Curoca River

Curoca River in central Angola.
Curoca
Curoca (Angola)

The Curoca is an intermittent river in Namibe Province, southern Angola which has residual lagoons in dry seasons. It is one of only two rivers in Iona National Park, which also includes moving sand dunes of the Namib Desert.[1] The Curoca forms part of the northern border of the that park and also runs through the Lagoa dos Arcos and the Regional Natural Park of Namibe (Parque Natural Regional do Namibe). Its mouth is at the Atlantic Ocean, north of the community of Tômbwa. The lagoons support plants including bamboo and thorn trees and animals such as springbok and oryx. Lagoa dos Arcos oasis is noted as a tourist destination.[2] The seasonal flooding of the river supports the limited agriculture and grazing conducted in the area.

A San group who live near the river and spoke a language called Curoca but the language is now considered extinct. The members of the group have adopted a Bantu language.[3]

See also

References

  1. FRAMEWORK REPORT ON ANGOLA’S BIODIVERSITY, Soki Kuedikuenda, Miguel N. G. Xavier, Ministry of Environment, Angola, 2009
  2. Sustainable Tourism V, F. D. Pineda, C. A. Brebbia,WIT Press, 2012
  3. Encyclopedia of the World's Endangered Languages, Christopher Moseley, Routledge, Dec 6, 2012,


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.