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A painting, thought to show a Garamantes war chariot, found in southern Algeria. Photograph: Robert Estall/Alamy

CAPTION

1 posted on 11/06/2011 4:30:36 PM PST by SunkenCiv
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To: SunkenCiv

Shows what I know: I thought Garamantes was an Italian wine.


3 posted on 11/06/2011 4:43:08 PM PST by ApplegateRanch ("Public service" does NOT mean servicing the people, like a bull among heifers.)
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To: SunkenCiv
When they had passed peak water, the Garamantes – the "very great nation" — were doomed to decline.

"peak water" ("peak oil"?) Interesting civilization (never heard of them). The hypothesis of their demise...I dunno. Thanks for posting, SunkenCiv.

History/education BUMP!

4 posted on 11/06/2011 4:44:45 PM PST by PGalt
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To: SunkenCiv
...But while Gaddafi dug down to build huge complex bunkers, the Garamantes mined fossil water with which to irrigate their crops...

GREED OVER LIBYAN SECRET TREASURE: BLUE GOLD excerpt: Gaddafi and the Neighborly issues.

Mubarak spoke at the 1996 Great Man-Made River Inaugural ceremony and stressed the regional importance of the project. Gaddafi called on Egyptian farmers to come and work in Libya, where there are only 4 million inhabitants at the time. Egypt’s population of 55 million is crowded in narrow bands along the Nile River and delta region.

In the 1970s, Qaddafi expelled many Egyptian families from Libya, but over the recent years the two countries have become close once again. There were plans to build a railway line to facilitate the two nations travel back and forth. There was also a standing commission plans between Sudan and Libya for integrating economic activity.

But even with that 1,800 miles of giant hydrological enterprise in operation, Libya still depends on foreign markets for three-quarters of its grain. To make his desert nation self-sufficient in food, Gaddafi made some long-term deals with nearby countries to grow food for Libya.

The Western African state of Mali has become dependent on Libya for aid and investment, funding its government buildings, hotels, and other high-profile infrastructure. Thus, a secret deal was struck between Mali’s president, Amadou Toumani Toure, and Libya’s Colonel Gaddafi became the solution to enhance Libyan food security by receiving 50 years worth of undisclosed rights, paid by the Libya Africa Portfolio Fund for Investment. Libyan-controlled organization called Malibya oversees the Libyan enterprise: A canal stretching 25 miles north from the River Niger to 250,000 acres of proposed irrigated land at the edge of the marshes, to divert large amounts of Niger River water for extensive irrigation upstream. It was dug in 2010 by Chinese contractors, who are now preparing the first 15,000 acres of fields.

The scale of the project is astounding. The director general of Malibya, Abdalilah Youssef, boasted in 2008 that the canal could supply up to 4 cubic kilometers of water a year to the enterprise’s fields of rice, tomatoes, and fodder crops for cattle. The current take for all other existing irrigation projects is 2.7 cubic kilometers a year, it grabs as much as 210 cubic meters a second, potentially more than doubling the amount of water taken from the river for irrigation.

Larger than Belgium, it is Africa’s second-largest floodplain and one of its most unique wetlands. Seen from space, it is an immense smudge of green and blue on the edge of the Sahara.

The Great Man-Made River of Libya.

The world’s biggest effort to reclaim deposits of fossil water is the Great Man-Made River in Libya, for which Gaddafi has spent $30 billion over the past three decades building for his people and given as a gift to the Third World without any financial or help from the USA, World Bank or IMF.

REPOSTED - SOURCE

6 posted on 11/06/2011 6:02:47 PM PST by Fred Nerks (FAIR DINKUM!)
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To: SunkenCiv

An ancient civilisation, lost for 1,500 years in the middle of the Sahara Desert, has been found and investigated by British archaeologists.

Research by the Universities of Leicester, Newcastle and Reading is revealing how a long-forgotten Saharan people made the desert bloom, built impressive cities and controlled an empire of 70,000 square miles.

Nearly all scholars had thought this ancient people, known as the Garamantes, had been little more than desert barbarians living in one small town, a couple of villages and scattered, nomadic encampments.

But the researchers, led by David Mattingly, an archaeologist at Leicester University, found the Garamantes had at least three big cities and 20other important settlements in the middle of the world’s largest desert.

Their investigations showed how the desert, where rainfall averages only half an inch each year, was successfully cultivated. A 3,000-mile network of underground irrigation canals was built by the Garamantes, which tapped into natural fossil water supplies laid down more than 40,000 years ago when rain last fell plentifully in the area...

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15 hundred years ago...sounds like islam came.

Foggara, underground irrigation channels constructed by the ancient Garamantian civilisation, taken from the escarpment above the town of Ubari. The lines on the ground surface are the spoil heaps from the excavation and maintenance of the foggara. Foggara enabled the Garamantes to thrive and pursue agriculture in this hyper arid region from around 500 BC to 500 AD.IMAGE

8 posted on 11/06/2011 7:01:16 PM PST by Fred Nerks (FAIR DINKUM!)
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