Escravos River

The Escravos River is a river in southern Nigeria. "Escravos" is a Portuguese word meaning "slaves" and the area was one of the main conduits for slave trade between Nigeria and the United States in the 18th century. The Escravos is a distributary of the Niger River, it flows for 57 kilometres (35 mi), ending at the Bight of Benin of the Gulf of Guinea where it flows into the Atlantic Ocean.[1][2] Chevron, a major US oil company, has its main Nigerian oil production facility at the mouth of the Escravos River.[3] This oil terminal pumps approximately 460,000 bbl/d (73,000 m3/d).

References

  1. THE HYDRODYNAMIC FLUXES OF THE ESCRAVOS AND FORCADOS RIVERS: IMPLICATIONS FOR TRANSPORT AND CIRCULATION PATTERNS OFF THE WESTERN NIGER DELTA, BY IBITOLA MAYOWA PHILIPS, NOVEMBER 2009
  2. The Escravos Bar Project, By Reuben K. Udo, Geographical Regions of Nigeria, Page 60
  3. Delta communities decry fresh oil spills from NNPC trunkline, 2016/10/13, SweetCrudeReports, ...An oil spill had occurred in these same communities on August 17, this year from a pipeline belonging to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC,...Gama-Zion community and into the Escravos River...

Coordinates: 5°35′N 5°10′E / 5.583°N 5.167°E / 5.583; 5.167


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