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Location of Senegal

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Senegal's cities and main towns
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Topography of Senegal

Senegal is a coastal West African nation located 14 degrees north of the equator and 14 degrees west of the Prime Meridian. The country's total area is 196,190 km2 of which 192,000 km2 is land and 4,190 km2 is water.

70% of the population of Senegal lives in the Coastal Region,<ref name=":2">Template:Cite news</ref> so climate change is expected to displace larger parts of the population.

CIA World FactbookEdit

Area
  • Total: 196,712 km²
    • country rank in the world: 86th
  • Land: 192,530 km²
  • Water: 4,180 km²
Area comparative

Terrain: generally low, rolling, plains rising to foothills in the southeast.

Natural resources: fish, phosphates, iron ore

Land use:
arable land: 19.57%
permanent crops: 0.28%
other: 80.15% (2011)

Irrigated land: 1,197 km2 (2003)

Total renewable water resources: 38.8 km3

Natural hazards: lowlands seasonally flooded; periodic droughts

Environment — current issues: wildlife populations threatened by poaching; deforestation; overgrazing; soil erosion; desertification; overfishing

Senegal is a party to several environmental treaties:

Senegal has signed, but not ratified, the Convention on Marine Dumping.

Physical featuresEdit

Senegal is bordered to the west by the North Atlantic Ocean. On land, the nation's longest border is with Mauritania to the north, an 813 km border along the Senegal River. To the east is the 419 km border with Mali. In the southeast is Guinea (330 km border) and to the south-southwest is Guinea-Bissau (338 km), both borders running along the Casamance River. Senegal is one of only a handful of countries to have a near-enclave within its borders—the small nation of the Gambia in the interior, which has a 740 km border with Senegal.

The Gambia penetrates more than 320 km into Senegal, from the Atlantic coast to the center of Senegal along the Gambia River, which bisects Senegal's territory. In total, Senegal has 2,640 km of land borders, and 531 km of coastline and shoreline. Senegal makes maritime claims of a Template:Convert contiguous zone, a Template:Convert territorial sea, and a Template:Convert exclusive economic zone. It also claims a Template:Convert continental shelf, or to the edge of the continental margin.

Another distinctive and well-known feature of the country is the pink-water Lake Retba, near the city of Dakar, which is one of the few lakes in the world with naturally pink or reddish coloured water.

The lowest point in Senegal is the Atlantic Ocean, at sea level. The highest point is Baunez ridge situated 2.7 km southeast of Nepen Diakha at Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

ClimateEdit

File:Koppen-Geiger Map v2 SEN 1991–2020.svg
Köppen–Geiger climate classification map at 1-km resolution for Senegal (1991–2020)

Senegal has three main climatic regions. The southern portion, south of The Gambia, has a tropical savanna climate (Köppen Aw) with two extremely contrasting seasons from northeast winter winds, including the dry dusty harmattan,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and southwest summer winds. Annual rainfall in this region can reach Template:Convert on the southern border, with as much as Template:Convert in August at the height of the wet season, and virtually no rainfall from November to May. The central portion has a hot semi-arid climate (Köppen BSh) with similar seasons to the south, but with a less rainy and highly variable wet season.<ref name="Geographical">Template:Cite journal</ref> Dakar's annual rainfall of about Template:Convert occurs between June and October when maximum temperatures average Template:Convert and minimums Template:Convert; December to February maximum temperatures average Template:Convert and minimums Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The extreme north in the valley of the Senegal River has a hot arid climate (BWh) with a wet season largely confined to August and September and very high year-to-year variability with complete failure of the wet season not rare.<ref name="Geographical"/> Interior temperatures are higher than along the coast. For example, average daily temperatures in Kaolack and Tambacounda for May are Template:Convert and Template:Convert respectively, compared to Dakar's Template:Convert.,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In the far interior of the country, in the region of Tambacounda, particularly on the border of Mali, temperatures can reach as high as Template:Convert.

ExamplesEdit

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Climate changeEdit

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EcologyEdit

Template:Further Senegal has a number of vegetation zones: sahel, Sahel-Sudan, Sudan (region), Sudan-Guinea, tropical rainforest, and Guinean mangroves.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Most of the southern Casamance arm of the country has been classified by the World Wildlife Fund as part of the Guinean forest-savanna mosaic ecoregion.

See also:.

Extreme pointsEdit

This is a list of the extreme points of Senegal, the points that are farther north, south, east or west than any other location.

GalleryEdit

ReferencesEdit

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