Science. 1987 Jul 17;237(4812):298-300. doi: 10.1126/science.237.4812.298.
Field research into the climatic history and shifting of the East Saharan desert has furnished evidence that during Quaternary time the present extremely arid western part of Upper Nubia (northern Sudan)was temporarily linked to the Nile by way of a hitherto unknown 400 kilometer long tributary. From about 9500 to 4500 years ago, lower Wadi Howar flowed through an environment characterized by numerous ground water outlets and freshwater lakes. Savanna fauna and cattle-herders occupied this region, which today receives at most 25 millimeters of rainfall per year. At that period the southern edge of the eastern Sahara was some 500 kilometers further north than today and ground water resources were recharged for the last time.
对东撒哈拉沙漠的气候历史和变迁进行实地研究提供了证据,表明在第四纪时期,上努比亚(苏丹北部)目前极其干旱的西部曾经通过一条迄今未知的 400 公里长的支流与尼罗河暂时相连。大约在 9500 至 4500 年前,豪尔低地河流经一个以众多地下水出口和淡水湖为特征的环境。热带稀树草原动物群和牧民曾居住在这一地区,而如今该地区每年的降雨量最多只有 25 毫米。在那个时期,撒哈拉沙漠东部的最南端比今天向北推进了大约 500 公里,地下水资源也最后一次得到了补充。