Page:Africa by Élisée Reclus, Volume 4.djvu/320



The united current cf the Zambese and the Shire, which at certain points is stated to be no less than eight miles wide from bank to bank, flows below the confluence in a south-easterly direction; it then trends to the south and again to

the south-east before ramifying into several distinct branches to form its "goosefoot" delta. All the waters ultimately find their way seawards through numerous mouths, such as the Melambe on the south, the Inhamissengo or Kongoni towards the north, the eastern Lu-Ebo, the Muzelo or Catherine, the Inhamiara, and others. The western Lu-Ebo, or Luasse, a channel winding to the coast on the extreme south, is connected with the delta proper only during the periodical