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The most common morphology of the hills comprise of

round to flat summits that abruptly descend on steep

convex and straight slopes, ending in relatively gentle and

moderately concave pediments. The pediment slopes show

an abrupt steepening in their lower sections adjacent to

valley floors which are often swampy.

Gemorphologically, Kooki hills are thought to result

from an upwarped Buganda plateau during early

Tertiary, after a long quiescence from the Karoo era

and subsequent reduction of the plateau landscape by

denudation process to a very low relief, the African

Surface in this Buganda part of Uganda which, therefore,

is sometimes called Buganda surface. The uplift resulted in

an elevated and dissected plateau consisting of a series of

flat-topped hills or their remnants and intervening valleys.

Thus, the landscape was dissected by the rejuvenated

drainage system, leading to a dissected plateau in form of

the present ridges and hills. In some cases, the Kooki hills

are related to the Kigezi-Ankole surfaces (highlands), but

generally, Rakai hills are regarded as an upwarping of the

Buganda surface.

The soils in the Kooki area are dominantly of Ferralsols

type and its associations. This is the most dominant

soil type in Uganda, covering about 2/3 of the country.

This is a class of soils considered to be the oldest on

earth; the soils are characterized by low fertility levels

and are deeply weathered and leached with little

mineral reserves remaining. Generally, soil distribution

varies with slope morphology, in that at the summits,

moderately deep to shallow soils often occur; but on

the steep convex and straight slopes, soils become very

thin with depths varying from bare rocky or weathered

regolith surfaces to only a few centimeters deep. Further

down on the concave and pediment slopes, respectively,

soil depths increase appreciably often reaching depths of

over 150 cm.

On the hill summits and steep upper and middle slopes,

the soils are Plinthic Ferralsols and Hyperskeletic

Leptosols. These associations are dominantly shallow,

loose and skeleteral, with high proneness to erosion.

Most of the former summit laterite capping has been

removed leaving behind disintegrating boulders and relics

Kooki hills in Kibaale-Bukoora, Rakai District

The degraded hills of Kooki in Rakai District

Rakai District Local Administration (2007)

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