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单词 sahara
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Sahara


Sahara

Sa·har·a

S0021100 (sə-hâr′ə, -hăr′ə, -hä′rə) A vast desert of northern Africa extending east from the Atlantic coast to the Red Sea and south from the Atlas Mountains and the Mediterranean Sea to the Sahel. About 5,000 to 10,000 years ago, the Sahara was a region of savanna vegetation and extensive surface water, most of which had disappeared by Roman times. Introduction of the camel (probably in the first century ad) led to occupation by nomadic tribes who moved from oasis to oasis in search of water.
Sa·har′an adj. & n.

Sahara

(səˈhɑːrə) n (Placename) a desert in N Africa, extending from the Atlantic to the Red Sea and from the Mediterranean to central Mali, Niger, Chad, and the Sudan: the largest desert in the world, occupying over a quarter of Africa; rises to over 3300 m (11 000 ft) in the central mountain system of the Ahaggar and Tibesti massifs; large reserves of iron ore, oil, and natural gas. Area: 9 100 000 sq km (3 500 000 sq miles). Average annual rainfall: less than 254 mm (10 in.). Highest recorded temperature: 58°C (136.4°F)

Sa•har•a

(səˈhær ə, -ˈhɛər ə, -ˈhɑr ə)

n. a desert in N Africa, extending from the Atlantic to the Nile valley. ab. 3,500,000 sq. mi. (9,065,000 sq. km). Sa•har′an, Sa•har′i•an, adj.
Thesaurus
Noun1.Sahara - the world's largest desert (3,500,000 square miles) in northern AfricaSahara - the world's largest desert (3,500,000 square miles) in northern AfricaSahara DesertLibyan Desert - the northeastern part of the Sahara Desert in Libya and Egypt and SudanAfrica - the second largest continent; located to the south of Europe and bordered to the west by the South Atlantic and to the east by the Indian OceanTuareg - a member of a nomadic Berber people of the Sahara
Translations
萨哈拉沙漠

Sahara

萨哈拉沙漠zhCN

Sahara


Sahara

(səhâr`ə) [Arab.,=desert], world's largest desert, c.3,500,000 sq mi (9,065,000 sq km), N Africa; the western part of a great arid zone that continues into SW Asia. Extending more than 3,000 mi (4,830 km), from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea, the Sahara is bounded on the N by the Atlas Mts., steppelands, and the Mediterranean Sea; it stretches south c.1,200 mi (1,930 km) to the SahelSahel
, name applied to the semiarid region of Africa between the Sahara to the north and the savannas to the south, extending from Senegal and Mauritania on the west, through Mali, N Burkina Faso, Niger, N Nigeria, and Chad, to Sudan and Eritrea on the east.
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, a steppe in W and central Africa that forms its southern border. The desert includes most of Western Sahara, Mauritania, Algeria, Niger, Libya, and Egypt; the southern portions of Morocco and Tunisia; and the northern portions of Senegal, Mali, Chad, and Sudan. The E Sahara is usually divided into three regions—the Libyan DesertLibyan Desert,
northeast part of the Sahara Desert, NE Africa, in SW Egypt, E Libya, and NW Sudan; called the Western Desert in Egypt. It is a region of sand dunes, stony plains, and rocky plateaus. There are few inhabitants and little traffic across it.
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, which extends west from the Nile valley through W Egypt and E Libya; the Arabian DesertArabian Desert
or Eastern Desert,
c.86,000 sq mi (222,740 sq km), E Egypt, bordered by the Nile valley in the west and the Red Sea and the Gulf of Suez in the east. It extends along most of Egypt's eastern border and merges into the Nubian Desert in the south.
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, or Eastern Desert, which lies between the Nile valley and the Red Sea in Egypt; and the Nubian DesertNubian Desert,
eastern region of the Sahara Desert, c.157,000 sq mi (407,000 sq km), NE Republic of Sudan, NE Africa, between the Nile and the Red Sea. The arid region, largely a sandstone plateau, has numerous wadis flowing toward (but never reaching) the Nile, whose great
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, which is in NE Sudan.

Regions of sand dunes (erg) occupy only about 15% of the Sahara; "stone deserts," consisting of plateaus of denuded rock (hammada) or areas of coarse gravel (reg), cover about 70% of the region; mountains, oases, and transition zones account for the remainder. Sparse vegetation is found in most parts of the Sahara, with the exception of the sand dune regions. High mountain massifs rise in the central regions; they are the Ahagger (Hoggar) in S Algeria, which rises to more than 9,000 ft (2,740 m); the Tibesti Massif in N Chad, which rises to more than 11,000 ft (3,350 m); and the Aïr Mountains (Azbine) in N Niger, which rise to more than 6,000 ft (1,830 m). The mountains are deeply dissected and were in the past infamous for the shelter they provided to marauders preying on desert traffic. From west to east the four principal land routes across the desert are from Colomb-Bechar to Dakar; from Colomb-Bechar to Gao and Timbuktu by way of Reganne; from Touggourt to Agadez and Kano by way of In-Salah; and from Tripoli to Ghat.

Climate

The Sahara has one of the harshest climates in the world. Located in the trade winds belt, the region is subject to winds that are frequently strong and that blow constantly from the northeast between a subtropical high-pressure cell and an equatorial low-pressure cell. As air moves downward from the high-pressure into the low-pressure cell, it becomes warmer and drier. The desiccating and dust-laden winds are sometimes felt north and south of the desert, where they are variously known as sirocco, khamsin, simoom, and harmattan. The northern slopes of the Atlas Mts. intercept most of the moisture from winds blowing inshore from the Mediterranean Sea.

Border zones on the north and south, where the desert merges with the steppe, receive about 10 in. (25 cm) of rain a year with some seasonal regularity, but over most of the region rainfall is sparser, with an average annual total of less than 5 in. (12.7 cm); rainfall is usually torrential when it occurs after long dry periods that sometimes last for years. The region's low relative humidity rarely exceeds 30% and is often in the 4% to 5% range.

Daytime temperatures are high, averaging 86&degF; (30&degC;) and often over 100&degF; (37.5&degC;). Heat loss is rapid at night, and the diurnal range can be as great as 70&degF; (38&degC;). Freezing temperatures are not uncommon at night from December to February.

Water and Other Resources

The Nile and Niger rivers, both fed by rains outside the desert, are the only permanent rivers in the region. Water is present at or just below the surface gravel in wadis (intermittent streams) that radiate from the mountain massifs, in scattered oases where the water table comes to the surface, and at greater depths in huge underground aquifers. The aquifers are believed to be filled with water dating from the Pleistocene epoch, when the Sahara was much wetter than it is today and had very large lakes. The more than 20 lakes (called chotts in the north) and areas of salt flats and boggy salt marshes are also considered relics from this pluvial period.

Important discoveries of minerals, oil, and gas have been made in the Sahara. There are huge oil and gas deposits in Algeria and Libya, but in most cases, inaccessibility has delayed exploitation. In searching for oil reserves, underground deposits of water also have been found. Extensive iron ore deposits are worked in the Fort Gouraud area of Mauritania. Salt is still mined, as in the past, at Taoudenni, Mali, and at Bilma, Niger, and is transported, as in the days of the great medieval kingdoms of W Africa, by camel caravans across the desert.

People

Two thirds of the Sahara's estimated 2 million inhabitants (excluding those in the Nile valley) are concentrated in oases where date palms, fruits, vegetables, grains, and other crops are produced under irrigation. Nomads, with herds of sheep and goats and with camels for transportation, predominate in drier areas and continue to use oases (including modern oases created by the drilling of wells), as in centuries past, for water, trade, and provisioning stops. The principal ethnic groups of the Sahara are the Tuareg (of Berber origin), who dominate the mountains of the central Sahara; the peoples of mixed Berber and Arab origin in W Sahara; and the Tibu (Tébu), who dominate the Tibesti Massif.

History

The Sahara has undergone a series of wet periods, the most recent occurring c.5,000–10,000 years ago; it was not until c.3000 B.C. that the Sahara transformed into its present arid state. There is dispute as to whether the desertification of the region has continued into historic time. Those who support this theory contend that increasing aridity is the reason for the recorded advance of desert conditions into areas under cultivation in Roman times in the north and more recently (since the late 1960s) in the south. Opponents of this view explain such changes as being the result of alterations in land-use practices and neglect of water-supply and irrigation systems.

The camel was introduced probably in the 1st cent. A.D. and facilitated occupation by nomads (first the Berbers, later the Arabs), who lived in interdependence with the oasis dwellers, providing protection against enemies in exchange for supplies of food and water. A profitable trans-Saharan trade in gold and slaves from W Africa, salt from the desert, and cloth and other products from the cities on the Mediterranean coast was carried on by the nomads. The first European explorers to travel in the Sahara were Friedrich Horneman in 1805 and Mungo Park in 1806. Some areas of the Sahara remain virtually unexplored, although a network of air and automobile routes now crosses the desert and links the major oases and mining areas.

Bibliography

See C. Kruger et al., Sahara (tr. 1969); M. Williams and H. Faure, ed., The Sahara and the Nile: Quarternary Environments and Prehistoric Occupation in Northern Africa (1980); J. Cloudsley-Thompson, ed., Key Environments: Sahara Desert (1984); E. Gautier, Sahara (1987).

Sahara

 

(from the Arabic sahra, “desert”), a desert in North Africa and the largest tropical desert in the world, occupying roughly one-quarter of the African continent.

The desert occupies southern Morocco and Tunisia, most of Algeria, Mauritania, Libya, and Egypt, and the northern parts of Mali, Niger, Chad, and the Sudan. It stretches for a maximum of 5,700 km from east to west and as much as 2,000 km from north to south in the middle. Various methods are used to determine the boundaries of the Sahara, including the isohyets for 100 mm and 200 mm, the boundary of fruit-bearing date palms in the north and other botanical characteristics in the south, and indexes of aridity. Some geographers consider the Nile Valley to be the eastern boundary of the Sahara. In view of these differences, estimates of the area of the Sahara vary from 6 to 8 million sq km.

Topography. The relief is dominated by plains with elevations of less than 500 m; along the Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts the plains lie below 200 m. Major uplifts are found only in the central Sahara, where the Ahaggar (Tahat, 3,003 m) and Tibesti (Emi Koussi, 3,415 m) highlands bear traces of active Neogene and Anthropogene volcanism (lava fields and geyser deposits in the Tibesti massif). The highlands are dissected by deep canyons and wadis, the dry beds of ancient and present-day streams. South of the Ahaggar and Tibesti highlands are the Iforas (to 728 m), Air (to 1,900 m), and Ennedi (to 1,310 m) plateaus. There are many nondraining basins, some of them lying below sea level. Among the largest are the Chott Melghir in the Algerian Sahara (26 m below sea level) and the al-Fayyum, Siwa, and Qattara (133 m below sea level) in the Libyan Desert.

The desert landscape is highly diversified. Some 70 percent of the Sahara is occupied by rocky deserts (hammadas), by gravel deserts, called regs in the Algerian Sahara and serirs in the Libyan Desert, by sandy deserts (ergs), and by flat saline plains known as sebkhas. The remainder of the area consists of mountain landscapes with rock and gravel deserts. Thick accumulations of sand covering some 2.2 million sq km are found in the depressions and major wadis. The largest are the Erg Iguidi, Erg Chech, the Great Western Erg, and the Great Eastern Erg. The sands of the ergs, rising in ridges, are stabilized to some extent by xerophytic vegetation. There are ridges with elevations of up to 200–300 m, as well as circular and star-shaped dunes. Shifting sands are found in the southern parts of the northern and northeastern Sahara, in the Idehan Ubari, Idehan Marzuq, Ténéré, and Libyan Desert.

Geological structure and minerals. Geologically, the Sahara constitutes the northwestern part of the African-Arabian Platform, whose Precambrian basement emerges in the Rigaibat, Ahaggar, Tibesti, and al-Uwaynat massifs and in the western projection of the Nubian-Arabian Shield. Together, the outcrops form the central Sahara uplift zone. To the north and south of this zone stretch the north Sahara and south Sahara subsidence zones, filled by Phanerozoic deposits.

Minerals include petroleum and gas, iron ore (Kediet Ijill), and copper ore (Akjoujt). The Precambrian basement contains deposits of gold, and ores of rare metals, tungsten, and uranium are associated with younger intrusions.

Climate. Excluding the north, which has a subtropical climate, the Sahara has a marked tropical desert climate, dry and hot. The climate is strongly influenced by the northeasterly trade winds that prevail over most of the Sahara throughout the year. The present arid climate has lasted roughly 10,000 years. During the Ice Age the climate was more humid, and the prehistoric population engaged not only in livestock raising and farming but also in hunting and even fishing, as shown by cliff drawings in various parts of the Sahara.

Air dryness (a relative humidity of 30–50 percent), an enormous moisture deficit, and a high rate of evaporation (potentially 2,500–6,000 mm) are characteristic everywhere but in the narrow coastal zones. The north Sahara receives most of the precipitation in winter and the south Sahara, in summer. The annual precipitation, 100–200 mm in the border regions, decreases to less than 50 mm over most of the Sahara plains and is normally less than 100 mm in the mountains. In the interior there may be no rain for several years in a row, although occasional downpours cause flash floods in the wadis and mudflows in the mountains. Abundant morning dew (condensation caused by low nighttime temperatures) is typical for most of the Sahara and promotes the formation of a surface dust crust. Snow falls for a short time in the high parts of the Ahaggar and Tibesti highlands almost every year.

High daytime temperatures and great daily and annual fluctuations in temperature are characteristic. Temperatures may reach 56°-58°C, almost the highest on earth, and the surface of the ground may heat up to 70°-80°C. The mean July temperature reaches 37.2°C at Adrar. Ground frosts occur almost everywhere during winter nights, and in the central mountains nighttime temperatures as low as - 18°C have been recorded. Long windy periods and dust (or sand) storms lasting many days are frequent, with the wind velocity increasing from 3–5 m per sec to 50 m per sec or more. The winds are locally called sirocco, khamsin, or simoom.

Rivers and lakes. With the exception of the Nile, there are no permanent streams flowing through the Sahara. After heavy rainfall the dry watercourses of the north Sahara are filled with water, as are the channels of the ancient river network spreading out from the Ahaggar and Tibesti highlands (Igharghar, Tafasaset, and Tamanrasset wadis). Small relict lakes have survived in the marginal regions of the Sahara and in the central mountains. They are somewhat swampy and often strongly mineralized.

The Sahara has large basins of groundwater, including artesian water, most of it occurring in continental Lower Cretaceous sandstones. The groundwater supports life in the oases, which are usually located in low-lying areas where there are springs or where it is easier to establish wells. The north Sahara is richest in groundwater. Here, the underground flow is more abundant, and there are more artesian wells with significant reserves. In the south Sahara groundwater is less abundant and lies deeper, and there is virtually no artesian water. Active drilling for water is under way in the Sahara, and the new basins of underground water that have been discovered are being used for water supply in the petroleum- and gas-producing regions. In the northern Sahara the newly discovered groundwater reserves are used for irrigation as well.

Soils and vegetation. The typical soils of most of the Sahara are the primitive soils of tropical deserts and semideserts (gravel, pebble, and sand), frequently saline. Limestone and gypsum crusts ranging in thickness from a few centimeters to 1–2 m are widespread. The vegetation belongs to the Holarctic floristic region and includes many Mediterranean species. There are roughly 1,200 species of higher plants, although an average of only 150 species are encountered over 1,000 sq km, about one-tenth the number found in Europe and one twenty-fifth the number found in the humid tropics.

Differences in the vegetative cover are governed by the Sahara’s position in two climatic zones and by characteristics of the relief and surface lithology (whether the area is a rocky, sandy, or other type of desert). Most of the vegetation consists of perennial drought-resistant grasses and shrubs with extensive and deep (up to 15–20 m) root systems, as well as ephemerals that appear after rainfall. The vegetation is extremely sparse everywhere, and the regs, hammadas, and parts of the sand accumulations are completely devoid of vegetation. The mountain regions, where relicts of Neogene flora have survived and where there are many endemic plants, are richer in vegetation. The most common trees and shrubs in the south Sahara are various species of acacia, tamarisk, Ephedra and Genista.

Almost everywhere the vegetation has been strongly affected by human activity—livestock grazing, the gathering of useful plants, and fuel extraction. As a result of the large-scale destruction of vegetation and the cultivation of light sandy soils, the shifting sands are advancing the oases. In 1974, Algeria launched the Green Wall Project, under which stone pines, eucalyptuses, and other trees were planted to block the advance of the sands over a 1,500-km stretch. In addition to dates, the principal crop, figs, olives, citrus and other fruit, and various vegetables are raised in the oases. Doum palms are grown in the southern oases.

Wildlife. The fauna belongs to the Holarctic and Ethiopian zoogeographic regions and includes some 4,000 species, most of them invertebrates. Roughly 40 percent of all the species are African endemics, although not more than 10–12 percent are Sahara species. The highlands of the central Sahara are isolated habitats for typical Sahara animals. Excluding birds, more than 50 percent of which are migratory, there are very few species in the drier regions, where the biomass of animals drops to 2 kilograms per hectare or less.

There are only about 60 species of mammals in the Sahara, among them the addax, the ungulate best adapted to long periods without water and now in danger of extinction, several species of gazelles, the mouflon (Ahaggar and Tibesti highlands), and one species of monkey (Air Plateau and Tibesti Highlands). Predators include fennecs, and, in the border regions, jackals, cheetahs, and hyenas. Common rodents are the gerbils and jerboas; lagomorphs are represented by the Sahara hare. Lizards (skinks, monitors) and snakes (horned vipers, cobras) are found everywhere in large numbers. Small crocodiles inhabit the relict lakes in the Ahaggar Highlands. Most Sahara animals are nocturnal.

Population. Excluding the densely populated regions of the Nile Valley and Delta, the Sahara has a population of roughly 3 million, most of whom live in the northern part of the Algerian Sahara, in the western and southern border regions of the Sahara, and in groups of oases (about two-thirds of the population), where the density reaches 1,000 persons per sq km or more. The present ethnic makeup of the Sahara population is diverse, with Berber-Arab peoples predominating. There are roughly 30,000 Tuareg, nomadic herders related to the Berbers, living in the Ahaggar Highlands and on the Air Plateau. The Negroid Tibbu inhabit the Tibesti Highlands. The chief cities are Touggourt, Ouargla, Laghouat, Touat, and Tidikelt in Algeria, al-Kufrah, Sabhah, Tazerbo, Jaghbub, and Marzuq in Libya, and Siwa, Dakhilah, al-Farafirah, and al-Bahriyah in Egypt.

Economy. The traditional occupations of the Sahara population are nomadic livestock raising, the gathering of wild plants and fruits, and farming in the oases. Dates are the principal crop, but grains and vegetables are also raised. The nomads and seminomads raise camels, sheep, and goats. Each spring they set out from the oases with their herds in search of summer pastures.

During the 1950’s and 1960’s the discovery and exploitation of major petroleum and natural gas deposits in the Algerian Sahara and in Libya fundamentally changed the economic significance of the Sahara. It became one of the world’s major petroleum-producing regions. Rock salt is extracted at Taoudenni in Mali, hard coal at Kenadsa in Algeria, iron ore at Kediet Ijill in Mauritania (9.3 million tons in 1972), copper ore at Akjoujt in Mauritania, and phosphorites at Bu Craa in the Western Sahara.

In addition to the pipelines that connect the petroleum and gas deposits with the Mediterranean ports in Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya, motor-vehicle and air transport are important. The Trans-Sahara Highway from Algeria to Niger (Agades) has an asphalt surface as far as Aïn Salah. A railroad connects Abadía with northern Algeria and Morocco. Touggourt is linked by rail with the Mediterranean coast, and ore is carried by rail from Ijil to the Atlantic coast.

REFERENCES

Petrov, M. P. Pustyni zemnogo shara. Leningrad, 1973.
Capot-Rey, R. Frantsuzskaia Sakhara. Moscow, 1958. (Translated from French.)
Sakhara: Sb. st. Moscow, 1971. (Translated from German.)
Silin-Bekchurin, A. I. Podzemnye vody Severnoi Afriki. Moscow, 1962.
Furon, R. Le Sahara: Géologie, ressources, minérales, 2nd ed. Paris, 1964.
Die Sahara und ihre Randgebiete, vols. 1–3. Munich, 1971–73.

M. B. GORNUNG

Sahara

vast north African desert. [Geography: EB, VIII: 768]See: Barrenness

Sahara

a desert in N Africa, extending from the Atlantic to the Red Sea and from the Mediterranean to central Mali, Niger, Chad, and the Sudan: the largest desert in the world, occupying over a quarter of Africa; rises to over 3300 m (11 000 ft.) in the central mountain system of the Ahaggar and Tibesti massifs; large reserves of iron ore, oil, and natural gas. Area: 9 100 000 sq. km (3 500 000 sq. miles). Average annual rainfall: less than 254 mm (10 in.). Highest recorded temperature: 58°C (136.4°F)

SAHARA


AcronymDefinition
SAHARASocial Aspects of HIV/AIDS Research Alliance
SAHARASouth Asian Helpline and Referral Agency (Artesia, CA)
SAHARASociety for Scientific Advancement of Hills & Rural Areas
SAHARASafety as High as Reasonably Achievable (nuclear safety principle)

Sahara


  • noun

Synonyms for Sahara

noun the world's largest desert (3,500,000 square miles) in northern Africa

Synonyms

  • Sahara Desert

Related Words

  • Libyan Desert
  • Africa
  • Tuareg
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