Classroom lesson · Mount Nimba · 🇱🇷 Liberia

Mount Nimba

A mountain shared by three countries, rich in rare wildlife

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Mount Nimba sits at the point where Liberia, Guinea and Côte d'Ivoire all meet, making it a mountain shared by three countries at once. At 1,752 metres above sea level, its summit rises above the clouds and its slopes are covered in rich grasslands and forest. It is so special that UNESCO listed it as a World Heritage Site.

Tell me more

The mountain is shaped a bit like a long ridge, with grassy highlands near the top and thick forest lower down. Because it rises so high, it creates its own small climate — it is cooler and mistier up top, which means completely different plants and animals live there compared with the hot lowlands below.

Mount Nimba is famous among scientists for its unique wildlife. It is one of the few places in the world where a special kind of chimpanzee has been seen using rock tools to crack open nuts — a behaviour that took researchers completely by surprise when they first filmed it.

The mountain's streams flow outwards in three directions, feeding rivers in all three surrounding countries. A raindrop landing on the very peak could end up in Liberia, Guinea or Côte d'Ivoire — it all depends on which side of the summit it falls. That makes Mount Nimba a natural water tower for the whole region.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What is special about a mountain that sits on the border of three countries? Who do you think it belongs to?
  2. 02Why might animals living at the top of a mountain be different from those living at the bottom?
  3. 03Chimpanzees on Nimba use rocks as tools. What does that tell us about how clever they are?
  4. 04If you could stand on the summit of Mount Nimba, what do you think you would see?
Try this

Classroom activity

On a blank map outline, mark the locations of Liberia, Guinea and Côte d'Ivoire. Draw Mount Nimba at the point where all three meet. Now draw arrows showing rivers flowing away from the mountain into each country and label them.