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Experience the Deserts of Southern Africa - On Botswana Vacations and Namibia Vacations

Experience the Deserts of Southern Africa - On Botswana Vacations and Namibia Vacations
Cape Crusader - Wed Oct 07, 2009 @ 02:33PM
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Being a lover of African Safaris and the diverse landscapes of this beautiful continent, I was intrigued by this article I read recently about the Southern African deserts. Deserts might immediately be associated with harsh conditions and an unpleasant climate, but these African deserts must be explored at least once for the amazing wildlife and natural scenery they offer.

Africa - the second largest continent in the world is also home to the largest desert in the world—the Sahara. In fact there are three deserts on the continent—The Sahara, the Namib and the Kalahari. Together these three amazingly vast and diverse land masses cover a large portion of Africa.

 

Sahara desert

There are around 4 million people or so that dwell in the Sahara, mostly in Mauritania, Western Sahara, Algeria, Libya and Egypt. Additionally there is a fascinating and impressive array of animal life, include gerbil, jerboa, cape hare, desert hedgehog, barbary sheep, oryx, gazelle, deer, wild ass, baboon, hyena, jackal, sand fox, weasel and mongoose. The bird life includes more than 300 species. This vast life and diverse culture comes all in one desert.

 

The Namib Desert - The sand dunes of the Namib Desert are the highest dunes on Earth. At 50,000 kilometers, the Namib-Naukluft Park is the largest conservation area in Namibia and one of the largest in the world. Wind blows the thirsty Namib Desert sand into sharp ridges. Amazingly there are animals, insects and plants that reside in this beautiful, yet mostly inhospitable region of the world.

Namib desert

The Kalahari Desert - A geological wonder, the Kalahari Desert is part of the huge sand basin that reaches from the Orange River up to Angola, in the west to Namibia and in the east to Zimbabwe. The sand masses of wind-shaped sand that are so common in the Kalahari landscape were created by the erosion of soft stone formations. Thanks to vegetation in the area, the dunes were stabilized 10,000 to 20,000 years ago. Strangely enough, the grasses, thorny shrubs and Acacia trees can survive long drought periods of more than 10 months a year. Some scientists don’t consider the Kalahari a true desert because some parts of the Kalahari receive more than 10 inches of rain in a year. Animals that live in the region include brown hyena, lion, meerkat, several species of antelope, and many types of birds and reptiles.

 

Great deals on accommodation and general info Botswana Vacations

Great deals on accommodation and general info for Namibia Vacations

 

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