THE DESERT ( Acacus Mountains ) LIBYA
جبال أكاكوس أو تدرارت أكاكوس هي جبال صخرية تقع في جنوب غرب ليبيا وضمن الصحراء الكبرى، وأقرب مدينة إليها هي غات الأثرية.
The Acacus Mountains or Tadrart Akakus (Arabic: تدرارت أكاكوس / ALA-LC: Tadrārt Akākūs) form a mountain range in the desert of the Ghat District in western Libya, part of the Sahara. They are situated east of the city of Ghat, Libya and stretch north from the border with Algeria, about 100 kilometres (62 mi). The area has a particularly rich array of prehistoric rock art.
LIBYA (AKAKUS)
Viaggio in Libya nella regione dell'Akakus
Libya 1 Akakus
Documentary Libya Akakus
غات ليبيا GHAT LIBYA
غات مدينة تقع في صحراء الليبية الغربية على مشارف الحدود الليبية الجزائرية وتتبع المدينة بلدية غات وهي عاصمتها وبها مطار للرحلات الداخلية. سكان المدينة من الطوارق، اختلفت الأراء حول التسمية فمن الناس من قال أنها من الغيث أي أنها تغيث المسافر في الصحراء وتؤمن له الزاد والماء، ومنهم من قال أنها مسماة على اسم ولي صالح وهو غوث حيث كان يسكن المدينة وعندما مات سميت المدينة باسمه، ولا يزال قبره في المدينة القديمة بغات والتسمية التانية هي الأرجخ لدى سكان غات.
في المدينة قلعة تركية قديمة، وهي محاطة بجبال أكاكوس من الناحية الشرقية وبها عدد من القرى التابعة لها ومن الناحية الجنوبية منها وعلى بعد 100 كلم تقريبا توجد سلسلة جبال طاسيلي التي تحوي على أقدم النقوش الأثرية والتي تعود إلى سبعة آلاف سنة قبل الميلاد وتعتبر تلك المنطقة من أكبر المتاحف الطبيعية في هذا المجال. كانت المدينة قديما طريقا للقوافل التجارية وكانت مرتبطة بمدينة تنبكتو القاطنة في قلب الصحراء الكبرى ارتباطا وثيقا.
تصوير وتحرير...filmed and edited by
محمد سعد ....mohamed saad
انتاج ...Production 2016
طرابلس ليبيا..Tripoli, Libya
Copyright © mohamed saad muntser
Libya Desert
4x4 from Sabha to Ghat in south-west Libya, through the sand dunes and rocky outcrops of the Sahara
Libia 2007 Nalut Gadames Ghat Akakus....
mgfilmproduction viaggio in Libia in camper 27 Dicembre 17 Gennaio - traghetto Civitavecchia Tunisi- Nalut Gadames Germa Gat Akakus Ubari Leptis Magna Tripoli Sabrata
Trekking in the Akakus - desert Sahara in Libya
Trekking in the Akakus, the Libyan sahara desert (2006).
رحلة إلي صحراء أكاكوس Trip to Akakus Desert
توثيق لرحلة لصحراء أكاكوس قام بتنظيمها نادي أصدقاء ليبيا للسياحة في شهر نوفمبر 2016.
يسعني نادي أصدقاء ليبيا إلي إعادة الحياة لقطاع السياحة المتوقف في ليبيا منذ عام 2011 عن طريق تنشيط السياحة الداخلية, التي تساعد علي التقارب بين أفراد المجتمع الليبي وتعريفهم بمناطق الجذب السياحي التي يمتلكها البلد كما تساعد هذه الرحلات المنظمة إلي خلق فرص عمل لسكان المناطق النائية.
a documentation for a trip in the Libyan desert
Desert Ride - Libya
Riding in Libya somewhere between Tripoli and Ghat
Libya - Ubari
Libya - Ubari
AKAKUS
L'Akakus è un vasto museo rupestre situato nel massiccio a Est di Ghat. E' su queste distese rocciose che il colore steso dagli antichi artisti sahariani ha saputo conservarsi fino ai nostri giorni. Le pitture rupestri si trovano quasi tutte in ripari protetti dal sole e dalle tempeste di sabbia. Il latte costituiva la base della composizione del colore che ha resitito fino ad oggi dalla preistoria. Le foto sono state scattate da Luigi Bologna nel 2009.
مغامرة جبال أكاكوس بالصحراء الليبية ???????? ⛺️????
Ghat Libya ..غات صحراء ليبيا
صحراء ليبيا ..تراث غات
رحلة الي أكاكوس ليبيا Trip to Akakus Libya
حقائق ستذهلك عن صحراء ليبيا !!
شاهد كيف كانت صحراء ليبيا جنان وانهار
برجاء الاشتراك لدعم القناة وليصلكم كل محتوى جديد و مميز
libya
رحلة داخل الجنوب الليبي في بقعة داخل الصحراء تسمي ( ماغيدت ) شمال شرق غات
عبارة عن جبال صخرية بركانية داخل الكثبان الرملية
Libye 2: Akakous
landscape of the akakous desert in libya
vues panoramiques du plateau de l'akakous en libye
اكاكوس تادرارات
حلقة بسيطة تسلط الضوء على الاثار والخراب الذي حل بها في منطقة اكاكوس تادرارت
14,000-year-old rock art vandalised in lawless Sahara
(16 Feb 2018) LEADIN:
Ancient rock drawings in Libya have been damaged by graffiti and other vandalism.
The 14,000 year-old pictures in the Tadrart Acacus area are so important they are included in the UNESCO World Heritage List.
STORYLINE:
The golden sands of the Sahara stretch out towards the Acacus mountains in southwestern Libya.
The area is located near the ancient city of Ghat near the Algerian border. And in this strange landscape lie some of the country's greatest treasures.
Tourists crowd around the rock formations to get a peek at a window into ancient civilisations. Drawings - some up to 14,000 years old - decorate the stone. The depections of cattle and humans are a hint to the lives of people who lived in the Tadrart Acacus area long ago.
And they are so highly regarded, this place is on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
But tour guides are reporting worrying damage.
The rock art has been defaced by graffiti and tourists have sprayed the pictures with water to make them appear more clearly in photographs.
Names recently written in Arabic can be found alongside ancient drawings.
Tour guide Yahya Saleh is certain he knows who to blame for the vandalism.
No one enters here from other countries, only the Libyans. The Libyans are the ones who write on the effects, he says.
Our Libyan youth come here to hunt deer and then they write and scrawl their memories on the antiquities. These monuments are history, this is what the Libyans will live with, and they treat them this way?
He points to words etched inside a picture of livestock that he is sure was not here a year ago.
Libya descending into chaos following the uprising that toppled long-time dictator Moammar Gadhafi.
And looking after this art has not been a priority for a country beset with a myriad of other problems.
But Saleh warns the site must be preserved.
People do not know the value of this, he says.
The important thing to do is to put somebody to protect them, because if this issue persists, then they will be gone within two years.
Libya is like a huge, open-air museum of history because of its many archaeological sites - five are on the World Heritage List.
But the country has been ravaged by conflict and many of these precious places have been attacked, shrines have been destroyed, sites looted and antiquities stolen.
But the awe-inspiring landscape of the Tadrart Acacus still stuns visitors - even those who come from Libya.
I have visited half of the world, but this is the first time I have seen such scenes, and I cannot believe that I am in my country, in Libya, says Ismail Shobana.
Domestic tourists like Shobana are the only people likely to come here now.
Poor security means foreigners are not prepared to venture into Libya.
So those who make their living from the industry have had to get creative to drum up business.
We had the idea of trying to activate local tourism in Libya by designing and carrying out trips like the ones we were doing for foreigners but for Libyans instead, explains Hisham Al-Adoly, a tour guide.
But he says even Libyans have had security concerns.
Security is unstable and unsettled in some areas, there was explicit fear. But when we explained the situation to them and called friends and people in the south, they were reassured in terms of security, Al-Adoly says.
Maintaining tourist interest in these ancient rocks and their art is crucial.
As long as people still value the site, there remains some hope that it can be protected for future generations and for a time when Libya is once again stable.
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