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All Somalia Merka Red Dunes
AO Edited

Merka Red Dunes

A stark contrast between red sand dunes and the white sand beach immediately next to it can be seen along the southern Somali coast.

Jazeera, Somalia

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White sand dunes sit in front of red ones in southern Somalia.   DeAgostini/Getty Images
An area where the red sand and white sand have somewhat mixed.   CrabSauce / Atlas Obscura User
An uninterrupted view of the dunes.   CrabSauce / Atlas Obscura User
From the white sand beach, red sand can be seen on the other side of the road.   CrabSauce / Atlas Obscura User
View from the ocean, where the white sand and the red sand are both visible on the shore.   CrabSauce / Atlas Obscura User
The red dunes with a makeshift dwelling in the foreground.   CrabSauce / Atlas Obscura User
Image from space, where the red dunes next to the white beach can be seen in the upper right.   NASA
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The striking nature and relative rarity of red sand dunes means they're usually tourist attractions wherever they occur. Well known examples include the Red Sand near Riyadh in Saudi Arabia, Sossusvlei in Namibia, and the Mui Ne Red Sand Dunes in Vietnam. While the Merka red dune complex is practically unknown by comparison, it has a unique feature that sets it apart: red and white sands run side-by-side, in places overlapping, with one burying the other. Driving south from Mogadishu, you can see white sand on one side of you and red sand on the other.

Many different specific geological conditions had to come together in just the right way to create this landscape. To start, the city of Mogadishu is built over a layer of fossilized coral that flanks the coast, the remains of a reef that lived over 100,000 years ago. You can still walk on outcroppings of it in some places by the ocean. Coral is largely made of calcium carbonate, the same material that eggshells are made of, and it's this compound that gives the beach and coastal sand its white color. 

The red sand has a completely different origin. "Basement rock" is the term for the thickest and oldest part of the continental crust. It's usually located deep underground, but in some cases it can emerge on the surface. In southern Somalia, the basement rock spent tens of millions of years at or above the ground, where it could erode into small particles of silicates like quartz, which colored the sand red. Inland, this erosion has mostly come from rivers—and it just so happens that the Shebelle River runs very near and parallel to the coast.

The last piece of the puzzle is the wind. While the two sands were already close, it seems that in the past, the prevailing wind directions were exactly right to slowly push the two together. Due to their fragility, the key minerals in the white sand can break down during transport, so the red sand has been pushed towards the shore more than the white sand has been pushed inland. The final result just outside Mogadishu is that red dunes begin nearly immediately after a long white sand beach ends.

In most other countries, the Merka red dunes would probably have become well known to the world. Vietnam's red sand dunes are already famous for having a white sand dune counterpart "only" 15 miles (24 kilometers) away, allowing visitors to experience two different landscapes in the same day. The Merka dunes let visitors experience two different landscapes in the same minute. Due to violent conflict though, tourism to Somalia was long impossible and today remains minimal. Although some of the dunes are now officially visitable, they stretch for hundreds of kilometers and cross some unstable and dangerous areas, ensuring much of the sand stays off-limits. 

The upside of this has been the preservation of the dunes. More famous dunes have suffered serious degradation due to litter, constant foot traffic, and thrill-seekers on ATVs or motorbikes. The Merka red dunes aren't exactly untouched, since people have lived near them for thousands of years, but contact has been at more sustainable levels. Snail shells that are six or seven thousand years old can still be found undisturbed at or near the sand's surface. 

Whether it will stay like this though remains to be seen. Proposals have been put forward to mine the sand for valuable elements and minerals, or to use it for the glass industry. Sand is a surprisingly lucrative resource, to the point where the majority of African nations have suffered from illegal sand mining. Somalia seems to have avoided this thus far, but if stability continues to slowly increase, exploiting the country's natural resources will become more attractive. There is a potential future where the Merka dunes are destroyed before most people can enjoy them.

Related Tags

Martian Landscapes Geological Oddities Color Oceans Deserts Dunes

Know Before You Go

The easiest place to visit the dunes is near Jazeera beach, southwest of Mogadishu. Getting there from the city's airport involves passing through numerous layers of police and military checkpoints from various local, national, and international officials. If you are not Somali, you will need to hire a guide in advance, both for your own safety and to navigate the unusual militarized bureaucracy.

Community Contributors

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CrabSauce

Edited By

Michelle Cassidy

  • Michelle Cassidy

Published

November 20, 2024

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Sources
  • https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/tr/pdf/ADA464006.pdf
  • https://nairobiconvention.org/clearinghouse/node/399
  • Aduda, Levke, and Lina Bolf. "The Conflict Potential of Sand: Illegal Sand Mining on the African Continent." Environment and Security 2, no. 4 (2024): 548–567.
  • Angelucci, A., M. de Gennaro, M. A. de Magistris, and P. di Girolamo. "Economic Aspects of Red Sands from the Southern Coast of Somalia." International Geology Review 36, no. 9 (1994): 884–889.
  • Angelucci, Antonello, Maurizio de Gennaro, Maria Antonietta de Magistris, and Pio di Girolamo. "Mineralogical, Geochemical and Sedimentological Analysis on Recent and Quaternary Sands of the Littoral Region Between Mogadishu and Merka (Southern Somalia) and Their Economic Implication." Geologica Romana 31 (1995): 249–263.
  • Boyden, Patrick, Jennifer Weil-Accardo, Pierre Deschamps, Davide Oppo, and Alessio Rovere. "Last Interglacial Sea-Level Proxies in East Africa and the Western Indian Ocean." Earth System Science Data 13, no. 4 (2021): 1633–1651.
  • Carbone, Federico, and Giovanni Accordi. "The Indian Ocean Coast of Somalia." Marine Pollution Bulletin 41, nos. 1–6 (2000): 141–159.
  • Matteucci, R., G. Belluomini, and L. Manfra. "Late Holocene Environmental Change in the Coastal Southern Somalia Inferred from Achatina and Rhizoliths." Journal of African Earth Sciences 49, no. 3 (2007): 79–89.
  • Munro, Robert Neil, and F. Jane Madgwick. "Recent Landscape Change in Somalia Monitored Through the Use of Repeat Photography." In 'Landscapes and Landforms of the Horn of Africa: Eritrea, Djibouti, Somalia', edited by Paolo Billi, 313–392. World Geomorphological Landscapes [21]. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature Switzerland AG, 2022.
  • NASA Earth Observatory. "Mogadishu, Somalia." Image of the Day for June 21, 2020. https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/146868/mogadishu-somalia
  • van Onselen, V M, T-Y Lin, L P Vo, and Lam T H Nguyen. "Proposed Strategy for the Development of a Local Geopark at Mui Ne Red Sand Dunes, Phan Thiet, Vietnam - Based on Tourist Perceptions and Experience from Taiwan." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 964, 012022 (2022).
Merka Red Dunes
Jazeera
Somalia
1.979194, 45.199974

Explore the Destination Guide

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Somalia

Africa

Places 6
Stories 2

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of Somalia

Somalia

Africa

Places 6
Stories 2

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