Chipoma Falls: Difference between revisions

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'''Chipoma Falls''' is a waterfalls in [[Chinsali District]] in [[Northern Province]] of [[Zambia]]. The falls are at their peak in the month of January of every year.  
'''Chipoma Falls''' is a waterfalls in [[Chinsali District]] in [[Northern Province]] of [[Zambia]]. The falls are at their peak in the month of January of every year.  


''Chipoma'' is a [[Bemba language|Bemba]] name which conveys the reverberating rush of falling water as the sound of the falls can be heard long before they are in sight.
''Chipoma'' is a [[Bemba language|Bemba]] name derived from the sound produced as the water traverses through the rocky surfaces before disappearing downstream in the cover of the ever green foliage.<ref name=zadama/>


==Location==
==Location==
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==History==
==History==
It was proclaimed as a national monument in 1964 and is under the auspices of the [[National Heritage Conservation Commission]] (NHCC).
The area is believed to have been occupied by the Stone Age people owing to the 12 surviving old clay iron smelting kilns dotted around it. It was proclaimed as a national monument in 1964 and is under the auspices of the [[National Heritage Conservation Commission]] (NHCC).<ref name=zadama>[https://www.daily-mail.co.zm/?p=12366 Chipoma: A tourism spectacle], [[Zambia Daily Mail]], 27 November 2014</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 06:47, 17 April 2017

Chipoma Falls is a waterfalls in Chinsali District in Northern Province of Zambia. The falls are at their peak in the month of January of every year.

Chipoma is a Bemba name derived from the sound produced as the water traverses through the rocky surfaces before disappearing downstream in the cover of the ever green foliage.[1]

Location

The waterfalls is situated on the Chimanabwe River, about 24 kilometres south-west of Chinsali and is an attractive portion of the river which is surrounded by ever lush green grass and woods.

History

The area is believed to have been occupied by the Stone Age people owing to the 12 surviving old clay iron smelting kilns dotted around it. It was proclaimed as a national monument in 1964 and is under the auspices of the National Heritage Conservation Commission (NHCC).[1]

See also

References

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