The Nile
The Nile is a huge river in Africa that flows through, as the longest river in the world. The Nile has two branches or tributaries joining one, namely the Pethak Nile and the Blue Nile. The last is the main source of the Nile River and its saturated soil resources, while the Nile is the longest river. The White Nile comes from the Great Lakes region of Central Africa, with the most distant source of southern Rwanda. 2 ° 16'55.92 "S, 29 ° 19'52.32" E, and flows to Tanzania, Lake Victoria, Uganda and southern Sudan, while the Blue Nile begins from Telan Tana in Ethiopia 12 ° 2'8.8 "N, 37 ° 15'53.11 "E, flows to Sudan from the south-east. Both met in the area near Sudan's capital Khartoum. The northern parts of the river are almost entirely flowing in the desert, from Sudan to Egypt, a country in which the history of civilization depends on the Nile since antiquity.