Jump to content

Tagant Plateau

Coordinates: 18°28′09″N 11°03′08″W / 18.4692°N 11.0522°W / 18.4692; -11.0522
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Emirate of Tagant)
Tagant Plateau
الهضبة تكانت
Natural region
Landscape of the Tagant region in Djouk
Landscape of the Tagant region in Djouk
Location of the Tagant plateau in Mauritania
Location of the Tagant plateau in Mauritania
CountryMauritania
Elevation
400 m (1,300 ft)

The Tagant Plateau is located in eastern Mauritania, forming a stony part of the Sahara Desert. The Tagant Region, a national administrative division, is named after the plateau.

Geography

[edit]

Some towns are located at the foot of the Tagant Plateau's slopes, which form cliffs in some places. Among these areas are Tichit, Moudjéria and Rachid. Tidjikdja lies on the Tagant itself. The Assaba Massif, where Late Ordovician glacial formations have been identified, is a southward prolongation of the Tagant Plateau.[1] The Aoukar, the dry basin of a former lake lies beyond the southern escarpments of the Tagant Plateau.[2]

History

[edit]

Beginning in mid-17th century, migrants from the Adrar Plateau region moved in and displaced the native population of the Tagant Plateau, the Toucouleur people, who now inhabit Futa Toro along the Senegal river.[3]: 17, 50 

The Tartega Gueltas oasis is one of the few wetlands in the region where there were still desert crocodiles in 1976.[4] The population was reported to be extinct in 1996,[5] but as of 2011 was still present, particularly in the Lake Gabou area.[6]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ M. J. Hambrey, W. B. Harland eds. Earth's Pre-Pleistocene Glacial Record. p. 90
  2. ^ Tichit - The living ghost of yesterday's glory
  3. ^ James L. A. Webb, Desert Frontier: Ecological and Economic Change Along the Western Sahel.
  4. ^ R. H. Hughes, J. S. Hughes, G. M. Bernacsek, A Directory of African Wetlands. p. 57
  5. ^ de Smet, Klaas (January 1998). "Status of the Nile crocodile in the Sahara desert". Hydrobiologia. 391 (1–3). SpringerLink: 81–86. doi:10.1023/A:1003592123079. Another relict population [of Nile crocodiles], in the Tagant hills of Mauretania, was found to be probably extinct in 1996.
  6. ^ Brito JC, Martínez-Freiría F, Sierra P, Sillero N, Tarroso P. Crocodiles in the Sahara desert: an update of distribution, habitats and population status for conservation planning in Mauritania. PLoS One. 2011 Feb 25;6(2):e14734. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0014734. PMID: 21364897; PMCID: PMC3045445.
[edit]

18°28′09″N 11°03′08″W / 18.4692°N 11.0522°W / 18.4692; -11.0522