Tagabo Hills

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Tagabo Hills
Sudan relief map.svg
Red triangle with thick white border.svg
Tagabo Hills
Location in Sudan
Highest point
Coordinates 14°34′N25°51′E / 14.567°N 25.850°E / 14.567; 25.850 [1]
Geography
Location Darfur, Sudan
Geology
Mountain type volcanic field
Last eruption Holocene(?)

The Tagabo Hills is a volcanic field in the region of Darfur in Sudan. It lies north of the Marrah Mountains and southwest of the larger Meidob Volcanic Field. The Tagabo Hills are also known as the Kutum Volcanic Field, after the town of Kutum, or the Berti Hills after the Berti people. It contains well-preserved features, such as scoria cones, thought to be of the late Pleistocene or even as recent as the Holocene. [1] However, a 1997 analysis ascribed the rocks only to the Paleogene/Neogene periods.

See also

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Berti is an extinct Saharan language formerly spoken in northern Sudan, specifically in the Tagabo Hills, Darfur, and Kurdufan. Berti speakers migrated into the region with other Nilo-Saharan speakers, such as the Masalit and Daju, who were agriculturalists practicing varying degrees of animal husbandry. They settled in two separate areas: one north of Al-Fashir, while the other had continued eastward, settling in eastern Darfur and western Kurdufan by the nineteenth century. The two groups did not appear to share a common identity, the western group differing noticeably in its cultivation of gum arabic. By the 1990s, Sudanese Arabic had largely replaced Berti as a native language.

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References

  1. 1 2 "Tagabo Hills". Global Volcanism Program . Smithsonian Institution.