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Egyption Geological facts PDF Print E-mail
Written by Admin.G.M   
Thursday, 10 July 2008 01:43

The Egyptian Nile Valley has been defined as two separate but distinct regions. The Upper portion of the Nile extends south of Cairo to the Sudanese border. The Lower portion, which encompasses the Nile Delta, begins north of Cairo and flow northward.

 Most of Egypt is hot and dry. Alexandria and the Mediterranean coastal communities experience mild weather, while the heat in Cairo and other inland areas is fierce, with temperatures rising to as high as 50°C.

Last Updated on Thursday, 10 July 2008 04:10
 
Six New Prehistoric Bat Species Discovered in Egypt PDF Print E-mail
Written by Admin.G.M   
Saturday, 08 March 2008 21:55

 Six new species of ancient bat dating back 35 million years have been discovered in Egypt, researchers say. The new species were found by experts who analyzed 33 fossils—including teeth and jawbones—that had been unearthed over a period of decades in El Faiyum, an oasis region 50 miles southwest of Cairo .

0"It is [a] surprising diversity of new forms—we didn't expect to find nearly as many new kinds of bats as we found in the sample," said Gregg F. Gunnell, a paleontologist at the University of Michigan who led the study.

The experts were also surprised to find that the new species were similar to some modern-day microbats, a group of bats that uses sonar waves to navigate and hunt in a process called echolocation.

"They are all pretty primitive members of modern groups, which is a little bit odd," Gunnell said.

"Generally in [this period in the fossil record], you tend to [find] archaic bats but nothing very modern, … but these animals are all members of living families."

The link is the best evidence yet that modern bats evolved on the African continent rather than in the Northern Hemisphere, as some have theorized.

"In a sense, Africa is sort of a crucible for the evolution of the modern bats," Gunnell said.

Among the newly discovered species was a previously unknown "giant" version of the microbat family, which makes it perhaps the largest of the echolocating species yet found.

Rare Finds

 
Wadi Al-Hitan PDF Print E-mail
Written by Admin.G.M   
Friday, 15 February 2008 18:52
Wadi Al-Hitan in Egypt’s Western Desert is the only place in the world where the skeletons of families of archaic whales can be seen in their original geological and geographic setting of the shallow nutrient-rich bay of a sea of some 40 million years ago. The fossils and sediments of different periods and levels reveal many millions of years of life and are valuable indications of the palaeoecologic conditions, of Eocene vertebrate and invertebrate life and the evolution of these ancestors of modern whales. Remarkably, two species still had small hind limbs, feet and toes. The quality, abundance, concentration and state of preservation of these fossils is unequalled.

COUNTRY Egypt

NAME Wadi Al-Hitan (Whale Valley)

IUCN MANAGEMENT CATEGORY
Wadi el-Rayan Protected Area: VI; Managed Resource Protected Area

NATURAL WORLD HERITAGE SITE
2005: Inscribed on the World Heritage list under Natural criterion i.

Last Updated on Sunday, 02 March 2008 18:15
 
A new fossil plant remain (Egypt) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Admin.G.M   
Friday, 15 February 2008 16:38
by Norbert Brügge, Germany

A new fossil plant remain of "Lepidodendron" Djebel Uweinat 

During a trekking - tour in the Djebel Uweinat and the Gilf Kebir (Egypt) the author found in 2003, November 09, in the Djebel Uweinat a fossil stem of Lepidodendron sp. (Lycophyta). The original is now preserved in the collections of the Museum for Natural Science of the Humboldt - University in Berlin (Germany).

Last Updated on Saturday, 31 May 2008 12:15