Morocco's Geographical Overview
Take the train from Casablanca going south
Blowing smoke rings from the corners of my mouth
Colored cottons hang in the air
Charming cobras in the square
Wouldn't you know we're riding on the Marrakesh Express
Take the train from Casablanca going south
Blowing smoke rings from the corners of my mouth
Colored cottons hang in the air
Charming cobras in the square
Wouldn't you know we're riding on the Marrakesh Express
They're taking me to Marrakesh
All on board…
All on board…
Marrakesh
Express
By
Crosby, Stills and Nash [1]
Familiar to most American’s, thanks
to Bogart and Bergman’s Casablanca[2], and later hippie anthem, Marrakesh
Express, by Crosby, Stills and Nash[3], Morocco lies on the northwest corner of the
African continent. With a coastline that includes both the Atlantic Ocean and
the Mediterranean Sea, one can see Spain in the distance, just across the
Straits of Gibraltar.[4] It
forms a land border with Algeria, to the east, one which has remained closed
since 1994,[5] although
relatives often cross illegally to maintain family ties, while guards “look the
other way”.[6]
To
the south is a disputed territory known as the Western Sahara, which abuts
Mauritania. This 1970’s annexation remains a subject of debate between
neighboring countries, and has never been recognized by any world nation.[7] Morocco's more recognizable cities are
Marrakesh, Tangier, and Casablanca, the largest.[8] Morocco
profits from its location not only with climate, but culturally and
economically, with its proximity to the European continent and trade routes
that use the Straits of Gibraltar.[9] The city of Tangier was once an
international zone, before becoming independent in 1956.[10]
The climate of Morocco is
distinctly Mediterranean, thanks to its proximity to the Mediterranean Sea. The
coastal areas benefit from the breezes off both the Atlantic and the Med; and
situated just 30-35̊ north of the Equator, the nation's climate is moderate and
subtropical. However, inland temps vary more, with colder winters and hotter
summers the further you move away from the coastline. Tangier, which
sits on a northern tip on the Mediterranean, has the most rainfall of all
African nations, due to its open exposure to the sea. [11]
Geographically, Morocco
boasts miles of Atlantic and Mediterranean coastline along the north and west,
and bleak, jagged mountain ranges stretching from the southwestern Atlantic
coast up the interior nearly to the Mediterranean, in the north. The area along
the Mediterranean coast, where Tangier is located, is known as Er Rif, and is a
fertile coastal plan, just as is the areas along the Atlantic. To the east and
south of the mountains is a semiarid area which joins the Sahara Desert. In
between the mountain ranges lay lowland plateaus which are usable for
agriculture.[12]
The disputed Western
Saharan region, along the southern Moroccan border, is rocky and desert-like,
and mostly barren of people, but valuable for its extensive phosphate deposits.
Morocco has the most substantial river system in all North Africa, as well as
some of the highest mountains. [13]
Morocco boasts a
population of more than 30 million, most of whom practice Islam. The official
languages of Arabic and local Tamazight are primarily used, as well as
the Darija dialect, and French. Morocco is a member of
the Arab League, and possesses one of the largest economies in Africa,[17] thanks in equal parts to tourism,
proximity to Europe and the sea, and fertile, agricultural terrain.[18]
--------------------------------------------------
Major City Latitudes and Longitudes
LAT LONG
Casablanca
- 33.573110 N, -7.589843 W
Rabat
- 33.971590 N, -6.849813 W
Tangier
- 35.759465 N, -5.833954 W
Marrakesh
- 31.629472 N, -7.981084 W [19]
---------------------------------------------------------
[1] David Crosby, Stephen Stills, and Graham Nash, "Marrakesh Express lyrics,"
AZ Lyrics (1969), 2009, accessed January 19, 2017,
http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/crosbystillsnash/marrakeshexpress.html.
[2] Casablanca, dir. Michael Curtiz, perf. Humphrey Bogart,
Ingrid Bergman, Paul Heinreid (USA: Warner Brothers, 1942), accessed January
19, 2017, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casablanca_(film).
[3] Ibid. Crosby,
Stills, and Nash.
[4] "Snapshot,
Africa: Morocco," Snapshot, Africa: Morocco, accessed January 19, 2017,
http://www.sheppardsoftware.com/Africaweb/snapshot/Morocco.htm.
[5]Nizar Lafraoa, "Despite Closed Border, Moroccans and Algerians Find
Ways To See Their Loved Ones," The Huffington Post, September 10, 2015, accessed
January 19, 2017, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/09/10/moroccan-algerian-border_n_8117162.html.
[6] Ibid. Snapshot,
Africa.
[7] The Shape of
Africa, Geographical Factors in African History, (Slide 6), prod. Hannah Schultz, 2016, accessed January 17,
2017,
https://learn.liberty.edu/bbcswebdav/pid-15568040-dt-content-rid-135137625_1/courses/HIWD320_B01_201720/iSpring%20Presentations/Introduction%20to%20the%20History%20of%20Africa%20%28LMS%29/Introduction%20to%20the%20History%20of%20Africa%20%28LMS%29/res/index.htm.
[9] Ibid. The Shape of Africa.
[11] Ibid. The Shape of Africa.
[12] "Morocco -
Topography," Topography - Morocco - average, area, system, , accessed
January 19, 2017, http://www.nationsencyclopedia.com/Africa/Morocco-TOPOGRAPHY.html).
[13]W. H.
Barker. "Historical Geography Of West Africa." The Geographical Teacher 10, no. 2 (1919): 54-58.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/40556553.
[15] "Morocco,"
Wikipedia, 2017, , accessed January 19, 2017, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morocco.
[16] Kate Smith,
"Africa | Marrakesh, Morocco The Rose City Or Red City," Sensational
Color, March 19, 2012, , accessed January 19, 2017,
http://www.sensationalcolor.com/color-meaning/color-around-the-world/africa-morocco-marrakesh-the-rose-city-or-red-city-1876#.WIEZ2PkrJaQ.
[18] Ibid. W. H.
Barker.
[19] "Lat Long," Latitude and Longitude Finder on Map Get
Coordinates, , accessed January 19, 2017, http://www.latlong.net/.
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