██ North Africa ██ West Africa ██ Central Africa
██ East Africa ██ Southern Africa
<50 largest metropoles of Africa>
<Trans-African Highway network 2003>
<Population density>
<Language map>
<Official languages>
<Africa HIV-AIDS 1999>
Map of Africa coloured according to the percentage of the Adult (ages 15-49) population with HIV/AIDS. Colour chart present in image. Countries coloured white have no information available.
<Yellow fever Africa 2005>
2. Maps of Africa about the history
<Map of human migrations>
Numbers are millennia before the present.
Map of human races migration, according to the mitochondrial DNA. Number represent thousand years before present time (time units used with Radiocarbon dating. The blue line represents area covered in ice or tundra during the last great ice age. Numbers represent thousand of years before present The letters are the mitochondrial DNA haplogroups (pure motherly lineages); Haplogroups can be used to define genetic populations and are often geographically orientated.
<Discovery sites of the Australopitecines>
<Location of remains of Wilton Culture (6000 BCE)>
<Orient 2000 BC>
<Map of the Ancient Near East during the Amarna period(1550-1292 BC)>
Map of the Ancient Near East during the Amarna period showing the great powers of the period: Egypt (green), Hatti (yellow), the Kassites kingdom of Babylon (purple), Assyria (grey), and Mittani (red). Lighter areas show direct control, darker areas represent spheres of influence. The extent of the Achaean/Mycenaean civilization is shown in orange.
<Trans-Saharan trade 8th-16th century>
<Africa in the 13th century>
<Africa around 1400>
<Africa in the 15th century>
<The Ghana Empire(750-1076)>
<The Mali Empire(1235-1645)>
<The Songhai Empire(15-16th century)>
<Explorations of Africa 1857-1863>
<19세기의 아프리카 탐험>
<19세기의 아프리카>
<노예무역>
<아프리카의 식민화(1880년과 1895년)>
<Colonial Africa in 1913>
<Colonial Africa in 1914>
<아프리카의 분할 1924>
<Map with African independence dates>
<아프리카의 식민지 해방>
<Animated map of independence>
<Organisation of African unity>