Sahara Desert - Science Piolo
Sahara Desert - Science Piolo
Sahara Desert - Science Piolo
Its parched, forbidding landscape took shape over thousands of years, but even today,
the Sahara is constantly
changing.
Why is this desert so
important to Africans? How
do people survive its harsh,
dry climate? And is the
Sahara getting bigger, or
smaller?
By studying satellite photos,
some scientists have come
to believe that the Sahara
regularly shrinks and grows.
In the early 1980s, the
Sahara's
southern
edge
expanded into the Sahel, a
dry band that separates the
desert from the savanna. But by the mid-1980s this area was green and wet again.
The Sahara receives less than three inches of rain a year; Chicago's annual precipitation,
its combined rainfall, snow and sleet, is 33.34 inches (84.68 cm). Even in the Sahara's
wettest areas, it may rain twice one week and not rain again for years.
For centuries caravaneers have traveled through the Sahara desert. Even though there
are many oases in the Sahara, the desert is so immense that travelers may go for days
to reach them.
Oases make trade possible between the ports of North Africa and savanna markets
further south. Without these wet rest stops for humans and animals, crossing the desert
would be almost impossible.
As the world's biggest desert, the Sahara covers a third of the African continent-an area
about the size of the United States.
This is the image many people have of the Sahara: a vast sea of sand dunes. The terrain is actually quite
varied.
Credit: apdesign | ShutterStock
The Sahara is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean on the western edge, the Atlas Mountains
and the Mediterranean Sea to the north, the Red Sea on the east, and the Sudan and the
valley of the Niger River on the south. The Sahara is divided into western Sahara, the
central Hoggar (Ahaggar) Mountains, the Tibesti Mountains, the Air Mountains, an area of
desert mountains and high plateaus, Tnr desert and the Libyan desert, which is the
most arid region.
In the north, the Sahara reaches to the Mediterranean Sea in Egypt and portions of Libya.
In Cyrenaica and the Maghreb, the Sahara experiences a more Mediterranean climate
with a winter rainy season.
Major cities located in the Sahara include Cairo, Egypt; Tripoli, Libya; Nouakchott, the
capital of Mauritania; Tamanrasset, Ouargla, Bechar, Hassi Messaoud, Ghardaia, and El
Oued in Algeria; Timbuktu in Mali; Agadez in Niger; and Faya-Largeau in Chad.
Many people imagine the Sahara as dotted with sand dunes, and the desert does have
its share of ergs, which are large areas of shifting sand dunes, with some of some of
them reaching 590 feet (180 meters). However, most of the Sahara is characterized as
rocky hamada, a type of desert landscape that has very little sand and is made up of
primarily barren, hard, rocky plateaus.
With the exception of the Nile River, the Saharas rivers and streams are irregular or
seasonal. The Nile crosses the desert from its origins in central Africa to empty into the
Mediterranean.
The central part of the Sahara has extremely limited vegetation. The northern and
southern reaches of the desert, along with the highlands, have areas of sparse grassland
and desert shrub, with trees and taller shrubs.
The Addax nasomaculatus, also known as the screwhorn antelope, is the Sahara's largest indigenous
mammal
Rodents, snakes and scorpions thrive in the desert environment. The desert is home to
the deathstalker scorpion, which can be nearly 4 inches (10 cm) in length. Its dangerous
venom contains large amounts of agitoxin and scyllatoxin.
Among the 40-plus species of rodents in the Sahara is the jerboa, related to the mouse,
rat and squirrel. To keep cool, the jerboa burrows underneath the desert's sands to more
humid soils.
The Addax nasomaculatus, also known as the screwhorn antelope, is the Sahara's largest
indigenous mammal. It travels in small herds throughout the Western Sahara, Mauritania
and Chad. Instead of drinking water, it sucks moisture from the desert grasses and
bushes. Its oversized hooves make the addax adept at moving through the Sahara's
loose sand.
Jackals and several types of hyenas are among the carnivores that roam the Sahara.
Weighing less than 3 pounds (1.4 kg), the Mall Fennec Fox is another carnivore that
makes its home in tunnels in the sand dunes during the day and comes out at night to
prey on the rodents.
Kim Ann Zimmermann
The Sahara: Facts, Climate and Animals of the Desert
Kim Ann Zimmermann, LiveScience Contributor | September 12, 2012 04:50pm ET
Dunes
Dunes are mounds of sand that have been blown and shaped by the wind. Dunes can be
as big as a tall hill. Some dunes move across the desert, but some stay in one place and
become fossilizedhard and permanent.
There are different types of dunes. When the wind blows in one direction, long curved
dunes called barchan dunes form. When the wind blows from two directions, long,
straight dunes called linear dunes form. When the wind comes from several directions,
star dunes form. From above, this kind of dune looks like a star, and can be more than a
thousand feet high.
who had small villages and farmed the land. There were forests and grasslands in the
Sahara.
Then, about 6,000 years ago, the climate began to change. Within a few centuries, the
Sahara became the desert that it is today. Why? Scientists think that conditions in the
atmosphere changed so that the Sahara got warmer and drier. As the climate changed,
fewer and fewer plants grew there, and the people had to move to places where there
was more water.
Satellite images help people make other discoveries in the Sahara. With these pictures,
archaeologists can find where ancient people had their settlements. Paleontologists
scientists who study fossils to learn about prehistoric lifeuse satellite images to help
them find the best places to search for clues to life millions of years ago.