I believe that I found these in Egypt, but I am not 100% sure. Some times I get lost looking for cool places and end up in random places!
Where do they get the water from?
Are we certain these aren’t lithium extraction pools? Based on the color and variation in color between them and the fact that they’re in the desert, it could be a lithium mine.
Edit: oh some of them are multicolored. Hmm…
The images are in 4K so you can zoom in quite a lot. I think some of the discolorations is down to maybe clouds getting in the way?
I’m pretty sure its farms though https://maps.app.goo.gl/FHveJiWGL8SoHjkD6
Not sure what lithium pool look like, but this is called center-pivot irrigation, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center-pivot_irrigation, and it’s how crops are typically done in the desert where there is no river or canal to pull from. Water is piped from wherever, or drawn up from a well and pumped into the irrigation arm. It’s on wheels and slowly rotates around the point where water is being pumped in. I see these all the time in southern Arizona and California deserts.
You can also see them in Minnesota
https://www.google.com/maps/@46.8353399,-94.9500685,12z/data=!3m1!1e3
They have them pretty much everywhere rain isn’t reliable in the summer. There are a bunch on the east coast of the US also.
This is really fascinating, in Denmark a lot of the potatoes in the shops are all of a sudden coming from Egypt. Especially early in the season before any of the European potatoes are ready , and especially this year which is apperantly a bad potatoes harvest here (both too wet and too dry).
These Egyptian potatoes are also very clean like they have been grown in desert sand. I’m wondering what they’re using as nutrient source , some of them claim to be organic so I guess no artificial fertilisers?
Would this eventually turn the desert green again when these fields are abondend when pests and weeds take hold? I guess after they stop pumping water there might be a chance if there are enough stuff growing to hang onto some moisture form the air. ( more likely all the nutrients will be washed or blown away)
That is in Saudi Arabia. Not that far from the border with Jordan.
GPS 30.0095403, 38.3257591
Those are mostly alfalfa fields that Saudi decided to use a fossil aquifer to water. Their wells are running dry and which is why there is so many abandoned fields. These are areas they don’t have enough water. It’s mixed in with date palms now as well.
Dude… did you just recognize this? how did you know? I took these pictures when I also took some pictures of Egypt and didn’t even notice that I had drifted so far away, when I found these fields!
I am speechless!
Hey now, I feel attacked.
We had half the typing lab full of IBM’s with 5.25" floppies running WordPerfect 5.1
The other half was the IBM selectric typewriters.
Oh and “Get off my lawn!!!”
Good job gridding out those farms in the middle of an empty fucking desert.
in the middle of an empty […] desert.
But there’s the thing: It’s all desert. And people still need to eat. They’re using groundwater, here, and it was adequate. Decisions taken in that time period were good decisions.
Now it’s changing. And just like California Almond farmers need to seriously switch to a crop that isn’t at the heart of the water wars, Saudis need to switch to methods and crops that use miniscule amounts of water.