By Mustafa J. Salem, Mabrouk T. Busrewil and Khaled M. Oun.
Tripoli, 3 July 2103:
![Waw 1](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_ucwWCjq3-VEpxpoJ4E5HzccFeY0imSsc6WtXyNr2HzNuRIwVyHprad2AVw9qxKiCzC5F_sgEpmtInh2Sc8RQSQLuHBgLqaoJCy7D1JAxJFL_vQHXNkPwBzJufmbIIv1LlQ5iRL6KICLPtjI3tNYiTFxQQn=s0-d)
Figure
1. Panoramic view of Waw An-Namus, with the centre cone in the middle
of the large volcanic crater (caldera) formed by roof collapse above the
underlying magma chamber. The volcano is surrounded by brackish lakes
and vegetation including some date palms. The dark colour indicates the
accumulated tephra mantling the surrounding area (Photo courtesy of Toby Savage).
![Waw_an_Namus_2](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_vHv7vMcs7AGQt70rLOy7RFg6Ng1LxCaWd8ozrYYPbgBF9KRvaSGoGeJtQu_rsqdRIiUegJ5kl1l0UbMsm4fiBicQGlOTPqopUOQBJc6gozmvPyYijbdNSXPvhe7GCQK7Q5CHjslWd-XjlfSQ=s0-d)
Figure
2:Waw An-Namus volcano with the lakes on its western side. Notice the
white salt crust around the lakes indicating a reduced water supply in
recent times. Smaller lakes on the far side are brownish in colour (Photo courtesy of Toby Savage).
Waw An-Namus, one of the most beautiful scenes in the Libyan Sahara,
lies about 240 kilometres east of the oasis of Tmassah and about a 120
kilometres east of Waw Al-Kabir. This beautiful volcano is located at
the southern edge of the major Al-Haruj volcanic field (
see Figure 3 for its location).
![satellite image -Libya](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_shyQi6bWMbT_DllfbeGv1236wOd2_L_IsdqGUNvjCwLdK7D6yoU1v4TiP5Tngxvy1gdy8i1mmuVQIzhwOsyCrLyY4oQAbcn0nw-_3H_mNqCfjCeP-zKdNwVtZeRTvMa0IIBxFeE_Ecgdh-6FWZRMMKa_U=s0-d)
Figure
3: Satellite image showing location of Waw An-Namus in south-central
Libya, at the southern edge of the major Al Haruj volcanic field.
![600px-Waw_An_Namus_-_STS052](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uQDnBO2ry_Z1gZMQxDlA0iVn_FZ7h0WqKfEO5Fdh942t-DDaKNpFmSFeLSW-g1Ri6HLcKXQynw5Odn9Cf3vNN13fySwGOuByOeIOh9fZK5My937zvb8BzeFRKQ2z1aECzglxU47w4--F5wCkdIfRsMeBZ11e6SCg=s0-d)
Figure
4: Sketch map of the area of Waw An-Namus, indicating the location of
the volcano in relation to salt craters, mud streams and volcanic ash
debris. (Figure modified from Angelo Pesce,1966. Image –Space Shuttle 1992)
Due to the presence of fresh water at this remote volcano and
throughout the long history of desert caravan travel, Waw An-Namus was
always an important watering point for the caravans en route from Waw
Al-Kabir to Rebiana and Al Kufrah oases further southeast in Libya.
This scenic volcano remained unknown to the outside world until it
was reported by Karl Moritz von Beurmann (1862) and Gerard Rohlfs
(1881), although they never visited the volcano. Probably the first
European to visit this volcano and report it was a Frenchman, Laurent
Lapierre (1920). Lapierre was a military officer who was captured in
combat and taken in captivity to Kufra via Waw Al-Kabir and Waw
An-Namus, and so had the opportunity to report his adventure after his
release a few years later.
About eleven years later an Italian geologist, Ardito Desio, reached
Waw An-Namus during his famous long camel journey. On his geological
expedition, Desio also visited Jalu, Maradah, Waw Al-Kabir, Tmassah and
Kufra and published a geological description of the volcano for the
first time in 1935.
After the Second World War, several scientists visited the volcano,
including the geographer Nikolaus Benjamin Richter who undertook several
trips to the volcano and published a book on his journey to the area in
1960. He first visited Waw An-Namus during the war as a member of the
Sonderkommando Dora, the surveying group attached to Rommel’s
Deutsche Afrikakorps.
Since that time, and as the Libyan government began awarding
petroleum concessions in Libya, several geologists, geophysicists and
tourists have visited Waw An-Namus, either to explore the adjacent areas
or because they were attracted by descriptions of the volcano. In 1962,
the Petroleum Exploration Society of Libya (PESL) included a
reconnaissance flight over this volcano during its excursion to
Tibisti-Chad (
Figure 5).
![Waw al Namus 5](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_u6km9KdKA1N-tPQOfRRDPshWTUA8_5thiYXPITDLbPcL1f_mJoDq6sd6uMuUj9nyw67UdecuFTGj6ouEYY5c4Xk2s37RuUtVxmZtKDMwgKY299azPFtzx1c7MLxIxws__i0zuIjdr49nMo=s0-d)
Figure
5: Historic view of Waw An-Namus published by A. Pesce in 1966 as part
of a publication by the Petroleum Exploration Society of Libya. The
western lake appears in the foreground.
A few years later, in1966 Italian geologist Angelo Pesche published a concise geomorphologic description of the volcano.
In the last two decades, Waw An-Namus has became one of the main
destinations for most tourists who visit the Libyan desert in general
and the Fezzan region in particular.
The volcano
The surrounding terrain is very flat and, when approaching, the
volcano can only be recognised by the black ash-fall and lapilli tuff
deposits which surround the collapsed depression for a distance of about
10 kilometres, in stark contrast to the light-coloured sand and Eocene
carbonates that are exposed in the adjacent area surrounding it (
Figures 4 and 7).
Then unexpectedly, one arrives at the rim of the caldera and is
overwhelmed by the incredibly beautiful scene in the middle of the
desert; the caldera is about four kilomtres in diameter and about 100
metres deep. Surrounding the central volcanic cone, at the bottom of the
collapsed depression, there are three main brackish lakes and a few
smaller ones, some of which are brownish in colour. These are surrounded
by tall reeds (Phragmites) and scattered wild date palms, which add to
its beauty (
Figure 6).
A common enough phenomenon in the Sahara is the occurrence of
reasonably potable water close to, and at nearly the same elevation as,
salt lakes. This scarce source of water feeds the lakes and was also
used by travellers in the old days. Due to the lack of continuously
recorded observations, the magnitude of oscillations of the water level
is unknown. In earlier years, the level of the lakes appeared to be
somewhat stable, but in recent years it has been noticed that during the
summer months, when the rate of evaporation increases, some parts of
the western lakes dry out forming a white salt crust around the rim of
the lake, which may indicate a reduction in the amount of water feeding
the lakes (
Figure 2).
![TS DMP 09-511](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_s26wAUYIJrCkbh6vFJI9-xoFLU_93v204zEChFtFw4p3WGYJm-QKxORyqS5hdgrj24u_vlAYQagj5hzgCNkgH-YN--xyWIelWgGW8X-U8BXJEIxZ31Nf_L0aRN7WVJsPhm8vtXsNeCnXw=s0-d)
Figure 6: Close-up view of the centre cone in the background and tall reeds surrounding the lake in the foreground (Photo courtesy of Toby Savage)
No associated lava flows are present at the crater, but the volcano
itself is built almost entirely of ash and lapilli-sized cinders with a
greatly reduced number of volcanic bombs and blocks ejected around the
vent during Strombolian eruptions. It may represent a vent of explosive
eruption that rapidly transported a mixture of magma and accidentally
caught deep-seated lherzolite nodules without appreciable residence time
in a crustal magma chamber or from a reservoir at great depths.
Bordering the volcano on the west are a few salt craters with mud streams flowing from them in a northerly direction (
Figure 4).
Petrographic descriptions of the basalt from Waw An-Namus were
undertaken by Engel and Bausch (1962) on samples collected from the
volcano and show that the rock is characterized by xenocrysts of
forsterite and bronzite embeded in a fine-grained to cryptocrystalline
groundmass consisting of plagioclase microlites, olivines,
aegirine-augite granules and glass. Other geochemical and mineralogical
analyses for the volcano were also published, for the first time, by
M.T. Busrewil and M.J. Wadsworth in 1983. In their publication these
authors showed that the rocks are basanites with a strong alkaline
character. Moreover the authors indicated that the mineralogical
composition of lherzolite xenoliths from the volcano is broadly similar
to other comparable worldwide occurrences of xenoliths.
The mantle-derived nodules, up to fist size with individual olivine
granules as large as 5 mm in diameter, are prominent near the rim of the
caldera. Unfortunately, however, many of these semi-precious minerals
have already been picked up and removed by visitors to the volcano.
In 2012, Jacques-Marie Bardintzeff and others published a
comprehensive geochemical and mineralogical study about the volcano.
They dated the Waw An-Namus volcano for the first time indicating that
the age of the cone is 0.2 Ma (200,000 years old). The chemistry of the
analysed specimens was reported to be under–saturated foidite,
representing the most extreme compositions among Libyan and Tibestian
lavas. Compared to the other volcanic fields in Libya, the Waw An-Namus
volcano is believed to have been active during the effusion of the last
episode of Al Haruj, or less likely at much later time.
![capture5 - Copy](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_vn-_YIE1lj17e8USJ6fvEXinRixuQQldE55TioZU_qoQtH0BQ8K1cee2nq6x9GJ9TKiZvHWLoWwdMoVLEG3Jg-kSi05t4u9EyJG186gkYB2XfUJsOvs4VSsnEZkQooOk3i5ekLIRbLx1yk=s0-d)
Figure
7: Satellite image of Waw An-Namus showing various features of the
volcano. At the top right note two of the salt craters. Inside the
caldera the volcano records two repetitive episodes of growth and
destruction. The inner cone may represent a relatively late
manifestation of a major explosive eruption (phreatomagmatic) in the
area. The numerous vehicle tracks indicate that some visitors drive down
to the centre of the volcano, while others circle the rim of the
depression
The volcano as a tourist attraction
Most tourists who visit the Libyan desert
make sure to include in their itinerary a visit to Waw An-Namus even for
just a short time. Perhaps it is the beauty of the volcano with its
magnificent depression that is rich in foliage and with the salt lakes
of various colours that are the reason for its attraction and fame.
With the increasing number of visitors in the last 20 years, this
small ‘oasis’ has experienced negative impacts on the landscape as well
as on its rare fauna and flora.
Most tour operators insist on driving their clients down the
collapsed depression to picnic near the lakes and this has impacted not
only the soft surface of the volcano but also damaged its fragile
habitat. A few years ago, some careless visitors caused a fire in the
eastern foliage of the oasis, burning a large area of it including some
date palms (Figure 8).
It is imperative that vehicles be prevented from driving down the
caldera. Visitors should only be allowed to walk down, while their
vehicles wait on the rim.
In the very near future this volcano must be protected by law and visits to it will need to be regulated and closely controlled.
![Burnt Trees Waw an Namus](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_u3V1QOAbKTj0CbhiVIELIyn21O8LPqDPuTiCixzl-sloAPKQvxkIDzTFrjFSRCkVYSsYUdT44_VLvUWIQc4Sv8KvskEKYKwWnyszoX6kQvGqeKNaMIBarVjVSzzpMfQ_kqFigL5I4a_Uz2A0s0mzPWzIHmDvE=s0-d)
Figure
8: Eastern side of Waw An-Namus volcano with a small part of the
eastern lake in the foreground. Burned reeds and date palms can be seen
in the background. These rare flora were burned as a result of
negligence by some visitors, and the authorities need to prohibit the
lighting of any fires in this fragile area.
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