Rare rain hits the Sahara desert in southern Morocco, causes flooding
This article is incomplete and has not been edited recently, and is considered abandoned. It is to be deleted on October 23 (9 days ago), if work on it does not resume. Please edit it so it becomes un-abandoned. If you feel that this article is ready to be reviewed by a peer reviewer, please add {{review}} to it. |
This article is incomplete and has not been edited recently, and is considered abandoned. It is to be deleted on October 23 (9 days ago), if work on it does not resume. Please edit it so it becomes un-abandoned. If you feel that this article is ready to be reviewed by a peer reviewer, please add {{review}} to it. |
This article has been assessed not ready for publication. When these things have been done, and the article is ready to be reviewed and fact-checked, Submit for review by changing the |
This article has been assessed not ready for publication. Please see the review comments on the collaboration page. {{tasks}} tag to {{review}} . |
Friday, October 11, 2024
In southern Morocco for first time in decades in the sand dunes of the desert, flooding took place. It was after heavy rains in August and September. On Tuesday satellite images from NASA showed Lake Iriqui in Iriqui National Park getting water for the first time in 50 years.
Local meteorological authorities released a statement on Tuesday saying the weather event was a "extratropical storm".
In Tagounite, a commune in Morocco there was 100m on one day in September. The Inter Tropical Front usually does not reach Morocco.
Sources
[edit]- "Rare floods in the Sahara desert" — SBS News, October 9, 2024
- "A rare rain in the Sahara Desert" — Aljazeera, October 8, 2024