Social Studies: Africa: Geography, Resources, and History
Exploring the continent's regions, natural resources, trade, and historical change
Social Studies: Africa: Geography, Resources, and History
Exploring the continent's regions, natural resources, trade, and historical change
Social Studies - Grade 6-8
- 1
Africa is the second-largest continent by land area and population. Name two major physical features of Africa and explain how one of them can affect where people live.
Think about deserts, rivers, mountains, rainforests, and savannas.
Two major physical features of Africa include the Sahara Desert and the Nile River. The Nile River can affect where people live because it provides water, fertile soil, transportation, and farming opportunities in a dry region. - 2
The Sahara Desert covers much of North Africa. Explain one challenge the Sahara creates for transportation or settlement.
The Sahara creates challenges because it is extremely dry, very hot during the day, and has limited water sources. These conditions make travel, farming, and permanent settlement difficult. - 3
The Nile River flows through northeastern Africa. Why was the Nile important to ancient Egyptian civilization?
Focus on food, water, transportation, and farming.
The Nile was important to ancient Egyptian civilization because it provided water for drinking and farming, deposited fertile soil during floods, supported transportation, and helped connect communities along the river. - 4
Africa has several climate regions, including desert, savanna, rainforest, and Mediterranean climate. Choose two climate regions and describe how they are different.
Compare rainfall, temperature, plants, or animals.
A desert climate is very dry and receives little rainfall, so plant life is limited. A rainforest climate is warm and wet with heavy rainfall, which supports dense forests and many species of plants and animals. - 5
The Sahel is a semi-arid region south of the Sahara. Explain why desertification is a concern in the Sahel.
Desertification is a concern in the Sahel because land can become drier and less fertile over time. This can reduce crop production, harm grazing land, and make it harder for people to get food and earn a living. - 6
Africa has many valuable natural resources, such as oil, gold, diamonds, copper, cobalt, and fertile land. Explain one way natural resources can help a country's economy and one challenge they can create.
Think about jobs, trade, government income, pollution, and conflict.
Natural resources can help a country's economy by creating jobs and income through mining, farming, or trade. They can also create challenges if wealth is not shared fairly, if mining damages the environment, or if groups fight over control of the resources. - 7
Read this resource list: Nigeria - oil; Democratic Republic of the Congo - cobalt and copper; South Africa - gold and platinum; Ghana - cocoa and gold. What pattern do you notice about Africa's resources?
The pattern is that African countries have many different types of resources, including minerals, energy resources, and agricultural products. The resources are not spread evenly, and different countries specialize in different products. - 8
Trans-Saharan trade routes connected West Africa with North Africa and the Mediterranean world. Identify two goods often traded on these routes and explain why the routes were important.
West Africa was known for gold, and desert communities needed salt.
Gold and salt were two important goods traded on trans-Saharan routes. The routes were important because they connected different regions, spread wealth, encouraged the growth of cities, and helped ideas and religions travel. - 9
The kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai grew in West Africa. What role did trade play in the growth of these kingdoms?
Trade helped Ghana, Mali, and Songhai grow by bringing wealth from goods such as gold and salt. Rulers collected taxes from trade, supported armies, built cities, and encouraged learning and religion. - 10
Mansa Musa was a ruler of the Mali Empire in the 1300s. Explain why his pilgrimage to Mecca made Mali more famous.
Think about how travelers, trade, and stories spread news.
Mansa Musa's pilgrimage made Mali more famous because he traveled with great wealth and gave away gold along the route. People in other regions learned that Mali was a powerful and wealthy empire. - 11
Timbuktu became an important city in the Mali Empire. Describe two reasons Timbuktu was important.
Timbuktu was important because it was a center of trade across the Sahara and a center of Islamic learning. Scholars studied and copied books there, and merchants exchanged goods such as salt, gold, and cloth. - 12
The Swahili Coast developed along the eastern coast of Africa. Explain how the Indian Ocean helped connect East Africa with other regions.
Ocean routes can connect ports the way roads connect cities on land.
The Indian Ocean helped connect East Africa with Arabia, Persia, India, and other regions through sea trade. Merchants exchanged goods such as ivory, gold, cloth, spices, and ceramics, and cultural ideas spread along the coast. - 13
Before European colonization, Africa had many societies with different languages, governments, religions, and economies. Why is it inaccurate to describe precolonial Africa as one single culture?
It is inaccurate because Africa is a large and diverse continent with many different peoples and histories. Precolonial African societies included kingdoms, city-states, farming communities, pastoral groups, trading centers, and many language and religious traditions. - 14
During the late 1800s, European powers divided much of Africa into colonies. Explain one way colonial borders created problems for African societies.
Think about borders being drawn by outsiders with little local input.
Colonial borders created problems because they were often drawn without considering existing ethnic groups, languages, trade routes, or political systems. This sometimes divided communities or forced different groups into the same colony under foreign rule. - 15
Many African countries gained independence in the mid-1900s. Identify one challenge newly independent countries often faced and one opportunity independence created.
One challenge was building stable governments and economies after years of colonial rule. One opportunity was that African leaders and citizens could make their own decisions, create national identities, and work toward economic and social development.