The Amazon and the Sahara
Two different parts of the world. Two different landscapes. Two different places. Can they ever be connected? Surprisingly, the answer is, yes!
The dry Sahara was the lifeblood for the vibrant and verdant Amazon. This is the story of a destiny that started long, long ago, when the Sahara was gushing with deep blue water.
Six thousand years ago, the Sahara Desert was nowhere near a desert that today takes up one tenth of Africa. It was a lake. Not just any lake, but the world’s largest freshwater lake. The Sahara is covered with ancient plankton. This plankton, which lies on the floor of the old lake, is called diatomite. It is extremely old, when an ocean existed in the region.
NASA’s Landsat 7 satellite is studying the composition of rocks from 400 miles above the Earth. It takes high resolution pictures of the Bodele Depression, where the diatomite is, in many different wavelengths of different light.