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Ghana is situated on the
southern coast of the West
African bulge and is bordered to
the east by Togo, to the west by
the Ivory Coast, to the south by
the Atlantic Ocean and to the
north and northwest by Burkina
Fasso.
The coastline consists mostly of
a low sandy, foreshore behind
which stretches the coastal
plain, except in the west where
the forest comes down to the
sea. The forest belt, which
extends northward from the
western coast and then eastward
into Ashanti for about 170
miles, is broken up into heavily
wooded hills and steep ridges.
North of the forest is
undulating savanna drained by
the Black Volta and White Volta
rivers, which join and flow
south to the sea through a
narrow gap in the hills. Ghana's
highest point is 2,9000 feet in
a range of hills on the eastern
border. Apart from the Volta,
only the Pra and the Ankobra
rivers permanently pierce the
sand dunes, most of the other
rivers terminate in brackish
lagoons. There are no natural
harbours.
(Source: CIA World Fact Book
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook) |
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