Caves as geoheritage resource in remote desert areas: a preliminary evaluation of Djara Cave in the Western Desert of Egypt

Author:

Abdel Maksoud Kholoud M.1,Baghdadi Mahmoud I.23,Ruban Dmitry A.45

Affiliation:

1. Natural Resources Department, Faculty of Postgraduate African Studies , Cairo University , Giza, Cairo 12613 , Egypt

2. Shaybah Wildlife Sanctuary , Saudi Arabia

3. Ministry of Environment , 30 Misr Helwan El-Zyrae Road, Maadi, Cairo 11728 , Egypt

4. K.G. Razumovsky Moscow State University of Technologies and Management (the First Cossack University) , Zemlyanoy Val Street 73, Moscow 109004, Russia

5. Higher School of Business, Southern Federal University , 23-ja Linija Street 43, Rostov-on-Don 344019, Russia (postal address: P.O. Box 7333, Rostov-on-Don 344056, Russia)

Abstract

Abstract Caves are rare in northeast Africa and, thus, deserve attention as potential geoheritage objects (geosites). Assessment of Djara Cave and its vicinity (Western Desert, Egypt) has permitted to document unique features, such as the cave itself as a peculiar subsurface landform, speleothems providing data for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions, rock art demonstrating elements of past landscapes, siliceous nodules weathered from Eocene limestones and a network of dry drainage channels indicative of wetter palaeoenvironments. These features are assigned to geomorphological, sedimentological and palaeogeographical types of geoheritage. Djara Cave and its vicinity are proposed as a geosite of national rank; it is vulnerable to anthropogenic stress and needs geoconservation measures and instalment of interpretative signs. This geosite is already popular among tourists, and can be used for further tourism development. More generally, the presence of caves in Egyptian desert areas makes possible the recognition of national speleological heritage that requires special country-level strategies of management.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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