Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

The Richat Structure

Tuesday, 19th July 2005 by Alex

The Richat Structure in central Mauritania is a stunning geological structure 50 kilometers across (Wikipedia entry). Once thought to be an impact crater, it is actually a sedimentary formation that has eroded flat over many eons. Apparently there’s a hotel smack-bang in the middle of it.

There are also several other similar structures in the Sahara, such as the Jebel Uwaynat (thumbnail #2) which was used to define the borders of Sudan, Egypt and Libya, and also the Brandberg Intrusion in Namibia.

Even though none of these features are in high-resolution, it’s well worth zooming in a bit, as they’re perhaps even more fascinating to look at closer up.

Richat Structure Jebel Uwaynat

Thanks to Pat Scaramuzza, Peter Nordstrom, GeMatt and Kai Huebner.

18 Responses to 'The Richat Structure'

  1. 1. Renee says:

    Absolutely stunning. I swear geography teachers the world over are on their knees thanking the google gods! Personally, I’ve wasted 3 hours tonight alone on google earth!

  2. 2. strayneuron says:

    amazing

  3. 3. Scott says:

    A desert polka party?

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  4. 4. FrankenPengie says:

    Posted over a month ago with different comments. If one posts anonymous does the post get tossed? WTF?

  5. 5. FrankenPengie says:

    Peter Nordstrom?! From Mercer Island?! You twit, I’ll sick that fat mobster kid from South Mercer on you! Steal MY post I tell ya…..!

  6. Google Sightseeing Admin
    6. Alex says:

    FrankenPengie, anonymous comments are just as likely to get posted. When I originally wrote this post, these were all the people who had submitted. Better luck next time ;-)

  7. 7. Lauri Kangas says:

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

    That’s a bit northwest from the second location. What in the world might that be? It’s clearly visible from quite far in space, and casts some sort of a blue trail towards southeast.

    I thought it would be some large lake of oil with oil-colored sand flying with the wind. But i guess it’s not. :)

  8. 8. Birdman of Malkatraz says:

    I’d say that was some kind of volcanic mineral - not oil - and then I just fould this:

    http://www.fjexpeditions.com/frameset/waunamus.htm

    It’s a volcano in Libya

  9. 9. OtterEven says:

    >A desert polka party?

    Looks like irrigation farming circles. A bundle of them.

    Weird to think that 12 thousand years ago or so, before the end of the last ice age, the Sahara was mostly green fields and grasslands - much like the central US today. I wonder what the Richat Structure must have looked like then?

    There have been some facinating ruins of cities and settlements found in the sahara, even canals, but they’re so hard to get to that excavation has been minimal. Having lived in the desert myself (Phoenix, AZ) I can understand not wanting to go about digging holes in the heat.

    Otter

  10. 10. FrankenPengie says:

    Alex, Thanx!

    The Sahara is clearly too full of nice suprises.

  11. 11. Rui says:

    About the polka party, [take a look here][1]

    [1]: http://www.galenfrysinger.com/man_made_river_libya.htm

  12. 12. Jé Pamonha says:

    I am brazilian, and i really like of the photos.
    the more impressionant thing that i found in this web site was the Egyto’s photos.
    very pretty there! :)

  13. 13. Werner Erasmus says:

    This should be in the Egypt section, not Namibia!

  14. 14. Jarno Holland says:

    There are similar structures at:

    26.00.00.00 N and 2.00.00.00 E

    These landforms share a same but less symmetrical structure with the now famous richat structure…

  15. 15. ibex says:

    Atlantis???

  16. 16. tanisha says:

    why is it blue…i see that some say mineral or lake? has any found any websites with proven info…this is a beautiful site

  17. 17. bothe says:

    Atlantis was located in an ocean wich at the time of the Greek was not navigable ?
    Could this really be the atlantic ? or the ocean described could have dried off and filled with sediment and sand; like the sahara where a whale fossil have been found near Egypt.

  18. 18. zeke7 says:

    I discovered this hole one day just panning my way across Africa. Turned on the GE Gallery layer, and behold, there were answers. Cool.

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