The world's oldest desert boasting incredible sand dunes - and it's not the Sahara

Formed 80 million years ago, the world's oldest desert is found in southern Africa, stretching over 1,200 miles across the Atlantic coasts of several countries.

Panorama of Hot balloon flight over the Namibian red sand dunes

Formed 80 million years ago, the world's oldest desert is found in southern Africa. (Image: Getty)

Formed between 55 and 80 million years ago, the Namib is believed to be the world's oldest desert.It's located along the south-western Atlantic coast of south-western Africa.

The Sahara desert, by contrast, is thought to be just two to seven million years old.

With summer temperatures often reaching 45C and nights dipping to below freezing, it is described as one of the most inhospitable places on the planet.

It is also one of the driest places on earth. Meaning "an area where there is nothing" in the local Nama language, this Martian-like landscape of incredible sand dunes, mountains and gravel plains stretches some 31,274 square miles across Angola, Namibia and northwest South Africa.

The desert geology consists of sand seas near the coast, while gravel plains and scattered mountain outcrops make up the inland area.

Bizarre, almost perfectly round 'fairy circles' dot the landscape. (Image: Getty)

The sand dunes, some of which are 300 metres high and span 20 miles long, are the second-largest in the world after the Badain Jaran Desert dunes in China.

The bright orange dunes tower above a ghostly forest of dead camelthorn trees and bizarre, almost perfectly round, “fairy circles” that some believe were left by alien visitors. The local Himba people believe they are caused by spirits, and are footprints left by their god, Mukuru.

The Namib-Naukluft National Park, which extends over much of the desert, is the largest game reserve in Africa and one of the largest in the world. The prominent attraction is the Sossusvlei area, where high orange dunes surround vivid white salt pans, creating a fascinating landscape.

The Namib is almost completely uninhabited by humans, except for several small settlements and indigenous pastoral groups, including the Ovahimba in the north and the Topnaar Nama in the central region.

Zeila Shipwreck - Swakopmund, Namibia - Skeleton Coast

One of the most dangerous costal areas is a 310-mile expanse of shipwrecks and whale carcasses. (Image: Getty)

The most arid parts of the Namib receive an average of just two millimetres of rainfall a year, with some years receiving none at all. That being said, species such as oryx, springbok, cheetahs, hyena, ostriches and zebra have adapted to survive the harsh conditions. For example, the oryx can survive for weeks without drinking by eating water-rich foods like roots and tubers.

One of the most dangerous coastal areas of the desert is a 310-mile expanse of large dunes and rusting ship hulls along the Atlantic, known as the Skeleton Coast. It receives its name from the nay whale carcasses scattered on its shores as well as nearly 1,000 shipwrecks.

The coast is often blanketed in dense fogs, created by the upwelling of the Atlantic’s cold Benguela current, which clashes with the hot air from the interior of the Namib Desert. These fogs create dangerous navigating conditions for ships, and the local San people have called the region "the land God made in anger".

Yet the desert is nowhere near as hidden as it once was. Today, there are plenty of ways to explore the park’s iconic dunes such as horseback rides, 4x4 tours, helicopters, hot-air balloons, and trekking to the summit of some of its biggest dunes including Big Daddy, Dune 45 and Dune 7 (the tallest at approximately 388 metres).

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