
Location of the Erg of Bilma

Modern Tourism in the Erg.

Dunes in the Erg of Bilma.
The 'Erg of Bilma' is a
Dune Sea (''
Erg'') in the
Ténéré desert region of the south central
Sahara. The Erg of Bilma stretches from
Fachi, east of the
Aïr Mountains in north central
Niger, east past the town of
Bilma, on to the
Chadian border. It surrounds on three sides the oasis of
Bilma, southernmost of a north south string of oasies of the
Kaouar rise.
The ancient
Bornu Empire to
Fezzan caravan routes had to cross the dunes if the erg south of Bilma as the last major obstacle before reaching the
sahel. While that traffic largely ceased after 1820, trade though the erg of Bilma continues from the
Lake Chad region and the
Termit Massif on a small scale.
[1]
Traditionally, the Erg of Bilma was crossed by the yearly
Tuareg '
Azalay' caravans, transporting salt and dates produced in the Kaouar west to
Agadez where they would meet the
Trans-Saharan trade routes.
Today these routes have been supplanted by truck traffic through the
Ténéré to the north of the dunes. The Erg of Bilma has become a tourist attraction, with short
camel caravans transporting tourists to its oases.
References
1. Jolijn Geels. Niger. Bradt London and Globe Pequot New York (2006). ISBN 1841621528.
★ Samuel Decalo. Historical Dictionary of Niger. Scarecrow Press, London and New Jersey (1979). ISBN 0810812290
External Links
★
Prof. Dr. R. Baumhauer at
The University of Trier's Geography center has produced a number of papers on the Geography and Paleogeography of the Erg of Bilma.
★
Surviving the Sahara : National Geographic, December 2002.