Visit The Fezzan, Libya
A mixture of heavily eroded sandstone, basalt mountains and vast sand seas make up the Fezzan. The Jebal Akakus is the most famous area, a designated UNESCO World Heritage site.

Umm Al-Maa Lake, Ubari
Desert camel train, LibyaUmm Al-Maa Lake, UbariSunset, The AkakusSunrise, Akakus MountainsTea break, Akakus MountainsUbari dunes at dawnFull moon, UbariDesert campfire, UbariDawn, Ubari Sand SeaGebraoun Lake, UbariMosque, GhatMandara Lake, UbariDesert Transport, Ubari Sand SeaAkakus MountainsRock Art, Akakus Mountains
The Fezzan is the name of the Saharan region in southern Libya, covering approximately 700,000 square kilometres.
A mixture of heavily eroded sandstone and basalt mountains and vast sand seas, the area was once far more fertile. From 12,000 to 4,500 years ago it was temperate with regular rainfall and extensive flora and fauna.
During this time indigenous people progressed from hunter-gatherers to pastoralists and this development is charted in one of the most remarkable and extensive collections of rock-art and petroglyphs anywhere in the world.
Around the Fezzan
The Jebal Akakus is the most famous area, a designated UNESCO World Heritage site, although previously untouched areas such as Wadi Methkandoush and Msak Millet are now opening up.
To be in this arid landscape surrounded by the swirls and broken outlines of weird rock formations and see images of elephants, giraffes, and huge cattle being herded or hunted by bushmen with spears and arrows is a remarkable and strange feeling, especially when you consider that the oldest images were created over 10,000 years ago.
Places within The Fezzan
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Idehan is the local word for a sand sea, and the Ubari is a prime example of one, stretching some 300 miles from east to west. The dunes, steep crescents stacked one on top of...
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