Classroom lesson · Ten Volcanic Islands · 🇨🇻 Cape Verde

Ten Volcanic Islands

Cape Verde is a whole country made of ten islands in the Atlantic Ocean

A bird's-eye view of a rocky green volcanic island rising out of bright blue Atlantic water

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Cape Verde is a small country made up of ten islands sitting in the Atlantic Ocean, about 570 kilometres off the west coast of Africa. Every single island was made by volcanoes pushing up through the ocean floor millions of years ago. Together they are home to about 550,000 people and some very special wildlife.

Tell me more

The ten islands are split into two groups by the wind. The Windward Islands (Barlavento) catch the ocean breezes and tend to be greener and hillier. The Leeward Islands (Sotavento) sit more sheltered and are often flatter and sunnier, with long sandy beaches stretching for kilometres.

Because each island formed separately from a different volcanic eruption, they all look and feel quite different. Some are rugged and mountainous, with steep valleys and ancient forests. Others are almost completely flat, with salt flats and sand dunes that look like a mini desert. Visiting Cape Verde can feel like visiting ten different countries at once.

The islands were uninhabited when the first settlers arrived from Portugal and West Africa in the 1400s. Today, Cape Verdeans are proud of a culture that blends African and European traditions - you can hear it in their music, taste it in their food, and see it in their colourful festivals.

The ocean between and around the islands is some of the richest water in the Atlantic. Humpback whales, dolphins, loggerhead sea turtles and hundreds of seabirds all depend on these waters. For a small country, Cape Verde punches well above its weight when it comes to wildlife.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01If you lived on an island with nine other islands nearby, how would you travel between them? What would be the best and hardest parts?
  2. 02Each island formed from a separate volcano. How do you think that makes each one look different?
  3. 03Cape Verde is far from the nearest continent. What things might be tricky about living on a remote island?
  4. 04What words would you use to describe an island that was born from a volcano?
Try this

Classroom activity

On a blank outline map of the Atlantic Ocean, mark the ten Cape Verde islands as dots. Label the two groups (Barlavento and Sotavento). Then draw arrows showing which direction you think the trade winds blow from. Compare your map with a partner - did you agree on the wind direction?