Scientists Are Turning SAHARA Green Again Using This GENIUS Idea

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • Can the Sahara turn green again? The possibility of the Sahara Desert transforming into a green landscape has intrigued scientists and sparked discussions. The Sahara Desert, known for its arid and desert-like conditions, has experienced fluctuations in its climate over geological timescales. In the past, there have been periods when the Sahara had a more humid climate and supported vegetation, known as the "Green Sahara", or Sahara Pluvial Periods, or African Humid Period.
    Factors such as changes in Earth's orbit, oceanic and atmospheric circulation, and moisture availability contribute to desert greening. Some studies suggest that human-induced climate change may lead to increased rainfall in the Sahara, potentially promoting vegetation growth. However, the process would be gradual, spanning long timescales. While there is ongoing scientific research and modeling to better understand the dynamics of desert ecosystems and climate change, predicting the future of the Sahara and whether it will turn green again remains uncertain.
    How Scientists Are Turning Sahara Green Again? Is This Our LAST Hope?
    $1 Trillion Project To Turn Sahara Desert Green Again: Will This Work?
    Can Scientists Really Turn the Sahara Green Again? What Could Go Wrong?
    Sahara Reborn: How Scientists Are Turning the Desert Green Again
    Why Scientists Are Turning the Sahara Green Again - And Why You Should Care
    Scientists Are Turning SAHARA Green Again Using This GENIUS Idea
    Chapters:
    00:00 Sahara Desert Was Once Lush Green
    00:56 What Went Wrong?
    01:44 Water In Sahara
    02:40 Sahara's Flora & Fauna
    Creative Director: Lakshay
    Editor: Deepak Paryani/Team 121 Creators (bit.ly/team121x)
    Presenter: Sidhart Viyapu (bit.ly/sidvoice)
    Script: Rajkumar Shukla
    Project Head: Rajkumar Shukla
    Production: World Of Science Media (theworldofscience.co)
    regreening deserts, turning Sahara green, turning Sahara into a forest, new discovery under Sahara desert, when will the Sahara desert be green again, can we make the Sahara green again, Sahara green wall, Sahara green project
    ©2023, World Of Science (WOS) Media. All Rights Reserved
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 59

  • @shikhargupta4063
    @shikhargupta4063 Před 9 měsíci +12

    Protect the existing forests AND turn the Sahara green!

  • @waterducklover6588
    @waterducklover6588 Před 5 měsíci +9

    "The Last Hour will not come till the land of Arabia reverts to meadows and rivers." Indeed the Prophet (ﷺ) said the truth!

    • @Mayan_88694
      @Mayan_88694 Před měsícem +1

      Not in the slightest, the Sahara desert is not part of Arabia

    • @Mayan_88694
      @Mayan_88694 Před měsícem +1

      Not at all, the Sahara desert isn’t part of the Arabian peninsula, abdool.

    • @haydraart7252
      @haydraart7252 Před měsícem +3

      @@Mayan_88694 the same concept applies to it also

  • @maxxa_satoru
    @maxxa_satoru Před 11 měsíci +9

    Please make a series on particle physics ❤

  • @louisebarnes1181
    @louisebarnes1181 Před měsícem

    I believe it would be important to make it a priority to raise the water table. Planting huge grids of desert grasses, which are watered by morning dew, would help raise the water table as they are hardy and have extensively long roots, which could eventually compost the sand. Trees could be planted within the protective grass walls. Trees will bring rain, as well as grasses, through evapotranspiration, and also raise the water table.

  • @leiflindergard8736
    @leiflindergard8736 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Seriously underrated, give this man exposure

  • @justanotherguy2824
    @justanotherguy2824 Před 2 měsíci

    The Sahara went through periods of dry desert and green savanna many times. As stated in this video, the driver of this impressive climate change is changing solar irradiation due to the Milankovich cycles. It may seem paradox, but HIGHER solar insulation is correlated with a green Sahara while lower irradiation turns the Sahara into a desert as we know it today.
    Climate models show two interesting things:
    1. Global Warming likely will intensify the African monsoon, and hence bring more rain to the Sahel region. So we may see some greening at the rim of today´s desert.
    2. Huge solar power plants in the Sahara would make the region darker and hence increase solar energy flow. This could have an effect similar to increased solar irridiation due to Milancovich cycles and create a green Sahara. Wind farms could also influence climate in the Sahara and support the greening.

  • @KirtaanaRathodR
    @KirtaanaRathodR Před 11 měsíci +5

    4:08 😂

  • @countryfacts_edits
    @countryfacts_edits Před 2 měsíci

    As a Libyan boy I want the Sahara desert to be green again… interested?
    I want to be a president when I grow up and I want to do something about this!
    Together from East and west,north and south! I am taking notes from you dear creator of this video…
    Thank you for the information
    Making rivers and pipelines is an amazing idea to make the desert green again same with solar panels and turbines!
    Other things as well..

  • @Artist-Solus
    @Artist-Solus Před 6 měsíci +2

    This would boost the rate of carbon dioxide reduction, but we must maintain other forests, and other plant life like algea, so we should aid in recovering coral reefs to increase rate of every piece of life underwater including algea

    • @TheWorldOfScienceCo
      @TheWorldOfScienceCo  Před 6 měsíci

      Thank you for your insightful comment! I completely agree that it's important to maintain other ecosystems like forests and algae as well. Coral reefs play a vital role in the underwater ecosystem, and their recovery would definitely contribute to the overall rate of carbon dioxide reduction.

    • @Artist-Solus
      @Artist-Solus Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@TheWorldOfScienceCo we should also maintain other species that are important to maintaining other species, like for example Mangroves, the problem in modern society is greed, most of the higher class wouldn't want to help, but someone like Mr.Beast is a true good person, we need more higher class people like him

    • @TheWorldOfScienceCo
      @TheWorldOfScienceCo  Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah, Mr. Beast is a true hero!

  • @coreywiley3981
    @coreywiley3981 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Turn some of it green... like put in each desert country a singular giant 300-mile circumference round forest in the middle of each of the following Libya, Chad, Algeria, Egypt, Western Sahara, Niger, Mauritania). In the middle, of each 300 mile circumference forest have a 50-mile circumference lake and constantly pipe in water from the Atlantic, or Red Sea, or Mediterranean. On the outskirts of the forest, have solar panels to collect energy and use it to desalinize the water. Fill and maintain the central lake with fresh water.
    Use large flying Artificial Intelligent robot drones powered by solar panels to daily fill up with water in the lake and drop it all throughout the forest to keep it wet. Station them at different points around the central lcircular lake so they can each have a certain part of the forrest to water. Also, drop a large variety of seeds of wild and local native trees and flora to maintain growth. The rest of the country could have agricultural spots dot the desert where water can be piped in for food production but let the rest remain mostly desert to not disrupt the ecology too much and find a balance. This way, every country in the Sahara would have a huge forest in the center of the country for recreation and beauty and wild animal refuge and then also agriculture in areas outside the forest zones as well as the natural desert throughout the rest of the country.
    edit: perhaps have concentric lakes throughout the 300 mile circumference forrest so that the drones can water a more local area without haveing to go far to fill up their water tanks

  • @halnelson5936
    @halnelson5936 Před 3 měsíci

    We should at first generalise and supporting the desert vegetation and plant mediterranean species around water places

  • @ChonkyChonker
    @ChonkyChonker Před 22 dny +1

    If you turn the Sahara green again the only thing i would say is RIP Amazon Rainforest

    • @desiaadmi9539
      @desiaadmi9539 Před 10 dny

      Same thing I was expecting . The sand of Sahara brings rain in Amazon.

  • @TheWorldOfScienceCo
    @TheWorldOfScienceCo  Před 11 měsíci +5

    Do You Think Turning the Sahara Green Again Could Actually Be a Bad Idea? 🤔

    • @wakil_ahmad
      @wakil_ahmad Před 11 měsíci +1

      Yes

    • @leiflindergard8736
      @leiflindergard8736 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Seems like a complete waste of energy and resources

    • @xavieracuna7029
      @xavieracuna7029 Před 11 měsíci

      I think it would be a good idea, but there seems to be a relationship between the Saharan Desert and the Amazon Rainforest. This is because every year millions of tons of nutrient rich dust or sand travels across the Atlantic ocean to supply the Amazon Rainforest with phosphorus and other vital fertilizers into Amazon soil. I kind of want it to happen, yet the relationship between the Desert and Forest seems to be already ideal. This being done could make things better for the Sahara, yet worse for the Amazon maybe even creating further risks. I may be wrong, but would like to put this into consideration for the possibility of affecting things like the Amazon in a worse way, ending the cycle.

  • @Wolffur
    @Wolffur Před 7 měsíci

    Considering that plants consume CO2 this idea might be a good way to combat climate change. Maybe we could use salt tolerant plants rather than desalination? At least at first, as desalination is both expensive and energy intensive.

  • @CUBETechie
    @CUBETechie Před 10 měsíci

    What would it do to South America?
    And what would be Done with the brine? Could it be use part for sodium ion battery and the other Part to make Saltblocks for I don't know build Material?

  • @peacemaker1
    @peacemaker1 Před 5 měsíci

    How about the increased albedo if you install solar panels? How are you going to deal with the supplementary heat absorbed by the sun?!

  • @nunoalexandre6408
    @nunoalexandre6408 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Love it!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Naayli
    @Naayli Před 23 dny

    The Arabian Sahara to the Atlantic Ocean have the same future

  • @tlst94
    @tlst94 Před 2 měsíci

    Terraform all deserts around the planet. Including Western-USA, parts of Michigan, China's Gobi Desert, Australia, and Japan's Tottori prefecture.

  • @SuhasNaikOfficial
    @SuhasNaikOfficial Před 11 měsíci

    💚💚

  • @lucijanpraprotnik
    @lucijanpraprotnik Před měsícem

    I really wish the Sahara desert became green as soon as possible!!!!!! The same thing belongs to another world deserts as well!!

  • @spacetv2168
    @spacetv2168 Před 11 měsíci +1

    4:19

  • @huntedsnake
    @huntedsnake Před 4 měsíci

    But first we should find another desert for camels and other animals who live in Sahara but forests are good so maybe its a good idea to turn Sahara green. We should also protect the ice caps and the amazon rainforest.

    • @nikolas_1982
      @nikolas_1982 Před 2 měsíci

      Camels don't eat sand, you know...

  • @user-ud1te2ys4n
    @user-ud1te2ys4n Před 3 měsíci

    政府よ、この地にトラクターとショベルカーと散水車を導入して植林活動に取り掛かって下さい‼️

  • @Hadjero
    @Hadjero Před 16 dny

    The amazon would turn into a sahara

  • @Qeswara
    @Qeswara Před 10 měsíci +4

    Yes, I would like to turn deserts into forests.

  • @maxfactor4209
    @maxfactor4209 Před měsícem

    Lol.. the top soil takes thousands of years to form...

  • @mtbmichal
    @mtbmichal Před 6 měsíci

    Poor research about actual technologies and working scientific programs...

    • @TheWorldOfScienceCo
      @TheWorldOfScienceCo  Před 6 měsíci +1

      Would love to know more, what did we miss? That’ll help us do better in our next videos. Thanks!

  • @nchurmdazz
    @nchurmdazz Před 7 měsíci +1

    Right? Right? 😹

  • @arnokosterman231
    @arnokosterman231 Před 11 měsíci

    When we plant trees every where jad do not chaince our conditions ophone the thentional diverentional directive❤🙏🎁🙏💜
    The order of magnetude is to low
    Total colective behavieures towart the amount of alchimation of oxigen 16 this is whay we olrady losing oxigen edmision and whay forest burn so easeyley latley❤ he

    • @arnokosterman231
      @arnokosterman231 Před 11 měsíci

      When we start correcting led stop chamtrailing cleans space devree❤
      And put here and there trees with cows sheaps and other animals so there shit can be reprogrammed as the new particle behavieures do to the mitras inbetween the treeroods❤😂❤
      We don't need million dollar project's to kill the rest❤
      We neet oll to work togheter in to the for men new understandings.for cosmic sence the olders understanding ontil the latest understanding in existance of existance❤
      Tace out concreate walk pads replace it with honigrad our but the frond door on the 2xond floor and make walk pads in the air❤ so aircohesion can go around it to kis the ground cohesion again❤

    • @sunnyBLR
      @sunnyBLR Před 10 měsíci +1

      What language is this?

    • @arnokosterman231
      @arnokosterman231 Před 10 měsíci

      Dislectick and multydimentional💜😋💜

    • @arnokosterman231
      @arnokosterman231 Před 10 měsíci

      czcams.com/play/PLACc6sKDQBmEEkhD_zaBFw6Qgm7EyOHjG.html
      Injoy beïng

    • @arnokosterman231
      @arnokosterman231 Před 10 měsíci

      Jad see it like this where in creation do we talk human languids onley here.
      Jad every where cosmic understandings are the same so every where we talk this way naturaly🎁

  • @mphil3051
    @mphil3051 Před 8 měsíci +1

    The rising CO2 is excellent for plant growth and will help turn the earth more green. Please don't tell climate activists this because they will have a Liberal
    fit. Lol

    • @TelPhi_
      @TelPhi_ Před 7 měsíci

      Aside from incredibly cringe and childish second part of your comment, that's only partially true. Your comment misses all the nuance of the subject, and overall the negative impacts of this far outweigh the benefits for plants. Do more research on this.
      I wish I could explain it here in greater detail but modern CZcams frequently hides replies where people are arguing on any subject, for some reason.