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Situated on the west coast of Africa, Cameroon is bordered to the west by the Gulf of Guinea, to the northwest by Nigeria,
to the northeast by Chad (with Lake Chad at its northern tip), to the east by the Central African Republic and to the south
by Congo, Gabon and Equatorial Guinea. The far north of the country is a semi-desert broadening into the vast Maroua Plain,
with game reserves and mineral deposits. This is bordered to the west by the lush Mandara Mountains. The Benue River rises
here and flows westwards into the Niger. The country to the northwest is very beautiful; volcanic peaks covered by bamboo
forest rise to over 2000m (6500ft), with waterfalls and villages scattered over the lower slopes. Further to the south and
west are savannah uplands, while dense forest covers the east and south. The coastal strip is tropical and cultivated. Cameroon
derives its name from the 15th-century Portuguese sailor Fernando Po’s description of the River Wouri: Rio dos Cameroes (‘river
of shrimps’).
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