Erg Chech
Erg Chech
عرق شاش | |
---|---|
Country | Algeria and Mali |
Elevation | 307 m (1,007 ft) |
The Erg Chech (Arabic: عرق شاش), is a large erg in southwestern Algeria and northern Mali.
Geography
[edit]It is an almost uninhabited part of the greater Sahara Desert, an inhospitable desert region with long, extremely hot summers and short, very warm winters. The Erg Chech is a vast sandy expanse including compound and complex linear and star dunes.[1] The mean elevation of the Erg Chech is just above 300 m, slightly lower than the neighboring Erg Iguidi stretching to the north. The barren plain of the Tanezrouft is located to the southeast.
One of the localities of the commune of Akabli in Aoulef District, Adrar Province, Algeria, is named 'Erg Chech'.[2]
Meteorites
[edit]About 100 kilograms (220 lb) of meteorites were collected in the Chergach strewn field, located in the Erg Chech north of Taoudenni, during the fall and winter 2007.[3] Desert nomads reported that during daytime in July 2007 several detonations were heard over a wide area, a smoke cloud was seen and several stones fell from the sky, however no fireball was reported. Ouled Bleila was the finder of the first meteorites, but he died in October 2007 in a car accident on his way back from the trip to the Chergach strewn field. According to the Tuareg people, the elliptical strewn field stretches for more than 20 kilometres (12 mi).[3] In 2020 another meteorite was found. These rocks represent bits of meteorite Erg Chech 002, the oldest pieces of volcanic rock ever found, likely from an ancient protoplanet. These finds were used to confirm the Aluminuium-26 heterogeneity in the early solar nebula <Krestianinov et al. 2023>
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Erg Chech and Yeti Eglab Massif
- ^ "Décret n° 84-365, fixant la composition, la consistance et les limites territoriale des communes. Wilaya d'Adrar" (PDF) (in French). Journal officiel de la République Algérienne. 19 December 1984. p. 1473. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-01-15. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
- ^ a b The Meteoritical Bulletin, No. 94, September 2008