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Appendix E - Flooding of the Sahara depressions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2009

Fereidoun Ghassemi
Affiliation:
Australian National University, Canberra
Ian White
Affiliation:
Australian National University, Canberra
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The idea of flooding the Sahara depressions goes back to the second half of the nineteenth century. The aim was to divert waters of the Mediterranean Sea into the Sahara depressions in Tunisia and Algeria via a canal. The hope was that filling these depressions would alter the climate of the area. The history of the scheme is described in a comprehensive publication by Letolle and Bendjoudi (1997). They describe the geography, geology, hydrology and the socio-economic conditions of the project area. The following brief description is based on their work.

There is a vast depression in the Sahara running from the west of Gabès on the Mediterranean coast of Tunisia to the south-east of Biskra, with a general downward slope of east to west (Figure E.1). Chott Melrhir and Chott Rharsa in the western part of this depression, with an area of about 8000 km2, were proposed for flooding. It was believed that this depression was once part of the ancient Bay of Triton. Herodotus (485–425 bc) and other historians of antiquity described its shores as being highly rich and fertile.

Martins (1864) described that the last of the Chotts in the east is only 16 km away from the sea. By breaking through the Gabès ridge, the basin of the Chotts could become an inland sea. Lavigne (1869) described his observations of the area as a journalist, and raised the possibility of creating an inland sea.

Type
Chapter
Information
Inter-Basin Water Transfer
Case Studies from Australia, United States, Canada, China and India
, pp. 379 - 383
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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References

Enger, L. (1984). A Three Dimensional Time-dependent Model for the Mesoscale: Some Last Results with a Preliminary Version. Uppsala, Sweden: Department of Meteorology, Uppsala University. Report 80.Google Scholar
Lavigne, G. (1869). Le precement de Gabès. La Revue Moderne 55: 322–355.Google Scholar
Letolle, R. and Bendjoudi, H. (1997). Histoires d'une Mer au Sahara: Utopies et Politiques. Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Martins, C. (1864). Tableau physique du Sahara oriental de la province de Constantine. Revue des Deux Mondes, pp. 295–322.Google Scholar
Pomel, A. (1872). Le Sahara, observations de géologie et de géographie physique et biologique, avec des aperçus sur l'Atlas et le Soudan, et discussion de l'hypothèse de la mer saharienne á l'époque préhistorique. Bull. Soc. Climatologique de l'Algérie 8: 133–265.Google Scholar
Roudaire, F. E. (1877). Rapport à Monsieur le Minister de l'Instruction Publique sur la Mission des Chotts. Paris: Challamel.Google Scholar
Verne, J. J. (1973). Jules Verne: A Biography by Jean Jules-Verne. Translated and adapted by Roger Greaves. London: Macdonald and Jane's.Google Scholar
Verne, J. (1978). L'Invasion de la Mer. Paris: Union General d'Edition.Google Scholar
Ward, E. (1962). Sahara Story. London: Robert Hale Limited.Google Scholar

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