Erg Iguidi Explained

Erg Iguidi
Native Name:عرق إقيدي
Settlement Type:Erg
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Algeria, Mali and Mauritania
Elevation M:410
Population Density Km2:auto

The Erg Iguidi (Arabic: عرق إقيدي), is a large erg in the area of Tindouf in southwestern Algeria, extending into northern Mali and Mauritania.[1]

Geography

The Erg Iguidi is a sandy desert with a clear pattern of narrow linear dunes stretching for a length of 400 km. Part of the greater Sahara, it is located in its northwestern region and is characterized by Harmattan withering winds. The highest point is 540 m.

Compared to the neighboring Erg Chech to the south, this erg is relatively humid. Groundwater is especially abundant towards the north-eastern edge of the Erg Iguidi.[2] There are patches of seasonal vegetation with grasses and shrubs and in the summer the desert is used as a pasturage area. The Erg Iguidi supports a population of slender-horned gazelle.[3]

See also

References

26.255°N -6.298°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Sahara Desert Ecoregion . 2014-08-17 . 2020-08-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200819010307/http://www.eosnap.com/tag/erg-iguidi/ . dead .
  2. Frank E. Trout. Morocco's Saharan Frontiers. p. 226
  3. David P. Mallon & Steven Charles Kingswoo eds. Antelopes: North Africa, the Middle East, and Asia p. 28