The Afar: The toughest people on earth?
(CNN)Living above a magma chamber is not without its hazards, and yet the Afar have done so for generations.
Nomadic
people from Djibouti, they have made the unforgiving landscapes at the
northern reaches of the Great Rift Valley their home, relying on the
same extreme elements that endanger their lives.
The
dangers they face are many: drought, volcanoes, and the ever-present
possibility that the ground beneath their feet may split open. One
commodity makes it worth it: salt.
End of an era?
Located
500 feet below sea level, Lake Assal -- or what remains of it -- is the
lowest point on the African continent. Lying at the foot on a volcanic
crater, it's also one of the saltiest lakes in the world.
Receding
water has left an expanse of crystal white salt that has become a
lifeline for the area's nomadic people. For centuries the Afar have dug
and sold the salt, first to Ethiopia and now increasingly to tourists,
says Hamadou Aleisse, who has harvested the plains since he was 15.
But Djibouti is in the midst of a major climatic and geological event.
"Climate
change is killing the nomads," argues geologist Abdourahman Omar Haga.
"If you have no rains, you have no grass. Your goats, they (will) die."
"Life is very difficult here because we have no water," says Aleisse. "But this is where I live, and I cannot go anywhere else."
One day even the salt may be gone.
The
Republic of Djibouti, already one of the most volatile places in the
world, sits at the meeting point of three of the earth's tectonic plates
-- and they're being pulled apart (albeit at a rate of two centimeters
per year). At one hotspot, magma sits just two miles below ground.
Seismic activity, Haga believes, could one day create a new ocean, washing away the salt plains.
"This area should be under the sea," he says. "If we have an earthquake now... this water is going there."
Hope springs (from the ground)
Earthquakes
might be beyond the control of scientists, but that doesn't mean
Djibouti's landscape cannot be harnessed. In fact, Haga believes the
harsh landscape could provide a sustainable future for the Afar nomads.
Where
the three tectonic plates -- the East Africa Rift, the Red Sea Rift and
the Gulf of Aden -- meet, fractures, fissures and volcanism occurs. The
only other country in the world with comparable geological conditions
is Iceland.
Seismic movement
creates fissures where lava gathers, heating the earth and the water
around it. Haga suggests this form of geothermal heat could change the
lives of the Afar forever.
"Geothermal
is very important," he explains. "It could be the base load of energy
for Djibouti... Solar energy (and) wind energy are temporary, but
geothermal is constant."
By tapping
into steam or hot water reservoirs under the ground, engineers can
generate electricity which could boost the Afar's long-term prospects.
"Without
energy there is no development," says the geologist. According to Haga,
Djibouti has enough areas of geothermal activity to power the entire
country.
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