ecoworldly.com— The two tribes lived there in a plum lakeside community when the Sahara Desert, as we know it, was a lush, green country, but were separated by effects of climate change over a time line of 1,000 years.
Aug 29, 2008View in Crawl 4
I wonder what would have happened if the Sahara never became the Sahara (desert). I'm imagining the people gradually moved when the area dried, eventually some moved to the north east part of the African continent and found water; a river. Staying there near the water source they developed into the Egyptian culture, influencing history in many ways. If their ancestors stayed in the Sahara region I wonder how different history would be.
Closed AccountAug 30, 2008
If only those ignorant humans had used renewable energy instead of fossil fuels the Sahara would still be lush & green. Damn Climate Change!
dhughesAug 30, 2008
I wonder what would have happened if the Sahara never became the Sahara (desert). I'm imagining the people gradually moved when the area dried, eventually some moved to the north east part of the African continent and found water; a river. Staying there near the water source they developed into the Egyptian culture, influencing history in many ways. If their ancestors stayed in the Sahara region I wonder how different history would be.
Closed AccountAug 30, 2008
Both of these tribes were already sick and tired of hearing about iPhones and The Dark Knight weeks before being discovered.
imjgaltstillAug 30, 2008
What about the ho-de-dos or the monbaks?
robotbuddhaAug 31, 2008
I think you're getting scientists and pop-sci reporters mixed up.