Change looms for ancient Ethiopian salt trade
Siegfried Modola / Reuters
A
worker ties together slabs of salt extracted from the Danakil
Depression in northern Ethiopia April 22. Once the caravan find a
suitable place to mine salt, they extract, shape and pack as many salt
slabs as possible before starting their two-day journey to the town of
Berahile. The Danakil Depression in Ethiopia is one of the hottest and
harshest environments on earth, with an average annual temperature of 94
degrees Fahrenheit (34.4 Celsius). For centuries, merchants have
travelled there with caravans of camels to collect salt from the surface
of the vast desert basin. The mineral is extracted and shaped into
slabs, then loaded onto the animals before being transported back across
the desert so that it can be sold around the country.
Siegfried Modola / Reuters
A
man walks with his camels through the Danakil Depression, northern
Ethiopia April 22. Once the caravan find a suitable place to mine salt,
they extract, shape and pack as many salt slabs as possible before
starting their two-day journey to the town of Berahile. The Danakil
Depression in Ethiopia is one of the hottest and harshest environments
on earth, with an average annual temperature of 94 degrees Fahrenheit
(34.4 Celsius). For centuries, merchants have travelled there with
caravans of camels to collect salt from the surface of the vast desert
basin. The mineral is extracted and shaped into slabs, then loaded onto
the animals before being transported back across the desert so that it
can be sold around the country.
Reuters
A
man lifts slabs of salt onto a truck in the town of Berahile in Afar,
northern Ethiopia April 19. The Danakil Depression in Ethiopia is one of
the hottest and harshest environments on earth, with an average annual
temperature of 94 degrees Fahrenheit (34.4 Celsius). For centuries,
merchants have travelled there with caravans of camels to collect salt
from the surface of the vast desert basin. The mineral is extracted and
shaped into slabs, then loaded onto the animals before being transported
back across the desert so that it can be sold around the country.
Siegfried Modola / Reuters
A man walks on sulphur and mineral salt formations near Dallol in the Danakil Depression, northern Ethiopia on April 22.
Siegfried Modola / Reuters
A man prepares bars of salt to be sold in the main market of the city of Mekele, northern Ethiopia on April 24.
Now
51 and retired, he has passed his camels to his son to pursue this
centuries-old trade in "white gold" from the Danakil Depression, where
rain almost never falls and the average temperature is 94 degrees
Fahrenheit (34.4 Celsius).
No comments:
Post a Comment