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The name Sahara comes from the Arabic word saharaŹ¾, meaning “deserts.” Almost as large as the entire United States, the Sahara covers 3.5 million square miles (9 million square kilometers). It extends some 3,000 miles (4,830 kilometers) from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea. Southward it spreads an average of 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) to the region of the Niger River and Lake Chad in the Sudan. The great desert contains at least a part of Western Sahara, Mauritania, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Mali, Niger, Chad, Libya, Egypt, and The Sudan (see Africa).
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The cloudless sky and dry air expose the land to the piercing tropical sun. A sandy surface may have a temperature of 170° F (77° C) or more. In July the air temperature is more than 100° F (38° C) in many places. The land cools rapidly when the sun sets. Temperatures may drop as much as 30° to 50° F (17° to 28° C). In winter they may fall below freezing in the north. Ice forms at night.
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Much of the Sahara is a series of plateaus. They average 1,000 feet (300 meters) in altitude. Across it from southeast to northwest runs a broad, rocky ridge. This chain reaches its greatest general elevation in the central Sahara, forming the Ahaggar mountain mass. The highest mountains, however, rise in the Tibesti group to the east. Here is the extinct volcano Emi Koussi, the Sahara's highest elevation at 11,204 feet (3,415 meters).
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The Nile and the Niger rivers cross the edges of the Sahara. There are no other permanent streams. Dry streambeds, called wadis, seam the desert. Travelers are warned against camping in them, however, because the beds may fill with torrents of water during the rare downpours. Some wadis mark the course of underground streams. Vegetation fringes these courses where the water table is near enough to the surface to be reached by plant roots. An oasis develops where the water supply is sufficient to support substantial plant growth.
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Despite its dryness, the Sahara has scattered plant and animal life. Shrubs and other plants resistant to evaporation send their long roots toward underground water, and coarse grass grows in widely separated bunches. Soon after the rare rains, a carpet of delicate, quick-blooming flowers is spread. (See also plant.)
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Prehistoric Past
The Sahara was not always a parched desert as it is today. Throughout the Ice Age, the huge glaciers and ice caps of Europe pushed the zone of temperate climate southward. The Sahara was then a rich grassland and hunting ground for prehistoric people. Relics of these people include stone tools and rock carvings on sheltered cliffs and walls of caves.
By early ancient times, the Sahara was dry and hot as it is today. The northern coastal strip supported warlike people who made trouble for their neighbors. Raiders from the Libyan Desert invaded Egypt. The Carthaginians, and later the Romans, had to keep a watchful eye on the Numidians, who inhabited an area roughly correspondent to that of present-day Algeria.
The vast desert barred travel to central Africa. During the days of the Roman Empire, however, people learned to use the camel for desert travel (see camel). Berbers from the Mediterranean coast filtered southward. They improved irrigation systems and planted date palms. Arabs with long camel caravans crossed the Sahara to collect ivory and gold, animal skins, and ostrich feathers. They also imported slaves from central Africa.
The camel provided a perfect mount for the Tuareg, a pastoral Berber people who dominated much of the central Sahara. Before the arrival of Europeans, the raiding of caravans and travelers was an important means of acquiring goods. The Tuareg also traded with merchant caravans, but the number of these caravans declined as motor vehicles became available. In the late 20th century increasing urbanization and the occurrence of devastating droughts across the savannas bordering the southern Sahara led many Tuareg to abandon their traditional livelihoods of raising and herding livestock.
How People Live in the Sahara
Some of the people who live in the Sahara raise crops on irrigated land in an oasis. Others tend flocks of goats, sheep, and camels. These herders find grass for the stock along the desert's fringe or where sudden rains have fallen. They live in tents so they can move easily as soon as the grass is eaten in one place.
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Through the centuries palm-shaded oases have been ports of call for thirsty caravans. Here they made stops to rest, pasture, and water their camels. Many oases grew into fortified villages. The larger ones have a citylike appearance, with narrow, roofed-over streets and buildings several stories high.
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Modern Developments
The discovery of petroleum and natural gas reserves in Algeria attracted international interest in exploring and developing the Sahara. Soon other oil and natural gas fields were discovered in Egypt and Libya, and large deposits of such minerals as iron ore, copper, and manganese were found as well. Uranium is widely distributed in the Sahara and has been particularly important in Niger. (See also Algeria; Niger.)
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A severe drought in the late 1960s and early 1970s, caused by vastly increased numbers of livestock and their subsequent overgrazing of the land, devastated the region's economy. Agricultural programs implemented in the 1980s at the Sabha and Al-Kufrah oases in Libya produced good crops of wheat and fruits.
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