The largest hot desert in the world - The Sahara
The Sahara (
Arabic:
الصحراء الكبرى, aṣ-ṣaḥrāʾ al-kubrā , 'the
Greatest Desert') is the largest hot desert in the world, and the world's third largest desert after
Antarctica and the Arctic.Its surface area of 9,400,
000 square kilometres (3,600,000 sq mi)—including the
Libyan Desert—is comparable to the respective land areas of
China or the
United States. The desert comprises much of the land found within
North Africa, excluding the fertile coastal region situated against the
Mediterranean Sea, the
Atlas Mountains of the Maghreb, and the
Nile Valley of
Egypt and
Sudan. The Sahara stretches from the
Red Sea in the east and the
Mediterranean in the north, to the
Atlantic Ocean in the west, where the landscape gradually transitions to a coastal plain. To the south, it is delimited by the Sahel, a belt of semi-arid tropical savanna around the
Niger River valley and Sudan
Region of
Sub-Saharan Africa. The Sahara can be divided into several regions, including the western
Sahara, the central
Ahaggar Mountains, the
Tibesti Mountains, the
Aïr Mountains, the
Ténéré desert, and the Libyan Desert. Its name is derived from the plural
Arabic language word for desert (صحارى ṣaḥārā [ˈsˤɑħɑːrɑː])
The Sahara covers large parts of
Algeria,
Chad, Egypt,
Libya,
Mali,
Mauritania,
Morocco,
Niger,
Western Sahara, Sudan and
Tunisia, extends over 9 million square kilometres (3,
500,000 sq mi) and it covers about 1⁄4 of the
African continent. If all areas with a mean annual precipitation of less than 250 mm were included, the Sahara would be over 11 million square kilometres (4,
200,000 sq mi) in area. It is one of three distinct physiographic provinces of the African massive physiographic division.
Most of the Sahara consists of rocky hamada; ergs (large areas covered with sand dunes) form only a minor part. Many of its sand dunes reach over
180 metres (590 ft) in height.The desert landforms of the Sahara are shaped by wind or by extremely rare rainfall and include sand dunes and dune fields or sand seas (erg), stone plateaus (hamada), gravel plains (reg), dry valleys (wadi), dry lakes (oued) and salt flats (shatt or chott).
Unusual landforms include the
Richat Structure in Mauritania.
Several deeply dissected mountains and mountain ranges, many volcanic, rise from the desert, including the Aïr Mountains, Ahaggar Mountains,
Saharan Atlas, Tibesti Mountains,
Adrar des Iforas, and the Red Sea hills. The highest peak in the Sahara is
Emi Koussi, a shield volcano in the
Tibesti range of northern Chad.
Most of the rivers and streams in the Sahara are seasonal or intermittent, the chief exception being the
Nile River, which crosses the desert from its origins in central
Africa to empty into the Mediterranean.
Underground aquifers sometimes reach the surface, forming oases, including the Bahariya,
Ghardaïa,
Timimoun,
Kufra, and Siwa.
The central part of the Sahara is hyperarid, with little to no 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 in wadis where moisture collects
. In the central, hyperarid part, there are many subdivisions of the great desert such as the
Tanezrouft, the
Ténéré, the Libyan Desert, the
Eastern Desert, the
Nubian Desert and others. These absolute desert regions are characterized by their extreme aridity, and some years can pass without any rainfall.
To the north, the Sahara skirts the Mediterranean Sea in Egypt and portions of Libya, but in
Cyrenaica and the Maghreb, the Sahara borders the
Mediterranean forest, woodland, and scrub ecoregions of northern Africa, all of which have a
Mediterranean climate characterized by hot summers and cool and rainy winters. According to the botanical criteria of
Frank White and geographer
Robert Capot-Rey,the northern limit of the Sahara corresponds to the northern limit of date palm cultivation and the southern limit of the range of esparto, a grass typical of the Mediterranean climate portion of the Maghreb and
Iberia. The northern limit also corresponds to the
100 mm (3.9 in) isohyet of annual precipitation.
To the south, the Sahara is bounded by the Sahel, a belt of dry tropical savanna with a summer rainy season that extends across Africa from east to west. The southern limit of the Sahara is indicated botanically by the southern limit of
Cornulaca monacantha (a drought-tolerant member of the Chenopodiaceae), or northern limit of
Cenchrus biflorus, a grass typical of the Sahel. According to climatic criteria, the southern limit of the Sahara corresponds to the
150 mm (5.9 in) isohyet of annual precipitation (this is a long-term average, since precipitation varies annually