Volume
When rivers volume decreases its energy also decreases causing it to deposit heaviest load then lighter ones.
c) Obstacles
Obstacles such as swamp vegetation and rock outcrop reduce the river‟s speed and also trap some of the load
thereby facilitating deposition.
d) River Bed Width and Depth
Where a rivers channel becomes wide and shallow there is less water per unit area and hence the river has
lower capacity to transport so deposition of excess load begins.
Resultant Features of River Deposition
a) Alluvial Fans and Bajadas
o Erosion is greater on the outer bank and deposition on the inner bank causing the river to form loop like
bends.
o Erosion continues on the outer bank (bluff) narrowing the land between the two outer banks forming a
pronounced meander e.g. on rivers Yala, Nzoia and Tana.
o During the floods when the river has more energy it cuts across the narrow land.
o The former bends are cut off by deposition to form an oxbow lake e.g. Kanyaboli on R.Yala and
Shakababo on R.Tana.
Flood Plains
Natural Levees
- A delta with a convex shoreline on the seaward end due to strong currents spreading materials over a wide
area on seaward side.
- Has many distributaries e.g. Tana and Rufiji deltas.
5. Birds Foot Delta
o The powerful river erodes vertically and laterally than the weak river making it to flow at a lower level.
o At the same time, it extends its valley backwards by headward erosion.
o The stronger river eventually joins the valley of the weak river.
o The headwaters of the weaker river start flowing into the valley of the stronger river e.g. R. Tano in Ghana
was captured by the Black Volta River and R. Eyong was captured by Imo in S. Nigeria.
The remaining section of the beheaded river is called a misfit/beheaded river.
The dry valley between the elbow of capture and the new course of the misfit stream is called a wind gap.
River Rejuvenation
- Renewal of erosive activity of a river.
- Happens in the old stage.
Causes
A. Change in the Base Level
Base level is the lowest level to which a river can erode its bed.
Rejuvenation resulting is called dynamic rejuvenation
1. Drop in sea level
o The river mouth moves further seawards.
o A steep gradient occurs between the old and the new mouths causing the river to starts to move swiftly.
o Vertical erosion resumes extending back to the flood plain.
2. Uplift of a section of land along the rivers course.
o Faulting or folding may occur.
o A section of land along a rivers course is uplifted.
o The gradient is increased causing the river to flow swiftly and undercut through the uplifted section.
o An antecedent gorge is formed.
3. Unequal sinking of land along a rivers course.
o The downstream side sinks more than the upstream one.
o An increase ingredient occurs causing the river to flow swiftly
o The river starts to undercut more vigorously than before.
B. Increase in Rivers Discharge
Rejuvenation resulting is called static rejuvenation
o The rivers discharge increases due to high precipitation or capture.
o The rate of erosion becomes higher due to increased discharge.
o The river starts to undercut more vigorously.
C. Change in Rock Structure
o A river passes a resistant rock and starts flowing over a less resistant rock.
o The river starts eroding more vigorously into the softer rocks.
Features of River Rejuvenation
1. Knick Points
- Formed from vertical erosion causing both valleys to be steep and symmetrical.
b) Ingrown Meanders
- Formed by lateral and vertical erosion causing one valley side to be steeper than the other and hence
asymmetrical in cross section.
6. Abandoned Meanders
- Meanders abandoned during formation of oxbow lakes when the river takes a short-cut leaving an
enclosed portion of land surrounded by an oxbow lake.
Drainage Systems
- Main river together with its tributaries.
Types
1. Accordant Drainage System
- Drainage system in which a river flows according to slope and rock structure by following areas of weak
lines.
2. Discordant Drainage System
- Drainage systems in which rivers don‟t flow in accordance with the slope, rock structure and land forming
processes.
Types
a) Antecedent Drainage System
- Drainage system where a river maintains its course while the surrounding land is being uplifted.
b) Superimposed Drainage System
- Drainage system which develops where a river maintains its flow over a new set of rocks after removing a
former set of rocks.
3. Back Tilted/Reversed Drainage System
- Drainage system where direction of flow is reversed be due to capture, uplifting or down warping e.g. R.
Kagera, Katonga and Kafu.
Significance of Rivers and Their Features
Positive
a) Rivers are sources of water for domestic and industrial use.
b) Rivers water is used for irrigation.
c) They provide port facilities where they have rias and estuaries.
d) Some rivers are used for transportation e.g. R. Congo and Nile.
e) Some rivers are fishing grounds e.g. Tana.
f) Rivers are dammed and used for H.E.P generation.
g) Features formed by river action such as waterfalls, gorges and oxbow lakes are a tourist attraction.
Negative
LAKES
A lake is a depression on the earth‟s surface where water has accumulated.
Classification /Types of Lakes
According To the Nature of Water
a) Fresh water lakes which contain fresh water.
b) Salty lakes which have salty water.
According To the Mode of Formation of Depression They Occupy
1. by Earth or Tectonic Movements
a) Faulted or Rift Valley Lakes
o During Rift Valley formation some parts of the rift valley floor sunk more than others.
o A long narrow and deep depression formed.
o Water from seepage and rain accumulated into these depressions to form lakes.
b) Down Warped and Tilted Lakes
o Tensional and compression forces caused some parts of the earths crust to up warp while others down
warped.
o A shallow depression formed.
o The depression may also be filled with water from rain or ground water.
o In the case of L. Victoria Rivers Kafu, Kagera and Katonga were tilted eastwards and Nyando, Yala and
Nzoia continued flowing west wards adding water into the depression.
- L.Victoria is the second largest fresh water lake after L.Superior.
- Has a maximum depth of 87m deep. Other examples of lakes are L. Kyoga and Wamala.
Playas/sebkha is a lake contained in an inland drainage basin in a desert formed when rain or flood water
flows into a basin formed by crustal warping e.g. Chemchane Sebkha in Mauritania.
2. by Vulcanicity
i) Crater Lakes
- Lake formed by water accumulating into a crater.
- Are usually salty.
- A crater lake formed on an explosion crater is called maar.
- Examples are Lakes Mossoko in Tanzania, Paradise in Marsabit and Myungu in Uganda.
- Formed as a result water accumulating on the upstream side of a lava barrier across a river.
o Highly viscous lava erupts across a rivers course.
o It solidifies and blocks the river forming a lava dam.
o The rivers water accumulates behind the lava dam.
o A narrow and winding lake is formed e.g. Lakes Bunyonyi, Mutanda and Bulera in Uganda.
3. by Erosion
a) Glacial Erosion
(i) Corrie/Tarn Lakes
- Lake formed when water from melting snow accumulates into a corrie/cirque e.g. Teleki, Nanyuki and
Hidden tarns on Mt. Kenya.
(ii) Ribbon Lakes
- Finger like on a glaciated valley.
o Glacier erodes the floor of a u-shaped valley.
o It over deepens some of its sections.
o Elongated hollow results.
o Water from melting ice accumulates into it forming a lake.
b) Wind Erosion
- Lakes formed when ground water accumulates in a depression formed by wind deflation and abrasion.
o Wind continuously erodes the earths crust by deflation and abrasion.
o The water bearing rocks are reached.
Water oozes from the water table into the hollow or water from flash floods may accumulate in it to form
temporary lakes called pans e.g. in Quattara depression between Egypt and Libya and Etosha pan in
Namib.
c) Solution Lakes
- Lakes formed when rain or ground water accumulates in depressions formed in limestone rocks when rain
water containing a weak carbonic acid dissolves limestone rocks e.g. Lakes Barber in Morrocco and
Ojikoto in Namibia.
4. by Deposition
a) River Deposition
- Formed when river deposition occur cutting off a section of a pronounced meander e.g. oxbow lakes
Shakababo and Mukunguya at lower part of Tana.
b) Wave Deposition
- Lakes formed when wave deposition occurs across a rivers mouth or where the coastline changes suddenly
enclosing a body of calm water.
o Waves break at an angle.
o The long shore drift causes materials to be progressively arranged across a rivers mouth resulting in a body
of calm water called a lagoon/sound.
5. by Man
a) Dams are Lakes formed when water accumulates behind dams constructed across rivers resulting into a
large man made reservoir called man made lake e.g. behind Seven Forks Dam and Lakes Volta in Ghana and
Nasser in Egypt.
b) Barrage is a bank of earth or stones built across a river to provide water for farming.
Significance of Lakes
Positive
1. Fresh water lakes provide water for domestic and industrial use.
2. Fresh water lakes also provide water for irrigation e.g. Naivasha for horticultural farms around it.
3. Man made lakes and some other lakes e.g. Victoria (Owen falls) are used for generation of H.E.P.
4. Lakes are used for transport.
5. Some lakes contain valuable minerals e.g. trona at L. Magadi and salt at L. Katwe in Uganda.
6. Many lakes have fish which is a source of food and employment to fishermen and traders.
7. Lakes are also a tourist attraction by providing recreational facilities and being habitats for wildlife.
8. Some lakes are sources of rivers e.g. Victoria for White Nile and L.Tana for Blue Nile.
9. Lakes modify the climate of surrounding areas by sea breezes and convectional rainfall.
Negative
1. Lakes are habitats for disease vectors e.g. mosquitoes and snails which transmit Malaria and bilhazia.
2. Lakes may cause flooding due to excessive rainfall or when dams break leading to loss of life and
property.
3. Lakes are habitats for dangerous animals like crocodiles, hippos and snakes which kill humans.
4. Lakes cause drowning accidents to people in time of storms.
a) Continental shelf- Relatively flat part of the continent covered by ocean water.
b) Continental slope- Steeply dipping surface between continental shelf and the ocean basin proper.
c) Abbysal plain- Almost level area of the ocean where sediments are deposited.
d) Mid ocean ridges- Range of hills which are submerged formed by volcanic and seismic activities.
e) Sea Islands- pieces of land surrounded by water.
i) Continental islands- Ones rising from continental shelf.
ii) Oceanic islands-Ones which rise from the sea floor e.g. Canary and Cape Verde.
iii) Coral islands-Ones made of coral.
f) Deep sea trenches - narrow steep sided submarine valleys on the ocean floor.
g) Guyots- submerged atolls forming an under water mountain.
h) Sea mount- a volcano which doesn‟t rise above the sea floor.
6. A portion of ocean water moves
There are two types of movements namely:
Vertical Movements
- Movement of ocean water from surface to bottom and vice versa.
How they occur
1. Cold polar water sinking before moving horizontally towards equator.
2. Ocean currents converge
3. When ocean water sinks at lower depths after ocean currents converge.
4. When ocean water rises to the surface in a process called upwelling.
o Canaries -cold
o Benguela-cold
o N. Atlantic drift-warm
o Gulf stream drift-warm
Factors that influencing formation of ocean currents
a) Wind by blowing over water causing a mass of surface ocean water to move in its direction forming
drift currents.
b) Rotation of the earth by causing deflection of ocean currents.
c) Shape of land mass by influencing current direction and causing it to flow following the coastal
outline.
d) Differences in temperature by causing cold polar water which is dense due to low temp moves
towards the equator passing on the ocean floor and warm water of the tropics to move towards the poles
passing on the surface.
2. Tides
- Periodic rise and fall in the level of ocean and other large water bodies.
- Occurs when the moon and to some e the sun exert gravitational pull on the water bodies on the earth.
o Moons gravitational pull is exerted on the earth causing the water on that side A to bulge resulting in high
tide 1
o Some water flows from sides C and D to side B to occupy space created by the moons pull resulting in
high tide 2 and low tides 1 and 2 at C and D.
Rotation of the Earth
- It brings any longitude under the influence of 2 high and 2low tides in a lunar day.
- Similar tides occur at an interval of 12hrs 26 minutes.
- A lunar day is time taken by the earth to complete one rotation with respect to the moon (24 hrs 52 min)
- Lunar month is time taken by the moon to complete one revolution around the earth (27.3 days)
- The moon is always ahead of the earth by 52 minutes due to its revolution e.g. if Nairobi is opposite the
moon at 6pm the following day the high tide will be at 6.52pm.
Tidal range is the difference between the highest level reached by high tide and lowest level reached by low
tide.
Types of tides
- Caused by relative positions of the moon and the sun from the earth.
- Sometimes the moon and the earth are nearer or farther from each other due to their elliptical orbits.
a) Spring Tides
c) Perigian Tides
b) Slope -The coast that slopes steeply into the sea favours erosion.
c) Load-large amount provides more abrasive tools. Angular shaped load is more effective in abrasion.
d) Amount of water in a wave - the larger the amount the greater the hydraulic force.
Features Resulting From Wave Erosion
a) Cliff and Wave Cut Platform
Cliff – A steep rock face which borders the sea.
Wave Cut Platform - A fairly flat part of the shore formed when a cliff retreats inland.
o Breaking waves erode rock surface of a steep coast cutting a notch.
o Erosion continues causing the base of the rock to be undercut resulting into an overhanging rock.
o Undercutting continues causing the overhanging rock to eventually collapse forming a cliff.
o The process is repeated and a fairly flat part of the shore is formed between the new and the former cliff.
b) Bays and Headlands
Bay – Piece of sea water jutting into the land or a curved inlet of sea.
Headland - a piece of land jutting into the sea.
o At first there is a coast with hard and soft rocks.
o Soft rocks are eroded more by wave action to form sea inlets called bays.
o Resistant rocks called headlands are left sticking into the sea. A big bay is called a gulf.
Cave - Natural cylindrical tunnel like chamber extending into the cliff or into the side of a headland.
o A small hollow form on a weak area of the cliff after limestone is acted upon by carbonation.
o Corrosion and direct dissolving act on the hollow extending it into the cliff forming a cave.
Blow Hole/ Gloup - Vertical hole formed on the side of cliff bordering the land.
o Formed when a cave reaches the surface some distance inland as a vertical pit.
It‟s called a blow hole because when the waves break water is forced out of the hole.
Geos - Narrow sea inlet formed when the roof of a cave between the blow hole and the sea collapses.
d) Natural Arch, stack and stump
Deposition takes place where water is shallow for waves to come into contact with ocean floor and break
the cyclic motion of water.
Features Resulting From Wave Deposition
a) Beaches
- Gently sloping mass of accumulated materials such as sand, shingle and pebbles along the coast.
o Formed by constructive waves during a relatively calm weather when backwash is weakest resulting in
materials accumulating at the shore.
During storms destructive waves destroy beaches creating other minor features such as: i)
Beach cusps
- Horn like projections of sand and gravel which gives the coast line a series of curves.
o Waves break at right angles.
o Powerful swash in form of eddies scour depressions moving coarse materials to either side forming head
like projections called cusps leaving finer materials forming bay like inlets.
ii) Beach Ridges and Beach Berms
Beach Ridges - Low ridges of coarse sand, boulders and shingle deposited roughly parallel to the shore
formed by waves approaching the coast at right angles.
iii) Beach Berms
- Narrow terrace of shingle thrown up the beach by storm waves formed where tidal range is high.
iv) Beach Rock Shells
Masses of sand, shells and pebbles cemented together by calcium carbonate forming projections above the
beach.
b) Spits
- Low lying ridge of sand, shingle and pebbles with one end attached to the coast and the other projecting to
the sea.
o Movement of materials by long shore drift is halted causing deposition due to coast changing its direction
towards the land e.g. across estuary or entrance of a bay.
o The process continues and the accumulation grows towards the sea.
o Waves carry sand to the inner end of the spit creating a hook like feature e.g. at the mouth of R. Senegal.
c) Tombolo
- Spit that grows out from the coast into the sea and joins an island e.g. Ras Hafur in Somalia and Ngomeni
on Kenyan coast.
d) Bars
- Ridge of sand, shingles and mud which lies almost parallel to the coast.
Types
i) Bay bar – Bar which forms across the entrance of a bay.
Offshore bar - Bar which forms off a very shallow coast line.
o Vegetation grows on the marsh and with time dries up e.g. „A‟ Laree in Malagasy.
f) Dune Belts
- Belt of low lying mounds of sand found on extreme landward side of the beach above the high tide level.
o Sand on the beach dries up during the high tide.
o It‟s picked by onshore winds and deposited at a distance away from the reach of breaking waves.
o It collects behind obstacles like grass or other vegetation and gradually builds up forming a dune.
o The dunes may be covered with vegetation to form marshes.
g) Mud Flats and Salt Marshes
Mudflats - Platform of mud consisting of fine silt and alluvium deposited in sea inlets such as bays and river
estuaries.
Salt marshes - Vegetation such as grasses and mangrove that grows on a mudflat
o Fine silt and river alluvium are deposited in sea inlets by tides.
o A platform of mud builds up and is colonised by vegetation forming a swamp called salt marsh.
o The dense network of plants roots trap more mud and alluvium causing the mudflats to extend seawards.
Factors Determining the Type of Coasts
a) Wave action
Wave erosion makes a coast to have erosion features while deposition causes depositional features.
b) Tidal currents
Where tidal range is high more surface area is exposed to wave action.
c) Nature of rocks
Weak rocks are eroded to form bays (inlets) while resistant ones are left standing to form headlands.
d) Alignment of coast
There is more erosion on exposed coasts while deposition occurs where the coast is obliquely aligned to
the breaking waves.
e) Change in sea level
Fall in sea level leads to emergence and rise to submergence.
Types of Coasts
According To the Alignment of Coast
1. discordant/transverse/irregular coast
- Coast which lies transversely to the coast line.
- Has a large number of inlets and receives heavy rainfall because winds blow onshore e.g. Mombasa.
2. Concordant coasts/regular/longitudinal coasts
- One which lies almost parallel to the coastline.
- Almost straight and lacks inlets and receives little rainfall due to winds blowing offshore e.g. Lamu.
According To Features Present
1. Submerged Coasts
- Coasts where a part of coastal land lies under the sea.
Causes of submergence
a) Rise in sea level e.g. when large quantities of melt water were released to the sea causing its level to rise
due to climate change at the end of ice age.
b) Sinking of coastal land and a part of the sea floor.
Types
a) Submerged Highland Coasts
- Found where submergence occurs on a coast characterised by steep slopes.
- Characterised by drowned features.
i) Ria Coast
- Platform of coral formed when coral polyps start building a reef near the shore.
Characteristics
a) Flat or concave shaped
b) Higher on the seaward side
c) Outer edge falls steeply into the sea
ii) Barrier Reefs
- Sand grains which have been rounded to the shape of millet seeds by wind attrition.
b) Ventifacts
- Boulders, stones and pebbles which are flattened by wind abrasion one or more sides due to changes in
wind direction.
- Dreikanter - Ventifact with three wind faceted surfaces formed when wind is blowing in different
directions.
c) Mushroom Block
- Irregular rock pillar with a broad top and a narrow base found in the desert landscape.
o Wind abrasion acts upon rock with alternating hard and soft layers.
o Soft layers are eroded more than hard layers leaving hollows and protrusions.
o There is more undercutting at the base where there is more abrasion.
o There results an irregular rock with a narrow base.
e) Deflation Hollows
- Wind lifting and holding particles such as dusts by air currents and transporting them over long distances.
ii) Saltation
- Wind transportation of heavy particles by a series of jumps and hops.
o They are rolled.
o They collide.
o Bounce and get lifted.
o Transported short distance ahead.
iii) Surface Creep
-Wind transportation of heavy particles such as gravel and pebbles by pushing and rolling along the desert.
Resultant Features of Wind Deposition
1. Sand Dunes
Dune - Low ridge of sand accumulated by wind deposition.
Types
i) Barchans
- Ridge shaped mounds of sand lying parallel to the path of prevailing wind.
o Wind blows between barchan dunes.
o Wind eddies move sand towards the sides.
o Sand accumulates on the sides resulting into ridge shaped mounds e.g. in Namib Desert.
iii) Transverse/Wake Dunes
- Wave like mounds of sand in a desert which lie at right angles to the prevailing wind.
o Less strong winds blow over sand from one direction.
o The wind concentrates larger grains of sand into series of transverse ridges.
o Wind may continue pushing the sand causing it to accumulate on the leeward side to form wake dune e.g.
in W. Sahara.
2. Drass
- Biggest sand features in a desert with surface resembling a plateau and with a height of up to 200m.
- Barchans and Seif dunes may form on such features e.g. in E. Sahara desert.
3. Loess
- Fertile soils with great thickness of about 100m formed from deposition of dust from deserts.
o Dust from deserts is carried beyond to wet areas.
o It‟s washed down by rain causing its deposition.
o It accumulates into layers.
o Deposition continues and the layers are compacted forming sedimentary rocks.
o The sedimentary rocks wither to form fertile soils which favour cultivation e.g. Temperate lands of
Europe along Rhine valley from Sahara dusts and along Huang He valley in N. China from dust of Gobi
desert.
Action of water in arid areas
- Receives short occasional rains causing flash floods which erode transport and deposit large loads of
materials produced by weathering.
- Water action is short lived.
o Flash floods flow into gullies widening and deepening them to form wadis.
Characteristics
o Wide and deep
o Steep with cliff like walls
o flat floor
o Dry (lack permanent drainage)
b) Dry River Valleys
- Valleys in arid areas through which streams flow during the wet season and dry up in dry season e.g. in
Turkana, Wajir and Mandera.
c) Mesas and Buttes
- Extensive inland drainage basin in a desert formed by deflation or crustal warping or a small fluctuating
salty lake contained in an inland drainage basin in a desert formed when water from torrential outpours
flows into the basin by multiple temporary streams e.g. Chemchane sebkha in Mauritania.
e) Peripediment
- Zone of thick alluvial deposits at the edge of playas in form of alkaline crust of mud, sand and gravel
formed when streams deposit a lot of materials at the edge of the playa. Materials dry up leaving a hard
salty crustal surface called Salina/salar e.g. in Arizona desert in U.S.A.
f) Pediment
g) Peneplain
Low level plain formed when pediments are eroded to form a low level plain.
h) Pediplain
6. Deserts are good sites for testing military weapons, military training and experimenting ground for aircraft
because they are sparsely populated.
7. The scarce vegetation in deserts such as shrubs can be used in livestock keeping e.g. goats, camels etc.
8. The hot sun in deserts can be harnessed to provide electricity for lighting, pumping of water, etc.
9. Seasonal streams can be dammed to supply water to surrounding areas e.g. Kigombo dam in Mbororo in
Taita which supplies water to Voi town.
Negative
1. Some desert features can prevent physical development e.g. sand dunes can burry roads and it is difficult
to construct bridges across wadis.
2. Sand dunes can cover oasis and settlements.
3. Sand dunes may destroy rich agricultural land.
4. High temperatures, shortage of water, unreliable rainfall and lack of transport and communication
infrastructure discourage settlement.
UNDER/GROUND WATER
- Water that exists beneath the earth‟s surface in pore spaces in soil and rocks.
Sources of Ground Water
a) Rain Water
- Some rain water which percolates and is trapped after meeting an impermeable rock.
b) Melt Water
- Water that infiltrates into the ground when snow melts during spring and summer.
c) Surface Water
- Water from rivers, seas, swamps, oceans, lakes and ponds that seep into the ground.
d) Magmatic/Plutonic Water
- Water trapped in rocks beneath surface during vulcanicity
Factors Influencing Existence of Ground Water
a) Precipitation
- For ground water to exist precipitation must exceed evaporation.
- Light rain falling over a long period of time infiltrates more than heavy short lived downpour.
b) Slope
- On flat and gently sloping areas rain water has ample time to infiltrate because it remains in one place for a
long time.
- On steep areas there is low infiltration since a lot of water turns into runoff because of getting less time to
percolate.
c) Nature of Rocks
- There is a greater possibility of existence of ground water where there are permeable surface rocks.
- Ground water exists where impermeable rock overlie an impermeable one so that when water infiltrates
and percolates underground it‟s trapped by impermeable rock and accumulates above it.
Aquifer - permeable rock which is permanently saturated with water.
Permeable rocks - Rocks which allow water to pass through them.
Types
a) Porous - Those with pores/airspaces between rock grains through which water passes e.g. sandstone,
limestone and chalk.
b) Pervious - Ones with cracks fractures and joints through which water enters and passes e.g. granite,
limestone and chalk.
Impermeable rocks - Ones which don‟t allow water to pass through them.
Types
a) Aquifuge - Impenetrable impermeable rocks e.g. gabbro, shale and slate.
b) Aquiclude - Porous rocks which absorb water and expand narrowing air spaces between grains preventing
water to percolate downwards e.g. clay.
d) Vegetation Cover
- Plants break the speed of rain drops causing drops to hit the ground gently giving rain water ample time to
percolate.
- On bare surfaces most of precipitation flows away as run off.
e) Level of Saturation of Ground
- Infiltration is more on dry ground because it has wide open air spaces while and less on a ground whose air
spaces are saturated with water.
Water Table
- Water that infiltrates and percolates into the ground fills air spaces creating zones of saturation whose
upper levels are called water tables.
Zones of Saturation
a) Zone of Non-saturation
- Zone of permeable through which water passes but doesn‟t remain in the pores for a long time.
- Well sunk to this zone doesn‟t contain any water.
- Type formed where a permeable rock lies above an impermeable one on a hill and water comes out at the
junction of those two rock layers.
b) Dyke Spring
- Type formed where an igneous dike cuts across a layer of permeable rock.
o Ground water on the upslope side is trapped causing water table on that side to rises.
o A spring develops where the water table is exposed on the surface.
c) Vauclusian Spring
- Type formed on a limestone hill or escarpment overlying an impermeable layer.
o Limestone rock becomes saturated with water.
o Water comes out of the ground where water table appears on the surface.
d) Valley Spring
- Type formed where water table intersects the surface along the side of the valley.
Artesian Basins
- Saucer shaped depression consisting of a layer of permeable rock sandwiched between two impermeable
rocks and the whole system forms a syncline.
Characteristics
a) One or both ends are exposed on the surface on a rainy area or beneath a lake.
b) Water enters at the exposed end or ends.
c) With time the permeable rock is saturated with water and becomes an aquifer e.g. between Chad and
Egypt across Quattara depression.
Artesian well
Well sunk into the aquifer of an artesian basin from which water will come out without being pumped.
Ideal Conditions for Formation of an Artesian Well
a) Aquifer to be sandwiched between impermeable rocks to prevent evaporation and percolation.
b) Aquifer to be exposed in a region which is a source of water e.g. rainy area or lake.
c) Aquifer to dip from the region of water intake.
d) Mouth of the well to be at a lower level than the intake area to develop hydraulic pressure which will force
water out.
Problems Associated With Artesian Wells
a) Water may be hot due to high temperatures.
b) Water may be salty because of water taking long to percolate through rocks thus dissolving large quantities
of mineral salts.
c) Water may fail to come out naturally when water is drawn faster than it‟s being replaced in the source
region and necessitating pumping.
Significance of Underground Water
1. Source of rivers and their tributaries.
2. Source of water for domestic and industrial use e.g. wells, springs, boreholes and oasis.
3. Used in agriculture e.g. oasis water is used for irrigation of date palms.
4. Influences settlements due to the availability of water e.g. in deserts people settle near oasis and spring line
settlements in limestone areas.
5. Hot springs are a tourist attraction and their water is trapped and pumped into houses through pipes for
heating during winter e.g. in Iceland.
6. Underground streams help in keeping some lakes fresh e.g. L. Naivasha.
Action of Water in Limestone Lime stone Areas (Karst Region)
Karst region - Region where the surface and the ground is covered with limestone rocks.
Karst scenery - Unique features in a Karst region resulting from the action of water e.g. Shimoni caves at the
coast of Kenya.
- When calcium carbonate is exposed a weak carbonic acid formed by rain dissolving CO 2 it‟s dissolved to
form calcium hydrogen carbonate which is removed from the rock in solution resulting in surface and
underground features in such a limestone region.
Factors Influencing Development of Karst Scenery
a) Surface rock and the rock below should be hard and well jointed for acid water to percolate and cause
solution to happen e.g. limestone, chalk or dolomite.
b) Climate should be hot to speed chemical weathering and humid for availability of rain which is a solvent.
c) Should have a lot of vegetation to release CO2.
d) Water table to be far below the surface so that the whole limestone rock is not dissolved and underground
features fail to be formed.
Surface Features in Limestone Areas
a) Grikes and Clints
Clints - Blocks of limestone rock left standing when water infiltrates through the limestone rocks widening
and deepening the joints.
Grikes - Deep groves or gullies formed when rainwater infiltrates through limestone rocks widening the
joints by solution.
b) Swallow/Sink Holes
- Deep vertical holes formed on limestone rocks when solution extends the grikes.
- Referred to as swallow/sink holes because surface runoff or river water may disappear through them as a
waterfall and come out of the ground as a vauclusian spring further downhill.
- Vertical shaft from the surface of the sink hole down into the ground is called ponor.
c) Dry Valley
- Steep valleys with no permanent streams on limestone surface at the section between the swallow hole and
where the river emerges.
d) Karst Window
- Small outlet to the surface from a cavern formed when continuous carbonation at the surface causes the
roof of the cave to collapse.
e) Limestone Gorge
- Deep steep sided river valley in limestone rocks formed when the swallowed river causes solution to
continue underground causing the roof of underground water course to collapse.
f) Karst Bridge
- Small section left joining the roof between the karst window and gorge.
g) Dolines
- Elliptical hollow with gently sloping sides on the surface of a limestone region formed when several
swallow holes collapse and merge.
h) Uvala
- Depression which may be as wide as 1 km in diameter formed on the surface of limestone regions when
several dolines collapse and merge.
i) Polje
- Largest, shallow, elliptical and flat floored depressions on a limestone region formed when several uvalas
collapse and merge.
- May become a temporary lake or may be covered by a marsh.
a) Stalactites
- Finger like masses of calcite hanging vertically from the roof of a limestone cave or cavern formed by
repeated evaporation of water and giving off of carbon dioxide from drops of water containing calcium
bicarbonate hanging from the roof of the cave causing crystallisation of calcium bicarbonate into calcite.
b) Stalactite
- Stumpy rock masses of calcite which grow from the floor of a limestone cave upwards formed by repeated
dripping of solution of calcium bicarbonate from the end of stalactite to the floor of a limestone cave then
it spreads out and crystallizes.
c) Limestone Pillars
- Pillar like structures in limestone caves formed when stalactites and stalagmites grow towards each other,
stalagmite grows until it touches the roof of a cave or when a stalactite grows until it touches the floor of
the cave.
d) Limestone caves
- Underground chambers or cavities in limestone rocks.
o Underground rivers dissolve limestone in horizontal joints forming a horizontal tunnel.
o Surface water and underground water percolates through the joints into the tunnel enlarging it forming a
phreatic cave i.e. cave below the water table.
o The water flows out at the vauclusian spring lowering the water table causing the phreatic cave to become
a limestone cave.
o Continued solution from water percolating through the caves roof widens and lowers its floor to form a
larger cave called limestone cavern e.g. Carls band cave in New Mexico U.S.A.
Significance of Karst Scenery
Positive
1. Features in karst scenery are a tourist attraction e.g. caves, gorges, stalactites, stalagmites, etc.
2. Limestone rock is used in the manufacture of cement e.g. cement factory at Bamburi in Mombasa and Athi
River.
3. Limestone blocks are also used for building.
4. Limestone regions are very good for grazing particularly sheep because the surface is dry.
5. Large villages called spring line settlements form at the line of vauclusian springs due to the availability of
water.
Negative
1. Limestone landscape discourages settlement because the surface is rocky, soils are thin and unsuitable for
agriculture, surface is rugged with features like grikes and Clints and the water supply is inadequate due to
rivers disappearing into swallow holes.
GLACIATION
- Action of moving ice.
Glacier - Mass of ice moving outward from an area of accumulation.
- Formed when snow accumulates on the surface, lower layers are compressed to a harder mass resulting in
opaque ice due to air bubbles and accumulation continues compression lower layers squeezing out air
forming glassy ice called glacier.
Types
a) Cirque glacier - ice occupying a cirque.
b) Valley glacier - Ice confined within a valley
c) Piedmont glacier: Glacier formed when valley glaciers converge at the foot of the mountain.
Ice bergs - Large mass of ice floating in the ocean formed when an ice sheet moves to the sea e.g. in Arctic
and N. Atlantic Ocean.
Ice sheet - Continuous mass of ice covering a large area on the earth‟s surface.
Ice caps - Ice covering the mountain peak.
Snow line - Line beyond which there is a permanent snow cover.
Ways of Ice Movement
a) Plastic Flowage
- Movement of ice like a viscous liquid.
o Great pressure is exerted at the bottom sides and centre causing some ice particles to melt slightly and
move slowly down hill like a viscous liquid.
b) Basal Slip
- Movement of ice by sliding over the underlying rock.
o Pressure is exerted on deepest layers of ice in contact with the rock beneath causing melting.
o A film of water is created which acts as a lubricant between the ice and the rock causing ice to slip and
slide over the rock and move down slope.
c) Extrusion Flow
- Movement of ice by spreading out.
o Ice accumulates building to great thickness at the centre causing compression of layers of ice beneath.
o The layers beneath are forced to spread out where there is less pressure.
d) Internal Shearing
- Breaking of ice into smaller pieces which move alongside one another.
o Uneven movement causes ice to develop cracks on the surface.
o The glacier breaks into smaller pieces which move alongside each other down slope.
d) Thickness of Ice
Thicker masses of ice cause more pressure between them and rocks beneath which cause slight melting and
therefore faster movement.
Glacial Erosion
Processes/Ways in Which Ice Erodes
a) Plucking
- Pulling away of parts of a rock at the base of glacier when the ice freezes into the cracks of a well jointed
rock.
b) Abrasion
- Scratching of the underlying ground by stones and boulders carried by the ice as the glacier moves.
Factors Influencing Glacial Erosion
a) Nature of Underlying Rock
- Abrasion is more effective on soft rocks than hard rocks.
- Well jointed and faulted rocks are more eroded than those which are not because cracks and joints enable
water to enter rocks and freeze which facilitates plucking.
b) Gradient of Slope
- Glacier on steep slopes moves faster and has greater kinetic energy to erode than slow moving glacier
c) Thickness of Ice
- Thick ice is heavier and exerts greater pressure on rock debris making them to abrade the underlying rock
more effectively.
d) Availability of Debris
- The more the rock debris the more effective abrasion will be since it acts as abrasive tools.
- Too heavy debris makes erosion impossible since ice is not able to transport it but glides over it without
acting on the rock below.
Erosion Features
On Glaciated Highlands
a) Cirque
o A deep crevice called bergshrund develops at the top of ice due to unequal movement.
o Freezing occur deep down the bergshrund causing the back wall and sides to be steepened by plucking.
o Plucked debris is carried forward scratching the floor of the basin deepening it forming the cirque, corrie
or cwm.
o Water from melting snow may accumulate in a cirque to form a tarn e.g. Teleki tarn.
b) Arêtes
- Narrow knife- edged steep ridge separating two cirques.
- Formed when two cirques cut backwards on adjacent sides of a mountain leaving a narrow steep ridge
separating them.
c) Pyramidal Peaks
- Sharp steep sided peak at the top of a mountain.
- Formed when three or more cirques erode on mountain side towards each other leaving a sharp pointed
rock separating them at the top of the mountain e.g. Corydon and Delamere on Mt. Kenya.
d) Glacial Trough
Glacial Trough and Related Features
- Rock outcrop with a long smooth gentle slope on the upstream side and a rugged steep slope on the down
stream side found on glaciated lowland.
- Formed ice acts on a rock on its way causing the side facing the upstream side to be polished by abrasion
resulting into a smooth gentle slope and the down stream side is affected by plucking resulting in a rugged
steep slope leaving a rock outcrop standing just above the surface.
b) Crag and Tail
Crag - projection of resistant rock which protects a mass of softer rock on the downstream side of the glacier.
o The ice moves over and around over the resistant rock eroding it slightly by abrasion.
o Cracks develop on the upstream side causing the ice to move and pluck materials from the resistant rock
leaving a projection of resistant rock with a steep rugged upstream side is formed.
Tail - elongated feature on the downstream side of the crag formed by formed by material deposited by the
glacier on the downstream side and the weaker rock.
c) Depressional Lakes
- Depressions filled with water from melting ice found in glaciated lowlands.
- Formed when soft rocks are scooped out by moving ice sheet forming depressions which are filled with
water to form a lake.
Glacial Deposition
- Material carried by the glacier is called moraine.
Types of Moraine
e) Slope
Lowlands allow glacier to accumulate a lot of materials which are finally deposited by melting ice.
Features Resulting From Glacial Deposition
a) Till Plain
- Extensive area of flat relief resulting from burying of former valleys and hills by glacial deposits.
b) Erratics
- Large boulders of resistant rocks transported by glacier from highland and deposited on the till plain.
c) Drumlins
- Long egg shaped hills deposited and shaped under an ice sheet of very broad glacier.
o Glacier deposits boulder clay at the valley bottom due to friction between the bed rock and the boulder
clay.
o With more deposition large mounds of deposits are formed.
o The moving ice streamlines the till that has been deposited irregularly resulting into the upstream sides of
the till being steep but smoothed.
d) Terminal Moraine Ridge
- Ridge like feature formed by extensive deposition of moraine along the edge of an ice sheet.
o Ice remains stagnant for a very long time.
o The ice at the edges of sheet melt and a lot of materials are deposited.
e) Eskers
- Isolated hill made of sand and gravel which have been deposited in strata by glacial water.
g) Kame Terrace
- Ridge of sand and gravel occurring in narrow lakes that exist between the glacier and an adjacent highland.
h) Outwash Plains
- Wide gently sloping plain composed of gravel and sand formed by glacial deposition.
- Formed when finer materials of terminal moraine are deposited in very thick layers over an extensive area
forming a plain.
Significance of Glaciation
Positive
1. Some outwash plains have fertile morainic soils suitable for agriculture e.g. Canadian prairies where wheat
is grown.
2. Water falls on hanging valleys are used for generation of H.E.P.
3. Glaciated highlands are a tourist attraction especially during winter when sporting activities such as skiing
and ice skating are carried out.
4. Glacial lakes such as great lakes of N.America provide natural route ways and fish sources e.g. L.Superior
and Huron.
5. Glaciated mountains are catchment areas for permanent rivers.
6. Sheltered water of fiords is a suitable bleeding ground of fish as natural harbours.
7. Sand excavated from outwash plains and eskers is used for construction.
Negative
1. Land in glaciated areas can‟t be fully utilised for agriculture due to being marshy because of boulder clay
deposits e.g. central Ireland.
2. Infertile sands deposited in outwash plains make land unsuitable for agriculture.
3. Numerous lakes formed as a result of morainic deposits reduce the land available for agriculture.
4. Settlement and transportation in glaciated landscape is difficult due to ruggedness caused by glacial action.
SOIL
- Uppermost layer of the earth‟s crust on which plants grow.
Constituents/Composition of Soil
1. Inorganic Matter
i) Crump soil structure - soil made of small, soft, groups of particles of irregular shape.
ii) Granular structure - soil made of porous groups of particles of irregular shape called granules.
iii) Plate structure - soil made of plate like flat particles arranged in horizontal manner.
iv) Prismatic structure - soil made of vertical prism like particles with rounded tops.
v) Blocky structure - soil made of irregular pieces of soil with sharp corners and edges.
c) Soil PH
- Basicity or acidity measure of a soil.
- Sulphate/phosphate - acidity
- Calcium/magnesium - Basicity
PH VALUE REACTION DESCRIPTION
8 Alkaline
7 Neutral
6 Slightly acidic
5 Moderately acidic
4 strongly acidic
Importance
i) Influences the activity of soil micro-organisms and hence decomposition of organic matter.
ii) Influences rate at which roots absorb minerals.
iii) Determines the types of crops to be grown e.g. tea-acidic.
iv) Determines availability of different nutrients to the plants e.g. phosphorous is not available at low PH
while potassium and iron not available at high PH.
d) Soil Colour
- Visible quality of soil.
Dark brown or black – considerable amount of organic matter.
Grey - poorly drained or water logged.
Whitish- lacks organic matter, iron oxides and has soluble salts concentration.
Importance
i) Influences soil temperature in that light coloured soils have low temperature and hence low organism
activity.
ii) High temp destroy humus, increase organism activity and provide warmth required for germination.
e) Soil Porosity
- Depends on texture and porosity. Clay is impermeable due to being fine textured and tiny pored while sand
is permeable due to being coarse textured and very porous.
Soil Profile
- Vertical arrangement of different soil layers from the surface to the bed rock.
A mature soil is one with a fully developed profile while a young soil is one with a not fully developed
profile.
Superficial layer
- Dry decaying organic matter covering the soil surface.
Horizon ‘A’
- Lies under a mat of surface vegetation and raw humus.
- Darker due to high humus content.
- Contains most of plant nutrients.
- Where most plant roots are found.
- Contains active micro organisms which breakdown organic matter into humus.
Horizon ‘B’
- Lies below top soil.
- Has small spaces between particles and hence less aerated.
- Has a hardpan or layer impeding drainage.
- Where most materials washed from horizon A have accumulated.
Horizon ‘C’
- Lies below sub soil.
- Made of partly mechanically weathered rock.
- Product of bed rock or may have been transported.
Horizon ‘D’
- Solid underlying rock.
- May have ponds of water which can be used by deep rooted plants during dry season.
Importance of Soil Profile
a) Determines the crops to be planted i.e. mature soils favour deep rooted crops while young soils favour
shallow rooted crops.
b) Bed rock determines the chemical properties of the soil such as PH and nutrients.
Soil Catena
f) Excavation works such as quarrying, open-cast mining, building of estates and road construction which
loosen and expose the soil to erosion agents.
g) Soil erosion which robs the soil of top fertile layer.
2. Chemical Degeneration
- Decline in usefulness due to changes in mineral nutrients of the soil.
Causes
a) Leaching which makes minerals inaccessible to shallow rooted crops.
b) Excessive application of fertilizers which interferes with bacterial activity and causes the soil to become
too acidic and unable to support a variety of crops.
c) Excess water causing water logging causing acidic conditions.
d) Planting one type of crop repeatedly which makes the soil deficient of some nutrients.
e) Excessive drought which causes accumulation of salts in the top soil.
f) Burning such as in slash and burning which kills micro-organisms causing nitrogen deficiency when
nitrogen fixing bacteria is killed.
3. Biological Degeneration
- Degeneration due to decline of organic content of the soil and organic matter.
a) Deforestation which deprives the soil of its organic content and moisture making it loose and more
vulnerable to erosion.
b) Burning such as in slash and burning which kills micro-organisms causing low decomposition rate which
robs soil of organic matter.
c) Overgrazing which causes removal of vegetation causing excessive loss of water from the soil and hence
reduced micro-organism activity resulting into shortage of humus.
d) Drought and excessive moisture which may lead to a shortage of essential organisms such as bacteria,
earthworms, termites and burrowing animals.
Soil Erosion
- Removal of top soil.
Agents of soil erosion are water, glacier and wind.
Causes of soil erosion are human activities and geomorphic processes such as earthquakes and faulting which
cause land slides and soil creep.
Conditions Favouring Soil Erosion
a) Slope
- Steep slopes accelerate soil erosion while gentle slopes experience less erosion.
- Places with rugged terrain experience gulley erosion.
- Hilly and Steep areas experience rill and gulley erosion.
b) Soil Texture
- Areas with fine textured soils such as volcanic ash are more vulnerable to erosion e.g. Nyambene Hills
around Karama and Muthara.
c) Climate
- Erratic and heavy rains cause splash, rill and sheet erosion.
- Intense heating by the sun causes loosening of soil particles.
- Low rainfall and high temperature leads to scanty or no vegetation which forms protective cover on the
soil.
Types of Soil Erosion
a) Splash Erosion
- Removal of soil by rain drops scattering loose particles and carrying them down slope by runoff.
b) Rill Erosion
d) Sheet Erosion
- Removal of top soil inform of a thin sheet.
- Common around L.Baringo and Marigat.
Impact/effect of Soil Erosion
Positive
a) Creation of rich agricultural lands when eroded soil is carried and deposited e.g. loess and alluvial soils in
lower courses of R.Tana.
b) Sand eroded from steep slopes and deposited on river bed is scooped for construction purposes e.g.
Machakos.
Negative
a) Lowers the agricultural productivity of land when fertile top soil is eroded.
b) Contributes to desertification when top soil is eroded leaving bare ground destroying vegetation.
c) Causes water pollution when agro-chemicals and other chemicals are carried to rivers, lakes or oceans.
d) Contributes to flooding by blocking river channels causing them to burst their banks during the rain season
flooding the adjacent areas.
e) Causes siltation of water reservoirs reducing their utility e.g. For H.E.P. generation.
f) May cause collapsing of structures such as buildings and bridges when soil around them is eroded
weakening their foundation.
Management and Conservation of Soil
Soil management is controlling processes and activities that would cause soil deterioration while soil
conservation is protecting soil from destruction.
Soil Management and Conservation Measures
a) Crop Rotation
- Growing crops which require different nutrients on the same piece of land on rotational basis to prevents
exhaustion of particular mineral nutrients from the soil e.g. leguminous plants to improve nitrogen content
of the soil.
b) Mixed Farming
- Growing crops and keeping animals on the same farm.
- Manure from animals is used to enrich the soil with minerals and improve its structure.
c) Contour Ploughing
- Ploughing across the slope rather than down the slope.
- Helps to trap water on horizontal furrows thus preventing excessive soil removal.
d) Terracing
- Dividing the slope into a series of wide steps and crops are grown on them.
- Trap the soil from being carried away by running water and also traps water allowing it to gradually
infiltrate into the soil.
e) Afforestation and Reafforestation
- Leaves reduce the force of rain drops preventing soil particles from being removed.
- Vegetation increases the rate of infiltration of rain water into the soil thus reducing runoff.
- Roots bind the soil particles together.
- Decayed vegetation provides humus which binds the soil particles together.
f) Planting Wind Breakers
- Planting hedges or trees around plots in large fields.
- Act as wind breakers and also trap soil being carried by water.
g) Regulating Livestock Numbers
- Matching the number of animals kept to the carrying capacity of land.
- Overgrazing can also be prevented by paddocking which ensures there is always pasture for animals and
no area is overgrazed.
o The pasture is subdivided into portions by fencing.
o Animals are left to graze in one paddock at a time.
o Then they are transferred to the next after a few days.
h) Constructing Gabions
- Construction of wire mesh boxes which are filled with soil.
- Allow water to pass through but trap the soil then vegetation gradually grows on the trapped soil.
i) Planting Cover Crops
- Planting crops which cover the soil properly and holds the soil in place e.g. sweet potato vines.
j) Mulching
- Covering the soil with crop residues.
- Reduces the impact of rain drops on the soil.
- Decays enriching soil with nutrients.
- Reduce the rate of moisture evaporation from the soil.
Significance of Soils
a) Gives physical support for the rooting system of plants and protects root system from damage.
b) Habitat for burrowing animals and bacteria necessary for breakdown of organic matter into humus.
c) Medium through which nutrients and air are made available to plants.
d) Provides mineral elements to plants e.g. nitrogen, calcium, phosphates, etc.
e) Is used in building and construction e.g. clay for making bricks and tiles.
f) Clay soil is used in ceramics such as making pots.
g) Some soils are used for decorative purpose e.g. ache used among Maasai.
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Mineral composition
- Mineral deficiency in the soil causes retardation.
Soil Classification
-Grouping of soil according to specific properties such as age, texture, colour and climate.
1. Zonal Order
Mature soils with a well developed profile due to having undergone long time soil formation processes under
good drainage conditions.
Sub-orders
a) Podsols
- Infertile and acidic soils which are heavily leached with base compounds like calcium removed leaving
aluminium and iron compounds
- Found in forested areas and higher latitudes e.g. Scandinavian countries and Canadian Shield.
b) Podzolic Soils
- Soils similar with Podsols but found in areas with deciduous forests and hot climates e.g. Congo Basin and
Kenya highlands.
c) Tundra Soils
- Soils with excessive moisture due to low evaporation rate causing permanent freezing of the soil.
- Associated with tundra climate e.g. Iceland and northern edge of Europe and Asia.
d) Latosols
- Soils with low organic content and high titanium salts content which form in conditions of high rainfall
and temperatures.
- Crumbles into dust if ploughed during dry season and cracks if not ploughed.
- Found in volcanic areas e.g. Uasin Gishu and Laikipia plateau.
e) Nitosols
- Deep porous friable red soils known as Kikuyu red loam in Kenya.
- Well aerated and high capacity for moisture storage.
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- Higher fertility and can support a variety of cash and food crops.
f) Phenozems (Prairie Soils)
- Dark brown and generally fertile soils.
- Suitable for growing of cereals e.g. wheat.
- Common in Prairie Provinces of Canada, Narok and Athi-Kapiti plains.
g) Sierozems (desert soils)
- Soils found in desert conditions with little seasonal rainfall and high temperature.
- Relatively little humus due to sparse vegetation.
- Plenty of calcium carbonate inform of lime crust deposited on surface due to excessive evaporation.
h) Pedocals
- Dark soils which have had little leaching and rich in calcium carbonate.
- Common in semi-arid and sub-humid grasslands.
Sub-groups existing in Kenya
i) Chermozems
- Dark coloured soils with relatively high organic matter from grass vegetation and a calcareous sub-soil.
- Conducive for cereal crop cultivation due to being found in rolling land and favourable climate for grass
growth.
- Found at bottom lands around Nyambene Hills and N. grazing areas between Isiolo and Nyambene Hills.
ii) Vertisols/Black Cotton Soils
- Dark cracking clay soils.
- Poorly drained due to high clay content leading to poor permeability.
- Suitable for growing of rice, cotton and sun flower.
- Found in Mwea plains and Kano plains.
2. Intrazonal Order
- Soil formed under poor drainage conditions.
Sub-orders
a) Hydromorphic soils
- Grey coloured soils formed in water logged areas.
Groups
i) Plano soils - found on flat old land surfaces.
ii) Bog and meadow - found in meadows, marshes and swamps e.g. Lorian and Yala swamps.
b) Halmorphic Soils
- Soils formed under semi-arid and arid conditions through salinisation.
- Infertile and poorly drained.
- Found in Amboseli and N.E.Kenya.
c) Calcimorphic Soils
- Soils formed by calcification e.g. redzina soils which are shallow and rich in lime and humus on the upper
profile developed under grass on limestone e.g. in England and steppes of Russia.
d) Andosols
- Dark brown volcanic ash soils formed from recent volcanic material.
- High silt content and very vulnerable to soil erosion.
- Found in Kenyan highlands and support extensive agricultural activities like coffee, tea, wheat and maize
growing.
3. Azonal Order
- Soils without a well developed profile due to having not undergone full soil forming processes.
- Found on steep slopes and areas with poor drainage which don‟t offer them time to mature.
Sub-orders
a) Lithosols
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- Soils with thin stony soil which is shallow over bedrock without a definite “B” horizon.
b) Regosols
- Soils without genetic horizons which have developed from material deposits like alluvium.
- Common in hilly and mountainous areas of the world.
c) Alluvial Soils (Fluvisols)
- Soils developed from alluvium of recent origin.
- Common along river valleys and mouths like Tana.
d) Mountain Soils
- Shallow soils found in mountainous regions.
- Vulnerable to erosion on steep slopes.
e) Histosols
- Soils formed from accumulation of organic matter which is 20% of the soil composition.
- If drained can be used to grow truck crops like vegetables.
f) Arenosols
- Soils having the appearance of sand largely composed of sand.
- Less fertile due to low organic matter.
- Common in coastal areas and N.E. provinces.
AGRICULTURE
- The practice of cultivating crops and rearing of animals
Factors Influencing Agriculture
1. Physical Factors
a) Climate
i) Temperature
- Some domestic animals do well in hot and warm areas e.g. goats and camels while others do well in cool
areas e.g. exotic breeds of cattle such as Guernsey.
- Some crops do well in cool areas e.g. tea and wheat while some others do well in warm areas e.g. sisal and
cotton.
- High temperatures increase the rate of evaporation of moisture which causes crops to wither and
eventually die.
- Night frosts damage tender leaves of some crops e.g. tea and bananas.
ii) Sunshine
- Needed for photosynthesis process in which plants manufacture food for growth and formation of fruits
and seeds.
- Sufficient sunshine is required during ripening of crops to ensure that they have high sugar content.
- Sunshine is required during harvesting to prevent crop from rotting and also for drying harvested crops.
iii) Winds
- Winds accelerate evaporation and transpiration which may cause crops to wither and eventually die.
- Hot and dry winds damage crops such as cocoa by causing them to ripen prematurely.
- Wind is important for pollination necessary for fruit and seed formation.
- Violent wind may cause falling of tall varieties of crops like maize and bananas.
iv) Moisture
- Inadequate moisture causes failed germination and retarded growth of crops.
- Too much water causes root and fruit rot.
- Livestock rearing is realised in areas which receive moderate to abundant rainfall
- Insufficient rainfall leads to shortage of pasture for animals causing poor quality and low production
b) Soil
- Deep soils favour growth of deep rooted crops while shallow soils favour growth of shallow rooted crops.
- There is retarded growth of crops in infertile soils.
- Clay soils are suitable for growing of rice because they retain water for a long time.
- Volcanic soil favour growth of crops requiring acidic soils e.g. coffee and tea.
- Soil water is required for germination and facilitating uptake of minerals in solution.
c) Topography/relief
i) Altitude
- Influences temperature determining type of crops and animals to be reared.
ii) Terrain
- Most crops do well on sloping land as it is well drained e.g. coffee and tea.
- Rolling plateaus and plains are suitable for large scale mechanized farming and irrigation.
- Gentle terrain eases cultivation and favours animals as they can graze with ease.
iii) Aspect
- Slopes facing the sun can support crop growing and livestock rearing because they are warmer while those
facing away tend to be cooler and are dominated by forests and grasslands.
- Windward slopes are wetter than leeward slopes and more suitable for growing crops and rearing animals
while leeward slopes are dominated by grasslands and more suitable for beef livestock rearing.
2. Biotic factors
a) Weeds
- Compete with plants for moisture, nutrients and sunlight leading to low and poor quality yields.
- Can choke pastures on which animals feed.
- Can increase the cost of agriculture as a lot of money is spent on hiring labour to weed the farms and
buying chemical herbicides.
b) Insects
- Locusts and army warms eat green leaves and stems on their way destroying everything.
- Tsetse flies and ticks transmit livestock diseases i.e. trypanosomiasis and East Coast Fever.
- Some insects such as bees and butterflies are useful to crop farming because they aid in pollination.
- Bees give us honey.
- Controlling pests increases cost of agriculture.
c) Small Animals
- Squirrels eat newly planted maize.
- Rats and mice destroy harvested grains.
- Quelea birds feed on rice while on the farm reducing its yield.
d) Diseases
- Diseases weaken and eventually kill plants and animals.
- Diseases also weaken and kill humans which cause labour shortage increasing labour costs.
- Controlling diseases also increases cost of agriculture.
3. Human/ Social factors
a) Traditions
i) Gender
- In some communities, food production is a sole responsibility of women and children so the produce and
land under cultivation will depend on women and children labour input e.g. W. Africa.
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a) There is migration from one plot to another when the former plot loses fertility.
b) Cultivated areas are usually small (1-3 acres).
c) Very little attention is given to land and crops.
d) Short periods of crop occupancy alternate with long periods of fallowing.
e) Mainly uses manual labour provided by the immediate family.
f) Use of simple tools.
g) Crops are mainly starchy foods e.g. cassava, yams, millet, etc.
h) Land is cultivated by slash and burning.
Disadvantages
a) Exposes land to soil erosion on the plots which have been left fallow.
b) Doesn‟t guarantee sufficient food production.
c) Extensive destruction of vegetation when fires get out of control.
d) Wasteful because sections of land stay fallow for a very long time.
e) Only practicable in areas with sparse population and plenty of land.
f) There are hardly any monetary gains because the produce is only enough for home consumption.
ii) Sedentary Subsistence Agriculture
- Farming in which the community permanently stays in one place.
- Areas where it‟s practiced –tropical lowlands, C. America and S.E Asia.
Characteristics
a) The community occupies a permanent dwelling spot.
b) Fallowed fields are frequently reused.
c) Crop rotation is practiced in some areas.
d) More attention is given to the land and crops sown.
e) More labour is used in the field.
f) Can support a larger population compared to shifting cultivation.
iii) Intensive Subsistence Agriculture
- Farming which involves maximum utilization of all cultivable land.
- Carried out in areas experiencing population pressure so as to grow sufficient food to feed the population
e.g. Japan, China, Srilanka, Pakistan, Kakamega, Nyeri, Kisii, etc.
Types
a) Dominated by other types of crops
b) Dominated by wet paddy
Characteristics
a) Very small plots resulting from years of fragmentation.
b) Intensive use of land.
c) Most work is carried out by hand.
d) Simple implements e.g. hoes, ploughs etc.
e) Several crops are grown on the same piece of land during the course of the year.
f) Crops vary from region to region e.g. Kenya - maize, beans, potatoes, Asia - rice in some areas, others-
wheat, soya beans and barley.
g) Livestock rearing is almost nonexistent because there is no land for growing pasture.
h) Use of manure and chemical fertilizers to sustain high soil fertility for maximum yields.
i) Use of Irrigation to make up inadequacy of moisture.
b) Commercial Arable Farming
i) Plantation Agriculture
- Cultivation of cash crops on large tracts of land called estates or plantations.
Characteristics
a) Large tracts of land are cultivated.
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b) Cash crops are grown e.g. coffee, tea, cocoa rubber, etc.
c) A single crop is usually grown.
d) Done for commercial purpose.
e) High capital is required to start and meet recurrent expenditure.
f) Crops take some years after planting before they start yielding.
g) Most plantations are owned by foreign companies.
h) Employment of scientific management to produce a lot of output.
Problems
a) Crops may be destroyed by climatic hazards reducing production.
b) High expenditure in maintaining plantations.
c) Subdivision of some plantations to provide land for the landless shareholders who bought them causing
decline in output from plantations.
d) Crops may also be destroyed by insect pests and diseases which also affect labourers.
e) Rapid deterioration of soil due to monoculture, soil erosion due to complete weeding and most crops not
providing sufficient soil cover.
f) Fluctuations of world prices causing the farmer to suffer great losses as they have no other crop to
supplement their income.
g) Poor management whereby managers misuse funds and shareholders fight over management leaving
plantations unattended.
ii) Extensive Mechanised Grain Cultivation
- Cultivation of grains on large tracts of land.
- Best developed in temperate grasslands of Prairies, Pampas, Veldt, and Downs which make the granary of
the world.
- In Kenya it‟s carried out in Uasin Gishu plateau, Nakuru and Narok.
Characteristics
a) Extremely large farms in mid-latitudes.
b) Cultivation is highly mechanized due to large farm sizes and its more economical and efficient.
c) Wheat is the main crop cultivated with other crops including barley, corn, millet and sorghum in Veldt etc.
d) Yield per farmer is high due to mechanisation.
e) Grain is raised on unirrigated land since it requires as little as 325mm annual precipitation.
f) Farms are individually owned.
iii) Intensive Commercial Agriculture
- Intensive use of land to produce maximum yield of crop per unit area for sale.
- Areas - N.W. Europe, E. U.S.A, former U.S.S.R and slopes of Mt. Kenya and Kilimanjaro.
Characteristics
a) Soil is utilised intensively to ensure maximum yields per unit area.
b) Farms are generally small in size.
c) Manual labour is used to tend crops
d) Proper care is given to planted crops.
e) Mechanisation where farms are a bit larger.
f) Farmers use large amounts of fertilizers, hybrid seeds and pesticides.
g) Irrigation water is used to supplement rainfall insufficiency.
h) Farming is sometimes highly specialised with some farms growing crops or keeping animals.
c) Mediterranean Agriculture
- Type distinct to areas experiencing Mediterranean climate.
Main areas - middle Chile, Piedmont district in N. Italy and Andalistic District of S. Spain.
Characteristics
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a) Farming is intensive.
b) It‟s highly specialised.
c) Subsistence farming is practiced alongside commercial farming.
d) Cereal crops are most widespread e.g. barley and wheat.
e) Orchard farming is carried out and it‟s the leading producer of citrus fruits, olives, dates and figs.
f) A small number of sheep, goats and cows are reared due to prolonged droughts and coarse bunchy grasses
unsuitable for livestock.
Crop Farming
Cash crops are grown mainly in southern part of Kenya due to the following factors:
a) Suitable climatic conditions for a variety of crops such as temperature ranging from cool to cold, rainfall
ranging between 800-2000mm annually and dry sunny periods between rainy seasons.
b) Fertile volcanic soils in highlands or alluvial soils in the lake basin of Kenya suitable for crop growing.
c) Adequate labour supply due to high population.
d) Long tradition of cash crops growing emanating from cash crops introduction by European settlers.
e) Govt policy to support small scale farmers
Some of the major cash crops grown in Kenya
a) Pyrethrum - Nakuru, Kisii, Limuru, Nyandarua.
b) Sisal -Thika, Taita-Taveta, Baringo, Kilifi.
c) Wattle - Uasin Gishu, Thika, Kiambu.
d) Cashew nuts - Kilifi.
e) Cotton-Rachuonyo, Busia, Meru, Kitui, Makueni.
f) Rice - Busia, Kirinyaga.
Diag;fig 12.7MAP OF KENYA TEA GROWING IN KENYA;
Tea Farming In Kenya
- Tea is a tropical plant with a botanical name Camellia Sinesis.
- First introduced in Limuru in 1903
Tea types
a) Aswan variety common in India and Srilanka.
b) Chinese variety.
- Kenya is the largest producer in Africa, among top 6 world producers and has the best tea in the world
market.
Major Growing Areas
W. Highlands – Kericho, Nandi, Kakamega, Cherangani hills.
E. Highlands – Nyeri, Murang`a, Kiambu, Thika, etc.
Conditions Necessary for Tea Growing
Physical Requirements
a) Warm temperature throughout the year (15◦C-30◦C).
b) Heavy and well distributed rainfall (1000-2000mm annually).
c) Deep and slightly acidic soils.
d) High altitude of about 1000-3000m above sea level.
e) The area to be free from frost.
f) Gently sloping land which is well drained.
g) Area to be shielded from strong sunlight and violent winds.
Human Requirements
a) Adequate labour for cultivation and processing which are labour intensive.
b) Good transport routes for quick transport of tea leaves to factory before they start withering.
c) Location of tea factories near farms for quick processing of tea as soon as possible.
d) Availability of capital to pay for the labour required in land preparation, planting, regular picking etc.
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Tea Cultivation
o Tea cuttings are raised in a nursery for 6-10 months.
o Holes are dug at intervals of 0.7-0.9 m with rows being 1.5 m apart.
o Transplanting is done at the beginning of the rainy season.
o Young tea plants are intercropped with other crops to prevent soil erosion and to act as mulch.
o Pegging lateral branches to force them to grow horizontally to aid frame development.
o Tips of shoots are periodically plucked to encourage growth of more shoots.
o Tea is ready for harvesting when it attains 4 years.
o The bushes are pruned to a new level after every 3 years to increase production through new vegetative
growth.
o Tipping or cutting shoots back to required height.
Harvesting Of Tea
o Picked after 5-7 day during rainy season and 10-14 days during dry season.
o 2 leaves and a bud are picked and thrown in a basket strapped on the back.
o A straight stick is used to determine the height.
o It should not be pressed to prevent premature fermentation.
Processing Of Tea
o At the factory the leaves are withered by blowing hot and cool air alternately.
o Passed through a machine which crushes them into small pieces.
o Crushed leaves are fermented for a few hours.
o Fermented leaves are dried by blowing with a machine called drier.
o The cooled tea is graded by passing through a strainer which sieves it.
o The various tea grades are winnowed by blowing out unwanted fibres.
o Tea is then packed in chests or bags to await sale or exportation.
Problems Facing Kenyan Tea Farmers
a) Pests e.g. weevils and beetles which attack tender leaves supposed to be picked.
b) Diseases e.g. root rot which causes the bush to wither, dry and eventually die.
c) Hail stones which fall on tea bushes causing damage e.g. in Kericho and Nandi.
d) Fluctuations of world prices which causes the farmers to lose morale and neglect or uproot the crop.
e) Shortage of rainfall leading to reduction in leaf production.
f) Transport problems in some areas due to dilapidated roads which cause spoilage of harvested tea before it
reaches the factory.
g) Shortage of labour in some tea growing areas where young people have migrated to towns.
h) Shortage of capital to meet production costs.
Marketing of Tea in Kenya
- Some tea is consumed locally and a huge amount is sold on the international market.
- Major marketer is K.T.D.A.
Functions of KTDA
a) Collection of tea from buying centres.
b) Processing of tea.
c) Providing farmers with inputs such as fertiliser.
d) Sensitizes farmers on high quality production of tea.
e) Facilitates sale of tea at best possible prices.
f) Ensures prompt collection of payment from all tea buyers.
g) Promotion of tea with the aim of expanding market share.
Outlets through Which It Markets Tea
1. Factory door sale of tea in polythene bags to farmers accounting for 3% of sales.
2. Through Mombasa auction where its exported to other countries such as Britain, France Afghanistan. It
accounts for 75% of sales.
3. Dealing directly with interested buyers which accounts for 15% of sales.
- KETEPA is the largest tea packing company in Africa belonging to tea grower‟s grades, blends and packs
some of the tea then sells to local market and exports superior qualities.
- Other companies which pack tea for local sale include Kikuyu Highland Tea Company and Unilever
Kenya (Home Cup).
Significance of Tea Farming in Kenya
a) Earns foreign exchange from tea export.
b) Saves some foreign exchange that would be used to import tea.
c) Farmers earn income which raises their standard of living.
d) It creates employment such as for people working in farms and factories.
e) Has led to development of industries such as processing factories, blending and packaging industries.
f) Has led to development of infrastructure by roads being improved to ease transportation of tea to
factories..
Sugar Cane Growing In Kenya
- Sugarcane is a coarse perennial grass belonging to sacharum family.
- It was introduced in Kenya in 1902 by an Australian farmer whereby commercial growing began in
Miwani, Kibos and Ramisi.
Main Growing Areas
Nyanza: Muhoroni, Miwani, Chemilil and Awendo.
Coastal: Ramisi.
Western: Mumias, Nzoia, Kabras, Nambele.
Conditions Favouring Sugarcane growing (requirements)
Physical
a) High temperatures(21◦c-27◦C)
b) High and well distributed rainfall (1200-1500mm annually).
c) Dry and sunny weather during harvesting to increase sugar accumulation in the cane.
d) Fertile and well drained soils.
e) Undulating land for machinery to be used and for easier transportation of cane to factories.
f) Altitude between sea level and 1600m.
Human Requirements
a) Abundant labour for planting, weeding, cutting and loading onto trucks.
b) A good transport infrastructure for sugarcane to reach the factory within a week after harvesting.
c) Location of processing factories within the growing areas for quick processing of sugarcane before losing
its sugar content through drying.
d) Availability of capital to pay workers in the field, buy farm machinery, etc.
Cultivation of Sugarcane
o Shallow furrows are made across the field at intervals of 1.2m-1.8m apart.
o Pieces of older sugarcane are laid horizontally in the furrows.
o They are covered lightly with the soil which they grow a cluster of shoots called stool.
o Nitrogenous fertilizer is applied when plants are growing at a high rate.
o Weeding is done when the crop is fairly short.
o After about 14 months the cane is ready for harvesting.
o After harvesting two ratoons the stools are dug out, land tilled and new setts are planted.
Harvesting of Sugarcane
o The cane may be set on fire to rid it of husks, trash, and harmful insects and animals.
o it is then cut using pangas within 48 hours if burnt to avoid conversion of tea sugar.
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o The husks and the top green part are removed if it wasn‟t burned.
o The cane is then loaded onto trucks using machines called mechanical grabs.
o Then it‟s transported to the factory to be processed within 48 hours.
Processing of Sugarcane
o At the factory the cane is put in large water tanks where it is washed.
o It‟s passed through a machine which cuts it up into short pieces.
o The pieces are passed between rollers to crush and squeeze out the juice.
o Fine matter in suspension and soluble non-sugars are precipitated leaving the juice.
o The juice is boiled with lime until it turns into thick syrup.
o The syrup is passed through crystallizers where sugar crystals grow.
o It‟s then led into centrifuges to separate crystals from molasses resulting into a raw coarse brown sugar.
o The brown sugar is decolourised with carbon black.
o Repeated crystallization is done to obtain various grades and sizes.
o The sugar is then dried and screened.
o It‟s then packed in bags for storage and sale.
Uses of Sugar
a) In baking to sweeten bread, cakes, etc.
b) Sweetening foods and drinks e.g. porridge, chapati, tea, coffee, etc.
c) Making local brews e.g. Karubu, nguru, etc.
d) In soft drinks industries e.g. soda, juice, etc.
e) Making sweets and chocolates, etc.
f) Manufacture of drugs e.g. syrups and sugar coated tablets.
Uses of By-products
a) Molasses is used as a sweetener for livestock feeds.
b) It‟s also used to manufacture ethanol, acetone and ethyl-acetate.
c) Bagasse or fibre left after squeezing the juice is used as fuel for boilers, for preparing pulp for making
paper used for making cement and fertilizer bags and as fodder or manure.
d) Filter cake resulting from filtration process is used as manure for cane.
Marketing of Sugar
- Consumed locally.
- Factories sell to wholesalers and retail outlets to consumers.
Significance of Sugarcane growing
a) Creation of employment e.g. in estates, factories, sugar mills.
b) Promotes development of industries such as processing sugar cane, industrial spirit and breweries
manufacturing, etc.
c) Has led to growth of towns in growing areas e.g. Muhoroni, Awendo and Mumias.
d) Saves some foreign exchange that would be used in sugar importation.
e) Farmers earn income through cane sale raising their standards of living.
f) Provision of social amenities to workers such as schools, houses and health centres to take care of workers
welfare e.g. Mumias.
Problems Facing Sugarcane Farming In Kenya
a) Pests e.g. termites which attack setts lowering the farmers yield.
b) Diseases e.g. sugarcane mosaic which causes the crop to become stunted with leaves becoming yellow.
c) Mismanagement of some sugar factories resulting in their closure and subsequent loss of income and jobs.
d) Inability of some factories to cope with supply of cane from out-growers due to low production capacity
and outdated technology.
e) Local sugar industry faces competition from cheap imported sugar from COMESA countries.
f) Strikes by cane farmers and transporters due to inadequate pay resulting in drop in output.
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- Most of land is owned by rich land owners and a small percentage by small holders.
- Two sets of labourers are employed and given small plots to grow subsistence crops, one to care for the
crop until maturity and the other to tend crop after it begins to bear fruit.
- Farmers mainly rely on natural fertility of the soil.
- Relatively little care is given to soil therefore it becomes exhausted leading to soil erosion.
- Old estates are abandoned and new estates established by clearing more land in a forest.
Coffee Harvesting
o Berries are harvested by hand.
o In Brazil little supervision leads to picking of unripe berries which lowers the quality of beans.
Processing
Wet Processing
o Ripe berries are soaked in water.
o Then fed into a machine which removes the outer skin leaving the coffee seed.
o Seeds in water are passed over sieves to grade them according to weight and size.
o They are fermented in a tank for 12 hours.
o Then washed with clean water and dried to a moisture content of 10-11%.
- The method produces coffee of high quality.
Dry Processing
o Berries are allowed to ripen and dry on the tree.
o They are harvested and dried further to a moisture content of 12%.
o The coffee‟s outer cover is removed by hurling leaving the seeds.
o The seeds are put though a machine that peels off two layers of the inner husk.
o The seeds are winnowed, graded and packed.
o They are finally roasted to make a powder.
Marketing
Kenya
- Handled by co-operatives which own factories.
- After processing they sell coffee to KPCU.
- KPCU then passes to Coffee Board of Kenya.
- Owners of large plantations can directly export their coffee.
- Exported to countries such as Britain, Germany, Finland, Norway, Japan and N. through the world market
where quota is allocated each country.
Brazil
- Marketing is mainly handled by companies such as Poxupe - Santos.
- Export sale is through the world market where she‟s allocated a bigger quota because she produces more
coffee.
- She also markets its coffee via the internet website which enables her to reach a bigger market.
- She markets her coffee to the same countries as Kenya.
The Role of Coffee in the Economies
a) It‟s a source of foreign exchange used to import commodities which are not available locally and develop
other sectors of the economy.
b) Saves some foreign exchange that would otherwise be used to import coffee.
c) Source of income to farmers which reduces poverty and raise their standard of living.
d) Source of employment for the workers in farms, factories, co-operatives, etc.
e) It‟s a source of foreign exchange used to import unavailable commodities and develop other sectors of the
economy.
f) In Brazil it has led to infrastructural development as roads have been constructed to link estates to export
cities.
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g) It also saves some foreign exchange that would otherwise be used to import coffee.
a) Warm temperatures in growing areas of 15-20◦c at least for three months which promotes growth of wheat
and protects it against frost.
b) Moderate rainfall of 1800-1270mm which promotes growth of wheat.
c) High altitude of growing areas of 1500-2900m which reduces incidences by high humidity.
d) Deep fertile volcanic soils which lead to high production.
e) Gently or fairly level land for proper drainage and to allow mechanisation.
Human Factors
a) Adequate labour for planting, weeding, application of fertilizers etc.
b) Availability of transport facilities such as lorries and tractors to transport grains from the fields to the store
and then to buying centres.
Canada
The main growing areas are the following Prairie Provinces:
a) Alberta
b) Saskatchewan
c) British Columbia
d) Ontario
e) Manitoba
Factors Which Have Favoured Wheat Growing In Canada/Which Have Led To the Rise of Canadian
Prairies to Be One of the Leading Wheat Producing Regions in the World
a) Warm summer temperatures (about 15.5◦c) which is ideal for wheat growing.
b) Low altitude lowlands which are warm and favourable to wheat growth as highlands are too cold for the
crop.
c) Sufficient rainfall of 560mm per annum which supports wheat growth well.
d) Extensive uninhabited tracts of land which have enabled large scale mechanised wheat cultivation.
e) Good connection of prairie lands to domestic and international markets by railways, roads and sea ways.
f) Fertile soils of prairies on which humus has accumulated without disturbance for a long time.
g) Undulating topography of prairies which offers well drained suitable for wheat cultivation.
Cultivation (Production Methods)
o Land is prepared by ploughing using tractor driven ploughs.
o It‟s then hallowed several times to allow weeds and stray wheat grains to be killed in the next harrowing.
o Manure and phosphate fertilizers are applied after the last harrow before sowing.
o Sowing is done using drills that are pulled by tractors or hands.
o Weeding is done by spraying or pulling using hands.
o The crop is regularly inspected for pests and diseases.
Canada
- Wheat is grown in extensive farms.
- All work is done by machines e.g. ploughing, harrowing, sowing, weeding, spraying and harvesting.
- Large amounts of grains are produced on these farms.
- The grain is mainly for export.
- Farmers are specialised.
Harvesting
o Wheat is harvested by cutting heads using sharp knifes for small scale farms or combined harvesters for
large scale farms which also threshes the grain.
o The grain is pumped into trucks or tractors which move alongside the harvesters.
o It‟s taken to farm stores where it‟s passed through driers before it‟s packed for sale.
Processing
o Wheat is cleaned and soaked in water to make it easier to remove the outer layers.
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o It‟s passed through breaker rolls to separate endosperm with the bran.
o The grain undergoes a series of grinding and sifting to obtain fine flour.
o The flour may be bleached to give it desirable white qualities.
o It may also be enriched with vitamins and iron.
Wheat Uses
a) For bakery e.g. cakes, bread, etc.
b) Wheat products are also used to make alcohol, preparation of glue and adhesive.
c) Outer part of kernel is used to make bran for animal and poultry feeds.
Marketing
Kenya
- All wheat produced is consumed locally.
- There is no surplus for export.
- Farmers take their produce to NCPB stores.
Canada
- Its large urban population offers a sizeable market where it‟s delivered by elaborate road and railway
network.
- The bulk is exported to countries such as Russia, Britain, China, etc. through the Saint Lawrence Sea Way.
Role of Wheat to the Economies
Kenya and Canada
a) Has promoted development of related industries such as bakery, alcohol manufacturing, etc.
b) It saves some foreign exchange.
c) It creates employment in farms, processing, and other related industries.
d) Provides income to farmers, traders which alleviates poverty and also raises the standard of living.
e) In Canada it has led to improvement of infrastructure in growing areas to ease transportation of wheat.
Problems
Kenya
a. Farmers have inadequate capital to buy inputs which lowers the yields.
b. Pests such as dusty brown beetle which eat stem damaging the plant.
c. Diseases such as the fungal stem rust which attacks the stem.
d. Price fluctuations on the domestic market especially when selling through middle men.
e. Shortage of storage facilities because the produce is transported to straight to NCPB before it sells it.
f. Climatic hazard such as the stormy rains which flattens the crop leading to rotting and drought which may
destroy entire crop.
g. Soil exhaustion due to monoculture.
Canada
a) Pests and diseases leading to low yields.
b) Soil exhaustion due to monoculture which necessitates use of fertilizers.
c) Adverse climatic conditions such as frost, hail and drought during summer.
d) Price fluctuations in the world market which reduces farmer‟s income.
e) Transport problem during winter when export routes are frozen causing difficulty in accessing the sole
market in USA.
Comparison
Similarities
- There is mechanisation in both countries.
- There are extensive farms in both countries.
- There is a dry sunny spell in both countries.
- Both countries experience the problem of pests and diseases.
- Wheat in both countries is grown in areas with gently sloping terrain.
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- Small scale farmers transport their produce to the collecting centres to buyers or middle men.
- It‟s checked and graded.
- Then packed in packaging materials.
- Then transported to the airports where most of it is airlifted to W. Europe where it may find its way to
Japan and USA.
Netherlands
- The produce is transported to go-downs of collecting agents or to the markets.
- It‟s transported via roads, railways, air or through canals and navigable rivers.
- It‟s destined for Britain, France, Germany, Sweden, Belgium and Luxemburg.
Role to the Economies
a) A source of foreign exchange.
b) Saves some foreign exchange.
c) Has led to industrial development by providing raw materials e.g. fruit canning, vegetable oil
manufacturing, etc.
d) Provides employment to many due to being labour intensive.
e) It has led to development of infrastructure in the areas with large scale horticultural farms which have been
served with better roads, water and electricity.
f) Earns farmers income when they sell their produce to buyers and middlemen.
g) Promotes better health and nutrition.
h) Has led to effective land use e.g. swampy areas in C. Province have been reclaimed for vegetable
production.
Problems
Kenya
a) Inadequate capital in part of small scale farmers to buy inputs which lowers yield quality and quantity.
b) Transport problem during rainy season in areas served only by seasonal roads leading to losses.
c) Pests and diseases such as leaf blight which destroy the crops leading to losses.
d) Lack of organised marketing system such as co-operatives causing exploitation by middlemen and
inability to access credit and advisory services.
e) High transport costs leading to sale of produce to middlemen who exploit farmers.
f) Exploitation of workers by large horticultural companies leading to unrests e.g. working for long hours
with less pay.
Netherlands
a) Frost affects crops growing in the open.
b) Inadequate capital to start new farms due to technology being very expensive.
Comparison
Similarities
- Similar crops are grown e.g. fruits, flowers and vegetables.
- Horticultural crops are grown both in open and in green houses.
- It‟s market oriented in both countries.
- There is employment of scientific methods of farming.
- It‟s done extensively in both countries to get maximum returns.
- Crops grown partly on reclaimed land in both countries.
Differences
- Farmers have well organised marketing systems (co-operatives) in Netherlands than Kenya.
- In Kenya the produce is first taken to collecting centres while in Netherlands it‟s taken to the go downs of
collecting agents or to the markets.
- Kenya experiences the problem of impassable roads while Netherlands‟s transport system is developed
and efficient.
- In Netherlands farming is carried out in coastal areas which are free frost while in Kenya it‟s carried out in
the cool and hot areas.
- Netherlands‟s soils are generally sandy while Kenya‟s are volcanic.
- There is biological control of pests in Netherlands unlike in Kenya.
- There is a higher demand for Netherlands‟s produce than Kenya‟s due to a larger urban population.
- There is use of more advanced technology in Netherlands than Kenya e.g. use of glass houses.
- Netherlands produces more horticultural produce than Kenya.
- There is specialisation in Netherlands with certain areas producing certain crops.
- Netherlands farmers have more access to capital while Kenyan farmers have inadequate capital due to lack
of organised marketing systems.
2. LIVESTOCK FARMING
- Rearing of domestic animals including poultry.
a) Traditional/Pastoral/Subsistence Livestock Farming
- Rearing of animals on natural pasture involving seasonal migration in search of water and pasture.
Main Areas
- N and N.E Kenya e.g. Turkana, Wajir, Garissa, Marsabit, Kajiado, Narok, etc.
- Communities: Maasai, Somali, Borana, Rendile, etc.
Factors Influencing Nomadic Pastoralism
a) Grazing areas are free from animal pests especially tsetse flies for being dry and hot.
b) Savannah grassland and semi-desert conditions which cause grass to sprout during rains and drying during
the hot dry season.
c) Availability of grass most times of the year in the bush and wooded savannah.
d) Gentle or relatively flat terrain of the areas which makes it easy for the movement of animals from one
place to another.
e) Sparse population of N and N.E region due to harsh climatic conditions which encourages nomadic
pastoralism because each community is able to occupy large tracts of land.
f) Desert and semi-desert conditions which don‟t favour agriculture making livestock rearing to be way of
earning livelihood.
g) Tradition of the people whereby animals are a sign of wealth and are used for paying dowry and
slaughtered for festivals.
Characteristics of Pastoral Farming
(a) They keep large numbers of animals as an insurance against natural deaths.
(b) They practice uncontrolled breeding which results into large herds.
(c) Many kinds of animals are kept e.g. cattle, sheep, goats and camels.
(d) Animals are reared for subsistence not for commercial purposes.
(e) They keep indigenous cattle which are hardy such as Zebu and Boran.
(f) They keep animals of poor quality due to lack of quality feeds and weakening by diseases making them to
be of low value.
(g) Animals are a sign of wealth and are reared for the purpose of paying dowry and slaughter during cultural
festivals.
(h) There is seasonal movement whereby they sped the dry season in one place and wet season in another.
(i) Disease incidences of both livestock and human are common due to tropical conditions.
Products
- Milk, blood, meat and skin for shields, sheaths and clothing.
Problems
a) Shortage of water and pasture due to long dry spell making animals to be of poor quality.
b) Pests such as ticks and fleas which weaken animals and diseases such as east coast fever, foot and mouth
and anthrax which cause heavy losses of stock.
c) Overstocking causing overgrazing leading to severe erosion, poor pastures and poor quality animals which
fetch low prices.
d) Lack of extension and veterinary services due to insecurity and constant movement hindering
improvement of animals reared.
e) Low levels of education and culture leading to keeping animals for wealth and prestige making them to
overstock leading to severe erosion, poor pastures and poor quality animals.
f) Poor pastures resulting from poor soils with most areas consisting of tuft grasses and bare land.
g) Cattle rustling which causes loss of live and destruction of property.
h) Inaccessibility of pastoral areas due to poor roads making the farmers unable to get their animals to the
market.
i) They rear indigenous cattle such as zebu and boran which mature slowly, yield little milk and have poor
quality beef.
j) Exploitation by middlemen due to lack of market information.
k) Small local market due to sparse population.
l) Competition from national parks leading to conflicts.
Improvements in Pastoral Areas (Measures Taken By the Government to Improve Pastoral Farming)
a) Encouraging pastoralists through the ministry of livestock to start ranching in order to improve the quality
of their animals.
b) Improvement of water supply in drier areas by sinking boreholes, wells, construction of dams, etc.
c) Establishment of demonstration ranches to sensitize pastoralists on better methods of animal husbandry.
d) Construction of cattle dips, and setting animal pest and disease organisations to control pests and diseases.
e) Providing extension services to advice pastoralists and offer drug treatment to animals.
f) Teaching pastoralists through formal education about advantages of keeping manageable sizes of herds.
g) Encouraging them to keep smaller number of animals to solve the problem of quality.
h) Ploughing and resowing pasture with more nourishing drought resistant grass.
i) Purchasing pedigree animals and cross breeding with indigenous animals resulting in hybrid stock which is
able to resist many tropical diseases, give more milk and better quality meet.
b) Commercial Livestock Farming
i) Dairy Farming
- Keeping cattle for milk production.
Characteristics
- Dairy cattle are reared.
- It‟s usually practiced in areas with good economy i.e. developed infrastructure for quick transportation of
milk and good ready market because dairy products are perishable.
- Employment of high modern technology of processing, packaging because milk is a perishable product
which should be processed short time after it is milked.
- High milk yielding cows are reared e.g. Friesian, Ayrshire, Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, Sahiwal.
Kenya
- The main breeds are Friesian and Ayrshire and cross breeds between indigenous and exotic breeds.
- Farmers use AI administered by veterinary extension officers or bulls directly to sire calves and keep the
herd „in milk.
- In the past the government used to provide the services but they have been privatised making them
inaccessible to many Kenyans.
Types of dairy farming
a) Lowland Dairy Farming
- Keeping traditional cattle for consumption by family members.
b) Highland Commercial Dairy Farming
- Practiced in the Kenyan highlands. in the following dairying areas:
Rift valley
- Kericho, Bomet and Nakuru, Laikipia, Trans Nzoia and Uasin Gishu which are the leading dairying areas.
Characteristics
- Large scale farms
- Milking is mechanised
- Fed on fodder and grass
Central
- All districts
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- Small farms
- Ranches exist in Makuyu Murang‟a
- Intensive farming
- Zero grazing and fodder feeding practiced
Western
- Kakamega, Vihiga, and Bungoma.
- Small scale dairying
- Open grazing is common
Eastern
- Meru, upper Embu, Tharaka Nithi, Kangundo, Machakos, Mbooni hills and Makueni.
- Large scale dairying in Timau and Kibirichia in Meru
- Small scale in higher altitudes
- Open grazing common
- Minimal zero grazing
Nyanza
- Kisii, Nyamira and Oyani and suna in higher parts of Migori
- Dominated by small scale dairying
- Zero grazing in some parts of Nyamira and Kisii districts.
Conditions Favouring Dairy Farming
Kenya Highlands
Physical
a) The region experiences low temperatures ideal for survival of exotic breeds (averaging 18◦c).
b) The areas receive high and well distributed rainfall which ensures abundant supply of natural pasture and
water from permanent rivers.
c) Fertile volcanic soils which have ensured there is quality nutritious cover of grass.
Human
a) Well established infrastructure e.g. roads which ensures quick transportation of milk to processing plants.
b) High population which offers ready market for dairy products.
c) Availability of processing and storage facilities near dairy farms to transform milk into less perishable
products which has increased the rate of milk production.
d) Provision of veterinary services and demonstration farms by the government which promotes rearing of
high quality dairy breeds.
Denmark
- A small country in W.Europe.
- The greatest exporter of dairy products.
Physical Factors
a) Low lying relatively flat land which makes it ideal for dairy farming.
b) Low lying relatively flat land which makes it ideal for dairy farming.
c) Cool to warm temperature (0.4-16.6◦c) which facilitates the growth of natural pasture.
d) Soils derived from boulder clay which is constantly enriched with animal manure and fertilizer which are
good for the growing of fodder crops.
e) Availability of a variety of fodder crops, manufactured feeds and supplements leading to high milk
production.
Human Factors
Mechanisation of most dairy farms e.g. machines for milking are widely used.
Big market for dairy products locally and in other European countries due to a high purchasing power.
Availability of adequate capital and modern technology which has improved production and storage of dairy
products.
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Extensive use of artificial insemination which improves the quality of breeds making dairy farming a success.
Rapid growth of co-operative movement which are very competitive causing farmers to strive to get products
of high quality.
Organisation of Dairy farming
Kenya
- The main breeds kept are Friesian and Ayrshire and cross breeds between indigenous and exotic breeds.
- Carried out for both subsistence and commercial purposes.
- Farmers depend on fodder and natural grass.
- There are cooperatives which provide processing, marketing and credit services to farmers.
- Dairy farming is less mechanised.
- Few farmers have access to AI services since their privatisation.
Denmark
Dairy farming is carried out by individual farmers in large scale.
It‟s carried out for commercial purposes.
The breeds reared are Danish Holstein which is the traditional cow, Friesian (75%), Ayrshire and channel
island cows.
Livestock are kept indoors for between 4-5 months during winter.
Farmers mainly depend on fodder than natural grass because temperatures are cold most of the year.
There are thousands of co-operatives provide processing, credit, advisory and research services.
Dairy farming is highly mechanised with machines such as combined harvesters, Lorries, ploughs and seed
drills being provided by co-operatives.
Processing of Milk
o Pasteurisation - Heating liquid milk to 75◦c for about 15 minutes.
o Sterilisation - Heating to 100◦c for a short time to kill bacteria which survived pasteurisation.
o Homogenising - Breaking and distributing fat particles throughout the milk to ensure a layer of cream
doesn‟t form of milk.
o Ultra heat treatment - Heating milk beyond 100◦c.
o Processed further into products such as butter, ghee or cheese.
o The products are packed ready for distribution to consumers.
Marketing
Kenya
- It‟s done by KCC and Dairy board of Kenya.
- Farmers may take the milk to KCC by themselves.
- Local co-operatives also collect milk from farmers at various collection points and take it to KCC.
- After processing the products are sent to KCC depots for distribution to consumers.
- Some is exported to neighbouring countries such as Uganda.
- Other processors also market their milk locally and internationally.
Denmark
- Done by co-operatives.
- The products are sold locally and abroad with major destination being EU such as Germany, UK, Sweden,
etc.
- The government monitors quality by use of inspectors who endorse the quality by Lurmark.
- Agricultural Marketing Board and Danish Dairy Board promote exports by international trade fares and
surveys.
- New markets are being explored in Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia and China.
Problems Facing Dairy Farming in Kenya
a) Small scale dairy farms face stiff competition from other cash crops like tea, coffee, vegetables and
passion fruits, etc.
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b) The cost of inputs is very high which has minimised mechanisation and resulted into to low profit margins.
c) Impassability of roads during the rainy season making milk delivery difficult.
d) Excessive droughts which result in inadequate feeds which causes temporary milk shortage.
e) Risk of cattle pests and diseases which has restricted dairy farming to Kenyan highlands.
f) Poor management of co-operatives at grassroots resulting to delayed payments which kills farmers‟
morale.
g) Shortage of proper storage facilities at the collecting centres such as cooling plants causing milk to go bad
before it gets to processing factories.
h) AI services have been privatised making them very expensive and inaccessible to many small scale
farmers resulting in low quality breeds and hence low milk production.
i) Lack of training especially to small scale farmers.
Improvements (How Govt Is Laying Emphasis to Dairy Farming)
b) Appointing supervisory boards for dairy co-operatives.
c) Extending credit facilities to farmers through co-operatives.
d) Holding agricultural shows to educate farmers on good dairy farm management.
e) Setting up demonstration farms which breed high quality bulls to be released to farmers.
f) Establishing well maintained roads for delivery of milk.
g) Carrying out extensive research on possible solutions to diseases.
Denmark
Rare incidents of diseases such as mastitis and Salmonella Dublin.
It‟s expensive to run farms in winter when animals are kept indoors and fed on fodder.
Dairy animals emit a considerable amount of carbon dioxide and methane which contributes to green house
effect.
Reduced market share due to competition from other dairy producing countries and restrictions.
Occasional spells of drought causing a considerable drop in milk production.
Role of Dairy farming to the Economies
a) Earns Kenya foreign exchange by exporting milk and dairy products.
b) Saves some foreign exchange.
c) Government also earns revenue by taxation from the sale of dairy products which is used to fund various
development projects.
d) Provides employment in dairy farms, milk processing plants and dairy related industries.
e) Gives farmers an income which has alleviated poverty and raised living standards.
f) Promoted development of industries such as milk processing plants, input manufacturing industries which
has created more employment and raised per capita income.
g) Promotes good health and nutrition by providing proteins, fats and vitamins that are essential for human
growth and development.
h) Has led to improvement of infrastructure in Kenya by government improving existing roads to ease milk
delivery.
Comparison
Similarities
- Dairy farmers in both countries sell their products to co-operatives.
- Both countries experience similar problems of adverse weather changes and diseases.
- Animals kept are similar e.g. Friesian, Ayrshire, Jersey, etc.
- Milk processing and dairy products are similar e.g. liquid milk, cheese and butter.
- In both countries milk is consumed locally and for export.
- Both countries keep traditional and exotic breeds.
- Open and zero grazing are practiced in both countries.
Differences
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- Dairy farming in Kenya is carried outdoors most of the year while in Denmark the animals are kept
indoors for about 6 months in winter.
- Dairy farming depends mainly on grass in Kenya while in Denmark it‟s mostly dependent on fodder.
- Dairy farming in Denmark is evenly distributed while in Kenya it is restricted to highlands.
- Dairy farming is heavily mechanised in Denmark while mechanisation lacks in many farms in Kenya.
- Dairy farming is a major foreign exchange earner in Denmark while in Kenya most of dairy products are
consumed locally.
- Denmark achieves high yields throughout the year because they feed animals on fodder while in Kenya
yields are affected by climatic changes.
- Kenyan farmers practice mixed farming while Denmark farmers specialised.
- Dairy co-operatives are highly developed in Denmark whereby they give grants and supply farmers with
machines.
- AI services are more widely used in Denmark than Kenya where only a few farmers have access to AI
services since their privatisation.
ii) Beef Farming
- Rearing of cattle for production of meet.
Conditions Favouring Beef Farming
Kenya
Physical Factors
(a) Extensive flatlands with natural grass within Nyika plateau and Rift Valley region.
(b) Moderate temperatures of about 28◦c.
(c) Moderate rainfall of about 750mm or above which ensures there is enough pasture.
(d) Availability of watering sites like Lorian swamp and a number of permanent rivers flowing through beef
farming areas.
Human Factors
(a) Availability of ranching schemes which control overgrazing and the spread of pests and diseases.
(b) Cultural practice of local people who carry out livestock keeping as their occupation.
Argentina
- Argentina is the worlds top beef exporter.
- Beef farming is mainly carried out in pampas grasslands with the major beef farming areas being Chaco
Formosa and Santiago del Estero.
Physical Factors
(a) Extensive rolling pampas grasslands which provides good natural grazing landscape and allows cattle to
graze freely.
(b) Fertile soils from the slopes of Andes which have given rise to good natural pasture.
(c) Moderate and well distributed reliable rainfall (about 1000mm annually) received in Pampas which
favours growth of good pasture throughout the year and ensures regular water supply for animals.
(d) Temperatures ranging between 24◦c in summer and about 10◦c in winter which enables grass to grow
throughout the year.
Human Factors
(a) High quality exotic breeds such as Short horn and Hereford which mature faster and have quality and
quantity beef.
(b) Availability of alfalfa which matures faster and is more nutritious which has been planted to replace
natural grass.
(c) Well developed infrastructure like the railway network used for movement of beef cattle from ranches to
factories and to the markets.
(d) Availability of large scale ranches which are well managed and mechanised.
(e) Availability of adequate capital making it possible to have refrigeration for proper storage of beef
products.
(f) Availability of local markets in E.U and U.S.A.
l) Using manure from animals ensures sustained crop production and also saves money that would be used to
buy manure.