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  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-23.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-22.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-21.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-20.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-19.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-18.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-17.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-16.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-15.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-14.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-13.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-12.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-11.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-09.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-08.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-07.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-06.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-04.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-03.jpg
  • ALGERIA. SAHARA. The Ahaggar Mountains, also known as the Hoggar, are a highland region in central Sahara, home of Tuareg people. They are located about 1,500 km south of Algiers. The region is largely rocky desert and the highest peak is at 3,003 meters (Mount Tahat). Assekrem is a famous and often visited point where le Père de Foucauld lived in the summer of 1905. The main city nearby the Ahaggar is Tamanghasset, built in a desert valley.
    Sahara-01.jpg
  • LOCAL BOY IN A VILLAGE. MATOBO HILLS. ZIMBABWE.<br />
The Matobo Hills were designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2003. The area "exhibits a profusion of distinctive rock landforms rising above the granite shield that covers much of Zimbabwe". The national park is the oldest in Zimbabwe, established in 1926 as Rhodes Matopos National Park, a bequest from Cecil Rhodes. These areas were redesignated for settlement as part of a compromise between the colonial authorities and the local people, creating the Khumalo and Matobo Communal Lands.
    Sabana-41.jpg
  • LAKE VICTORIA. TANZANIA.<br />
The lake was first sighted by a European in 1858 when the British explorer John Hanning Speke reached its southern shore while on his journey with Richard Francis Burton to explore central Africa and locate the Great Lakes. Believing he had found the source of the Nile on seeing this vast expanse of open water for the first time, Speke named the lake after Queen Victoria. Burton, who had been recovering from illness at the time and resting further south on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, was outraged that Speke claimed to have proved his discovery to have been the true source of the Nile, which Burton regarded as still unsettled. A very public quarrel ensued, which not only sparked a great deal of intense debate within the scientific community of the day, but much interest by other explorers keen to either confirm or refute Speke's discovery.
    Sabana-39.jpg
  • YOUNG LIONS. OKAVANGO, BOTSWANA.<br />
The Okavango Delta, in Botswana, is the world's largest inland delta. It is formed where the Okavango River empties onto a swamp in an endorheic basin in the Kalahari Desert, where most of the water is lost to evaporation  and transpiration instead of draining into the sea. Each year approximately 11 cubic kilometres of water irrigate the 15,000 km² area and some flood-waters drain into Lake Ngami.
    Sabana-36.jpg
  • ELEPHANT. OKAVANGO, BOTSWANA.<br />
The Okavango Delta, in Botswana, is the world's largest inland delta. It is formed where the Okavango River empties onto a swamp in an endorheic basin in the Kalahari Desert, where most of the water is lost to evaporation  and transpiration instead of draining into the sea. Each year approximately 11 cubic kilometres of water irrigate the 15,000 km² area and some flood-waters drain into Lake Ngami.
    Sabana-35.jpg
  • HIPPO HUNTED IN SELOUS. TANZANIA.<br />
The Selous Game Reserve is one of the largest fauna reserves of the world, located in the south of Tanzania. It was named after Englishman Sir Frederick Selous, a famous big game hunter and early conservationist, who died at Beho Beho in this territory in 1917 while fighting against the Germans during World War I. The Selous was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982 due to the diversity of its wildlife and undisturbed nature.
    Sabana-33.jpg
  • HIMBAS. NAMIBIA.<br />
The Himba are an ethnic group of about 20,000 to 50,000 people living in northern Namibia, in the Kunene  region (formerly Kaokoland). They are a nomadic, pastoral people, closely related to the Herero, and speak Otjihimba, a dialect of the Herero language.
    Sabana-43.jpg
  • HIMBA. NAMIBIA.<br />
The Himba are an ethnic group of about 20,000 to 50,000 people living in northern Namibia, in the Kunene  region (formerly Kaokoland). They are a nomadic, pastoral people, closely related to the Herero, and speak Otjihimba, a dialect of the Herero language.
    Sabana-38.jpg
  • LAKE MANYARA NATIONAL PARK. ARUSHA, TANZANIA.<br />
The lake is a shallow freshwater lake in Tanzania, home of a diverse set of landscapes and wildlife.
    Sabana-29.jpg
  • KIVUKONI FISH MARKET. DAR ES SALAAM, TANZANIA.<br />
Though Dar es Salaam lost its official status as capital city to Dodoma in 1974, it remains the centre of the permanent central government bureaucracy and continues to serve as the capital for the surrounding Dar es Salaam Region.
    Sabana-28.jpg
  • View of Amsterdam ans Basilica of St. Nicholas from the Maritime Museum and Dutch East India Company (VOC) ship, Amsterdam, Netherlands, Europe
    Amsterdam-041.jpg
  • BAOBAB AROUND LAKE MANYARA NATIONAL PARK. ARUSHA, TANZANIA.<br />
The lake is a shallow freshwater lake in Tanzania, home of a diverse set of landscapes and wildlife.
    Sabana-32.jpg
  • HIMBA. NAMIBIA.<br />
The Himba are an ethnic group of about 20,000 to 50,000 people living in northern Namibia, in the Kunene  region (formerly Kaokoland). They are a nomadic, pastoral people, closely related to the Herero, and speak Otjihimba, a dialect of the Herero language.
    Sabana-31.jpg
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