Desert exploration
Desert exploration is the deliberate and scientific exploration of deserts, the arid regions of the earth. It is only incidentally concerned with the culture and livelihood of native desert dwellers.
The nature of deserts ensures that the story of their exploration is filled with tragedy. Many expedition members met their deaths due to the harsh conditions. Unlike earlier naval exploration and later space exploration, there was little hope of financial reward, and desert expeditions were generally undertaken for scientific purposes, in search of earlier explorers who had vanished, or for the challenge alone.
The following sections list deserts around the world, and their explorers. Expeditions are listed by their leaders; details of other expedition members may be found via the links.
Africa
- Kalahari Desert
- Sahara Desert
- Michael Asher & Mariantonietta Peru - made the first known crossing of the Sahara from west to east, by camel and on foot, from Nouakchott, Mauretania, to Abu Simbel, Egypt, 1986–87, a distance of 4500 miles Ref: The Modern Explorers. Thames & Hudson. London 2013 Michael Asher lived for 3 years with the Kababish nomads in the Sudan.
- Heinrich Barth - crossed the Sahara during his travels in Africa and the Middle East during 1845-1847.
- James Richardson - explored the Sahara and Sudan he died in the notorious hamada (a stony desert) in the Western Sahara.
- Friedrich Gerhard Rohlfs - German geographer. First person the cross Africa north to south. Named a place Regenfeld near Dakhla Oasis in southern Egypt after experiencing a rare occurrence of desert rain.
- Karl Alfred von Zittel German palaeontologist who accompanied Rohlfs.
- Henri Duveyrier - He undertook a number of fossil-hunting explorations in the Sahara.
- Albert-Félix de Lapparent - Explorer of the northern and western parts of the Sahara.
- Victor Loche - first identified the Sand Cat (Felis margarita) while exploring the North Sahara.
- Joseph Ritchie - sent to find the course of the River Niger and the location of Timbuktu. He died in Murzuk.
- Helen Thayer - 20th Century walker and explorer.
- Jeremy Curl - youngest known European to walk across the Sahara from north to south. Explored areas of the Tanezrouft, Hoggar mountains and Adrar des Ifoghas, living with the indigenous Tuareg.
Asia
- Taklamakan Desert China - Charles Blackmore 1993
- Gobi Desert Mongolia
- Rub' al Khali or the Empty Quarter of the Arabian Peninsula:
- Bertram Thomas in 1931 and
- St. John Philby in 1932: first documented journeys by Westerners
- Wilfred Thesiger in 1946-50 crossed it several times and mapped large parts of it
- Youngho Nam in 2013 crossed on foot 1,000 km from "Salalah, Oman" to "Liwa, United Arab Emirates"
Australia
North America
See also