nilosaharan.png This image presents a linguistic map of the African continent, illustrating the distribution of various language families or groups across the landmass. The majority of the continent is colored in a solid dark green, with thin white lines tracing the borders between different countries. Scattered across the northern and eastern sections are specific regions highlighted in distinct colors to denote different languages. In the bottom left corner, there is a legend box containing ten entries, each paired with a colored square. The text in the legend is as follows: - A cyan square labeled "Songhai" - A light green square labeled "Sahariano" - A red square labeled "Kuliak" - A brown square labeled "Fur" - A black square labeled "Maba" - A magenta square labeled "Komuz" - An olive-green square labeled "Kunama" - A dark blue square labeled "Berta" - A pink square labeled "Sudánico central" - An orange square labeled "Sudánico oriental A" - A yellow square labeled "Sudánico oriental B (nilótico)" Geographically, the cyan regions representing Songhai appear in West Africa. A large area of light green for Sahariano is located centrally in the north, covering parts of Chad and Sudan. South of this central area are patches of pink indicating Sudánico central. Near the center of the continent, there are small black areas for Maba and brown areas for Fur. In East Africa, particularly around Ethiopia and Sudan, there are scattered orange regions (Sudánico oriental A), a large yellow area (Sudánico oriental B), and vertical strips of magenta (Komuz) and dark blue (Berta). Small red dots indicating Kuliak are visible within the eastern regions. There is also a white patch in East Africa that does not correspond to a color in the provided legend list. This description was generated automatically. Please feel free to ask questions if you have further questions about the nature of the image or its meaning within the presentation.