Eye of Africa Atlantis – Wonderful Geological Phenomenon
Tauheed Ahmad Nawaz
This is also called The Eye of Africa A marvelous geological phenomenon in the Sahara Desert of Mauritania, a country in northern Africa, peers up in this satellite image. The Richat structure, as it is also recognized, very much resembles a bulls-eye peering out of the sand. The magnificent Eye of Africa Atlantis is 30 miles in diameter, so large in the featureless Sahara that the earliest space missions used it as a landmark.
This was well believed: that eye was formed by a meteor impact, but with the passage of time. It is believed to be the result of geological uplift that has been exposed over time by wind and water erosion. Therefore, different rates of erosion on the varying rock types have formed concentric ridges, and then further erosion-resistant rocks form from high ridges while the non-resistant rocks form valleys. A plateau of sedimentary rocks forms the darker regions surrounding the Richat structure, which is rough and stands 656 m above the surrounding sand.
Mauritania’s (the Kediet ej jill Mountain) highest peak is a magnetic mountain standing almost 3281 feet. It appears very composed in blue, a true natural magnetic substance. Whenever you’re flying over Mauritania or passing above Africa, you must pay a visit out the window and see if you can spot the Richat Structure.
It shouldn’t be too difficult The thing is, at 30 miles, a lot of scientists truly believed that the Eye of the Sahara was first spotted from space in the mid-’60s. The Richat Structure, or blue eye of Africa, is a prominent geological circular feature in the Sahara desert in Mauritania, near Ouadane. The local, apparent wealth of surface artifacts is the result of the concentration and mixing caused by deflation over multiple glacial-interglacial cycles.