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Lake Mweru (also spelled Mwelu) is a freshwater
lake on the longest arm of Africa's second-longest
river, the Congo. Located on the border between
Zambia and Democratic Republic of the Congo, it
makes up 110 km of the total length of the Congo,
lying between its Luapula River (upstream) and
Luvua River (downstream) segments.
Mweru means 'lake' in a number of Bantu languages,
so it is often referred to as just 'Mweru
Mweru is mainly fed by the Luapula River, which
comes in through swamps from the south, and the
Kalungwishi River from the east. At its north
end the lake is drained by the Luvua River, which
flows in a northwesterly direction to join the
Lualaba River and thence to the Congo. It is the
second-largest lake in the Congo's drainage basin
and is located 150 km west of the southern end
of the largest, Lake Tanganyika.
The Luapula forms a swampy delta almost as wide
as the southern end of the lake. In a number of
respects the lower river and lake can be treated
as one entity. For a lake in a region with pronounced
wet and dry seasons, Mweru does not change much
in level and area. The annual fluctuation in level
is 1.7m, with seasonal highs in May and lows in
January. This is partly because the Luapula drains
out of the Bangweulu Swamps and floodplain which
tend to regulate the water flow, absorbing the
annual flood and releasing it slowly, and partly
because Mweru's outlet, the Luvua, drops quickly
and flows swiftly, without vegetation to block
it. A rise in Mweru is quickly offset by a faster
flow down the Luvua.
Mweru's average length is 118 km and its average
width is 45 km, with its long axis oriented northeast-southwest.
Its elevation is 917 m, quite a bit higher than
Tanganyika (763 m).[1] It is a rift valley lake
lying in the Lake Mweru-Luapula graben, which
is a branch of the Great Rift Valley. The western
shore of the lake in DR Congo exhibits the steep
escarpment typical of a rift valley lake, rising
to the Kundelungu Mountains beyond, but the rift
valley escarpment is less pronounced on the eastern
shore.
Mweru is shallow in the south and deeper in the
north, with two depressions in the north-eastern
section with maximum depths of 20 m and 27 m.
A smaller very marshy lake called Mweru Wantipa
(also known as the Mweru Marshes) lies about 50
km to its east, and north of the Kalungwishi.
It is mostly endorheic and actually takes water
from the Kalungwishi through a dambo most of the
time, but in times of high flood it may overflow
into the Kalungwishi and Lake Mweru

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