20130518

Beauty of a Desert


1. Taklamakan (Central Asia): a desert covered with snowfall

 
Taklamakan is one of the largest sandy deserts in the world, ranking 15th in size in a ranking of the world's largest non-polar deserts. It covers an area of 270,000 km2 (100,000 sq mi) of the Tarim Basin, 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) 
long and 400 kilometres (250 mi) wide. It is crossed at its northern and at its southern edges by two branches of 
the Silk Road as travelers sought to avoid the arid wasteland.
 
In 2008, China's biggest desert experienced its biggest snowfall and lowest temperature after 11 consecutive days 
of snow. Snow is rare in the desert that covered 337,600 square kilometers, never before had the whole desert 
been covered.
 
2. Lençóis Maranhenses (Brazil): a ‘desert' with lagoons

 
It seems incredible, but in a country that keeps around 30% of the fresh water and shelters the largest rain forest 
in the world, we can find a “desert”. Located in the State of Maranhão, on the north shore of Brazil, the Lençóis Maranhenses National Park is an area of about 300 square kilometers (155,000 ha) of blinding white dunes and deep 
blue lagoons, forming one of the most beautiful and unique places in the world. The dunes invade the continent 
over 50km (31 miles) from the cost, creating a landscape that reminds a white bed sheet, when seen from above.
 
But you may ask: -Lagoons?? You told me it was a desert… Yes, what defers this region from a desert is the amount 
of rain that drops over the dunes, creating ponds of crystal clear water on the depression between dunes. Despite 
its desert-like appearance, Lençóis Maranhenses records an annual rainfall of 1,600mm (i.e. 62.9 inches), 300 times 
more than in the Sahara. During the period of drought, the lagoons evaporate and become completely dried. After 
the rainy season, the lagoons are home of many species of fish, turtles and clams. The mystery in this story lies in 
the fact that when the lagoons fill up, life comes back, as if they had never left the place. One of the hypotheses 
to explain the phenomenon is that the eggs of the fish and crabs are maintained alive in the sand, exploding when 
rain comes back.
 
3. Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia): the world's largest salt desert

 
The Salar is one of the iconic images of Bolivia, a massive salt desert in the middle of the Altiplano. It is an 
expansive, virtually flat desert that reflects the sun in such a way as to create a mirror effect with the sky. 
There are several lakes in the desert with strange colours from the mineral deposits in the region.
 
Some 40,000 years ago, the area was part of Lake Minchin, a giant prehistoric lake. When the lake dried, it left 
behind two modern lakes, Poopó Lake and Uru Uru Lake, and two major salt deserts, Salar de Coipasa and the 
larger Uyuni. Uyuni is roughly 25 times the size of the Bonneville Salt Flats in the United States. It is estimated 
to contain 10 billion tons of salt, from which less than 25,000 tons is extracted annually.
 
4. Farafra (Egypt): the white desert

 
A main geographic attraction of Farafra is its White Desert (known as 'Sahara el Beyda,' with the word 'sahara' 
meaning a desert). The White Desert of Egypt is located 45 km (30 miles) north of Farafra. The desert has a 
white, cream color (it is truly white, in clear contrast with the yellow deserts elsewhere) and has massive 
chalk rock formations that have been created as a result of occasional sandstorms in the area.
 
5.  Atacama (Chile): the flourished desert

 
The Atacama Desert occupies the largest amount of the Chilean territory located north of the 29th parallel. 
The area located on the coast between Arica and Antofagasta appears in the Guinness Book of World Records 
as the driest place in the world. Nevertheless, to the south of the Tropic of Capricorn, the desert becomes kinder towards living beings. The coastal mists, "camanchacas", are more abundant south of Antofagasta and bring 
the humidity necessary for the maintenance of the coastal scenic vegetation. Many plants survive mainly because 
of the "camanchaca", and the harsh savings of water, in normal dry years, that causes them to delay important functions such as growth, to favor survival and reproduction.
 
6. Namib (Namibia): the only desert with elephants

 
South of Africa lies the Namib desert. which is less vast than the Sahara but just as impressive. It forms part of 
the Namib-Naukluft National Park with neighbouring Angola. The Sossusvlei sand dunes are the highest in the 
world, some towering at 300m high and if you are lucky enough, you can stumble across desert elephants-the 
Namib is the only desert in the world to have elephants. Apparently the oldest desert in the world, myriad species 
of plants and animals can only be found here. The Namib has fascinated geologists for years but it remains very 
little understood to this day. Off the coast, strong southerly winds with fogs and strong currents cause sailors 
to lose their way; the north coast has been named 'Skeleton Coast' due to the amount of shipwrecks found there, 
some of which can be found as much as 50m inland, as the desert slowly takes over the ocean as it 
moves westwards.
 
7. Simpson Desert (Australia): the red sand desert

 
Australia is home to four large deserts, popularized by Mad Max: Sturt's Stoney Desert, Tanami Desert, the Great 
Victoria Desert and the Simpson Desert, which is also known as 'The Big Red' due to the presence of dunes of red 
sand. The Simpson Desert is an erg which contains the world's longest parallel sand dunes. These north-south 
oriented dunes are static, held in position by vegetation. They vary in height from 3 metres in the west to around 
30 metres on the eastern side. The most famous dune, Nappanerica, or, more popularly, Big Red (named by Simpson Desert traveller Dennis Bartell), is 40 metres in height.
 
8. The Black Desert (Egypt): the desert with black stones

 
Located 100km northeast of the White desert, the Black Desert is a region of volcano-shaped mountains with 
large quantities of small black stones. The stones lie out across the orange-brown ground, so that it is not quite 
as black as many people may hope for. Especially after visiting the White Desert, which has formations that are 
really white, many will imagine a desert as dramatic as this. Climbing one of the many soft peeks, the view from 
the top is really nice, with similar peeks continuing on into the haze. The Black Desert is uninhabited.
 
9. Antarctica: world's driest and wettest desert

 
Antarctica is a land of extremes. It's not inhabited year round by humans because it's simply too freezing cold. 
In 1983 scientists recorded extreme cold temperatures as low as -129 Fahrenheit. It's also the wettest place on 
Earth, but simultaneously the driest. The reason it's the “wettest” is not because of rainfall; since Antarctica is 
covered by 98% ice, it's technically very wet. However since it's also the aforementioned coldest place in the world, 
it gets very little precipitation – less than 2 inches a year. Which makes Antarctica a desert. A brutally cold ice 
desert with a massive trench full of even more…ice. Three for the price of one!
 
10. Sahara (North Africa): world's largest desert

 
The Sahara, with a size of 8.6 million km², is the world's largest desert, covering large parts of North Africa. 
Around 4 million people live there. Its maximum length is 4,800 km, running from west to east, and up to 1,200 km 
from north to south. Sahara covers most of Mauritania, Western Sahara, Algeria, Libya, Egypt, Sudan, Chad, Niger 
and Mali, and touches Morocco and Tunisia.
 
Sahara is very dry but there is an annual rainfall in most regions, although just a few dozen millimetres.