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The six cataracts of the Nile

Fourth Cataract

Sixth Cataract
The six primary 'cataracts of the
Nile' are shallow stretches between
Aswan and
Khartoum where the water's surface is broken by numerous small boulders and stones lying on the river bed, as well as many small rocky
islets. In some places, these stretches are punctuated by
whitewater and are perhaps well characterized as
rapids, while in others the water flow is smoother. The six primary cataracts of the Nile were the main obstacles for boats sailing on the Nile in antiquity. Counted upstream, the First Cataract is in modern
Egypt; the rest are in
Sudan.
★ The First Cataract is near
Aswan ()
★ The Second Cataract (or Great Cataract) was in
Nubia and is now submerged in
Lake Nasser ()
★ The Third Cataract is around
Tombos /
Hannek ()
★ The Fourth Cataract is in the
Manasir Desert and will be flooded by the
Merowe Dam from 2006 onwards ()
★ The Fifth Cataract is near the
confluence with the
Atbara River ()
★ The Sixth Cataract is where the Nile cuts through the
Sabaluka pluton near
Bagrawiyah ()
The word cataract is derived from the
Greek kataraktes meaning "
waterfall". However, none of the Nile's six primary cataracts would be accurately described as such, and given the broader definition, many minor cataracts should perhaps also be included in the count. Geologists indicate that the region of the northern Sudan is
tectonically active and this activity has caused the river to take on "youthful" characteristics.
[1] The
Nubian Swell has diverted the river's course to the west, while keeping its depth shallow and causing the formation of the cataracts. Even as the river bed is worn down by
erosion, the land mass is lifted keeping parts of the river bed exposed. These distinctive features of the river between Aswan and Khartoum have led to the stretch being often referred to as the 'Cataract Nile', while the downstream portion is occasionally referred to as the "Egyptian" Nile.
[2]
Despite these characteristics, some of the cataracts which are normally impassable by boat, become navigable during the flood season.
The six primary cataracts of the Nile are described extensively by European colonials, notably by
Winston Churchill in ''
The River War'' (
1899), where he recounts the exploits of the British trying to return to
Sudan between
1896 and
1898, after they were forced to leave in
1885.
Amelia Edwards in her book ''A Thousand Miles Up the Nile'' (
1892)
[3], describes the now submerged second cataract as over sixteen miles in length.
In ancient times,
Upper Egypt extended from the
Nile Delta to the first cataract, while further upstream, the land was controlled by the ancient
Kush civilization, that would later take over
Egypt.
Notes
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External links
★ The Cataract Nile and the Great Bend (webpage)
[3]
★ The 1905-1907 Breasted Expeditions to Egypt and the Sudan: A Photographic Study
[4] (See photos listed in the
index under "Nile, Third Cataract" and "Nile, Fourth Cataract")
;Photo links
★ Second Cataract:
[5] [6]
★ Third Cataract:
[7] [8] [9]
★ Fourth Cataract:
[10]
★ Fifth Cataract:
[11]
★ Sixth Cataract:
[12] [13]