The Ancient Egyptians were familiar with the Nile as far upstream as today’s Khartoum, Sudan, some 1,700 miles from the river’s mouth. In A.D. 150 Ptolemy, the famed Greek geographer living in Roman Egypt, wrote that the river originated in the “Mountains of the Moon” deep in the African interior. In 1862 English explorer John Hanning Speke journeyed from Africa’s east coast to find what he considered to be the source, where the river exits Lake Victoria in present-day Uganda.
Geographers did not explore the Amazon’s most distant
sources until the mid-20th century, and it was only with the advent of GPS
technologies that ever-more accurate estimates, like the 2007 survey, were made
possible. Great rivers change course over the seasons and the years, making it
difficult to determine which measurement comprises its accurate length. As the
crow flies, it is about 2,400 miles from the Nile’s source to its outlet (the
meandering Amazon covers a mere 1,100 miles of straight-line distance).
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