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Victoria Falls
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Victoria Falls

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Victoria Falls, on the Zimbabwe–Zambia border, southern Africa. During the rainy season approximately 20,000 cu m/706,292 cu ft of water pours over the brink.
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The Victoria Falls on the River Zambezi, on the Zambia–Zimbabwe border, are 120 m/400 ft high. The falls were named after Queen Victoria by the explorer David Livingstone, but the local African name for them is Mosi-oa-tunya, ‘smoke that thunders’).
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An aerial shot of Victoria Falls, situated on the Zambia–Zimbabwe border. The waterfall was named after Queen Victoria by David Livingstone, but the local African name is Mosi-ao-tunya, ‘smoke that thunders’.

Waterfall on the River Zambezi, on the Zambia–Zimbabwe border. The river is 1,700 m/5,580 ft wide and drops 120 m/400 ft to flow through a gorge 30 m/100 ft wide. The falls were named after Queen Victoria by the Scottish explorer David Livingstone in 1855.

Above the falls the river flows over a level stretch of basalt and is flat and broad, dotted with thickly wooded islands. At this point it is some 1.5 km/1 mi wide, and then plunges into a series of zigzagging gorges, the first of which extends the whole breadth. Its course is impeded by an opposite wall, nearly as high, the water escaping through a channel of 30 m/100 ft width through the ‘Boiling Pot’, into the Grand Canyon, spanned by a bridge. The falls, which are unspoilt, include the Devil's Cataract, the Main Falls, the Rainbow Falls, and the Eastern Cataract.

The existence of the falls was first made known to the outside world by David Livingstone in 1855, but the Victoria Falls were undoubtedly known to Catholic missionaries, who were in this part of Africa in the 16th century.

Victoria Falls

Town and tourist centre near the Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe; population (1992) 16,800. The administrative and commercial centre for northwest Zimbabwe, the town has an international airport and tourist facilities. It is surrounded by the Victoria Falls National Park.



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