Newsgather

Sahara

Stabil16 Meldungen13 QuellenZuletzt aktualisiert: 4 g önce

Neueste Meldungen

Des drones et des dromadaires : dans le désert de Mauritanie, les méharistes face aux terroristes islamistes
Welt
16.05.2026

Des drones et des dromadaires : dans le désert de Mauritanie, les méharistes face aux terroristes islamistes

REPORTAGE - Au cœur du Sahara, à la frontière d’un Mali en proie à l’avancée des islamistes sur la capitale Bamako, la Mauritanie a ressuscité une compagnie de méharistes. Ces soldats de la Garde nationale chevauchent des dromadaires pendant des semaines pour récolter du renseignement, creuser des puits et aider les populations les plus excentrées afin qu’elles ne tombent pas entre les mains des terroristes.

L
Le Figaro International
NACHRICHT
01.05.2026

Road trip au Maroc : 500 km sur la Méditerranée, de Tanger à Saïdia

GRAND REPORTAGE - Moins chantée que les rivages atlantiques, moins exotique que Marrakech ou le Sahara, la côte méditerranéenne déploie un ruban de 500 kilomètres, de Tanger à l’extrême est du pays. Un Nord farouche et minéral posté en embuscade entre ports de pêche, tours de guet et criques aux eaux turquoise. Seule façon de découvrir cette riviera, emprunter la nationale 16, l’une des plus belles routes du monde. En voiture !

L
Le Figaro Actualités
Conflict Over Iran Could Push 32 Million Into Poverty, UNDP Warns
In Entwicklung
Welt·30.04.2026KI-Zusammenfassung

Conflict Over Iran Could Push 32 Million Into Poverty, UNDP Warns

UNDP Head Alexander De Croo warned at a G7 development meeting in Paris that the conflict over Iran could push 32 million people into poverty across 160 countries. The study, conducted after six weeks of war, estimates at least $6 billion in subsidies for energy and food are needed to prevent worsening conditions, with sub-Saharan Africa, Bangladesh, and Cambodia particularly affected.

T
TASS
Malaria May Have Shaped Early Human Settlement in Sub-Saharan Africa
Wissenschaft
23.04.2026KI-Zusammenfassung

Malaria May Have Shaped Early Human Settlement in Sub-Saharan Africa

Scientists at Max Planck Institute and University of Cambridge have found evidence that malaria may have been a powerful force shaping early human settlement patterns across sub-Saharan Africa. Using climate models spanning 74,000 years, researchers discovered humans avoided malaria hotspots for tens of thousands of years. Around 15,000 years ago, a key genetic mutation (sickle cell) arose in West Africa, providing protection and allowing human expansion into previously avoided regions.

N
NPR News
Malaria May Have Shaped Early Human Settlement Patterns in Sub-Saharan Africa
Wissenschaft
23.04.2026KI-Zusammenfassung

Malaria May Have Shaped Early Human Settlement Patterns in Sub-Saharan Africa

New research published in Science Advances shows that mosquito-borne malaria may have been a powerful force shaping early human settlement patterns across sub-Saharan Africa. The study found that human populations avoided malaria hotspots for at least 74,000 years, with this pattern only breaking down around 15,000 years ago when a key genetic mutation—sickle cell anemia—arose in West Africa, providing protection against the disease and allowing expansion into previously avoided areas.

N
NPR News