The Congo and its tributaries course through the rainforest of the same name, which is the second-biggest rainforest on the planet after the Amazon Rainforest (in Brazil).The Congo is one of the most profound streams on the planet with parts of it achieving profundities of more than 220 meters (720 feet)! Since it tributaries channel ranges north and south of the Equator, and its related downpour belt, it's continually raining some place in the Congo's seepage bowl. Take a gander at this stream on the Odd Pod and you will soon see why it conveys such a substantial volume of water. 

It is likewise amazingly long. Truth be told, it is the ninth longest stream on the planet, moving through ten nations inside its seepage bowl. With its source in North-East Zambia, it ascends from the mountains as a stream and gathers water along its course, until it channels to the Atlantic Ocean. It has one of the biggest waste bowls on the planet, with a territory of around 3,680,000 square kilometers. This wide waste bowl lies on both sides of the equator, toward the North and South, balancing out the stream of water through the channel following no less than one a player in the scope has a blustery