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Kebili
Oasis, Nefzaoua, TUNISIA

Kebili is the principal oasis of
Nefzaoua, in southern Tunisia.
Surrounded by
sand, this fertile zone is
irrigated, like all oases, by an
outpouring of the ground water which
gives birth to many springs.
Motor pumps used
to exploit ground water enabled
farmers to expand and multiply
irrigated areas, transforming the
pre-desert savannah into a modern
agricultural space.
But the shallow
ground water supplies quickly ran
dry, and when deeper layers are
drilled, they in turn also ran dry.
The dash ahead,
or rather down, will soon come to an
end.
What has been
overlooked is that some water
supplies are nonrenewable.
It is not so much
a matter of the desert advancing as
the savannah is being degraded by
human activity.
The abandoned
areas are invaded by small sand
dunes driven by the wind.
Gradually the
dunes link up, like moth-holes in a
garment, until there is nothing left
but desert.
Natural and human
causes thus join together in
advancing the Sahara.
In the Sahel, to
the south, similar activities
produce similar effects.
Published by:
http://unfccc.int/secretariat/art_gallery/items/3357.php
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