Ndji River


The Ndji River, or Ndgii River, Dji River, Kpéo River, is a river of the Central African Republic. It is a left tributary of the Kotto River.

Characteristics

The Ndji river is long.
It rises to the east of the Pata sandstone plateau and skirts the eastern escarpment before crossing it.
Its source at is at an elevation of.
It drops by to its mouth on the Kotto at at an elevation of.
The Belgian explorer Léon Hanolet travelled up the valley of the Bali river and the upper Kotto River in 1894, following the road of the Arab caravans.
His expedition reached Dabago at on the Ndji River.
He described the country as flat, and sometimes walked for six hours without crossing a stream.

Ecology

The river is home to the Syncerus caffer aequinoctialis subspecies of the African buffalo.