HomeNewsTrendsThe Sahara Desert used to be a green savannah – new research explains why

The Sahara Desert used to be a green savannah – new research explains why

Every 21,000 years, the earth 'wobbles' on its axis, making summers warmer and monsoons stronger in the northern hemisphere. Scientists have found evidence that every 21,000 years for the last 8 million years, this wobble has caused 'greening' in the Sahara Desert.

December 24, 2023 / 18:23 IST
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Millennia-old rock art in Tassili N'Ajjer, Algeria, show a verdant Sahara, today the world’s largest hot desert. (Photo by Tomas Malik via Pexels)

By Edward Armstrong, University of Helsinki

Algeria’s Tassili N’Ajjer plateau is Africa’s largest national park. Among its vast sandstone formations is perhaps the world’s largest art museum. Over 15,000 etchings and paintings are exhibited there, some as much as 11,000 years old according to scientific dating techniques, representing a unique ethnological and climatological record of the region.

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Curiously, however, these images do not depict the arid, barren landscape that is present in the Tassili N'Ajjer today. Instead, they portray a vibrant savannah inhabited by elephants, giraffes, rhinos and hippos. This rock art is an important record of the past environmental conditions that prevailed in the Sahara, the world’s largest hot desert.

Dog in 7,000-10,000-year-old rock art, at Tassili n'Ajjer plateau of Algeria. (Photo by Alberto Bertelli via Wikimedia Commons 4.0)