Kinyeti Explained

Kinyeti
Photo Size:250
Elevation M:3187
Prominence M:2120
Map:South Sudan
Label Position:top
Listing:Country high point
Ultra
Location:Ikotos County, Eastern Equatoria, South Sudan
Range:Imatong Mountains
Coordinates:3.9475°N 32.9089°W

Mount Kinyeti is the highest peak in South Sudan. It is located in the Imatong Mountains in Ikotos County of Eastern Equatoria, near the Ugandan border. Kinyeti has an elevation of 3187m (10,456feet) above sea level.[1] The group of high mountains that contain Kinyeti, extending to the border with Uganda, are sometimes called the Lomariti or Lolobai mountains.[2]

The lower parts of the mountain were covered with lush forest.[3] These are the most northern forests of the East African montane forest ecoregion.The summit is rocky, with montane grassland and scattered, low ericaceous scrubs, low subshrub and herbs in rock crevices.[4] One of the first Europeans to visit the mountain was the botanist Thomas Ford Chipp, who discovered Coreopsis chippii near the summit.[5]

Named after Mount Kinyeti is the Mount Kineti chameleon (Trioceros kinetensis), a threatened species. [6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mount Kinyeti . Encyclopædia Britannica . 2011-07-06.
  2. Book: Flora of the Sudan-Uganda border area east of the Nile, Part 1 . 9 . Kaj Vollesen . Kgl. Danske Videnskabernes Selskab . 1998 . 87-7304-297-8.
  3. Book: Sudan: the Bradt travel guide . 5 . Paul Clammer . Bradt Travel Guides . 2005 . 1-84162-114-5.
  4. Book: Flora of the Sudan-Uganda border area east of the Nile: Catalogue of vascular plants, 2nd part, vegetation and phytogeography, Part 2 . Kaj Vollesen . Kgl. Danske Videnskabernes Selskab . 2005 . 87-7304-318-4.
  5. Web site: Revision of the Genus Coreopsis . Earl Edward Sherff . Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago . 20 October 1936.
  6. IUCN Red List https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/203826/2771689