Explore Live Cams in Libya
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Libya is a vast North African nation bordered by Egypt, Sudan, Chad, Niger, Algeria, and Tunisia, with a long Mediterranean coastline stretching over 1,700 kilometres. It is the fourth largest country in Africa and one of the most sparsely populated - over 90% of its territory is covered by the Sahara Desert, creating an ocean of sand, rock, and ancient silence that stretches almost uninterrupted from the Mediterranean coast to the heart of the continent.
The ancient Greek and Roman ruins along Libya's Mediterranean coast are among the most spectacular and least visited in the world - Leptis Magna, birthplace of the Roman Emperor Septimius Severus, is one of the best-preserved Roman cities on Earth and a UNESCO World Heritage Site of extraordinary scale and grandeur, its theatres, arches, and market colonnades rising intact from the desert landscape. The Saharan interior hides the Acacus Mountains, another UNESCO site, whose sandstone formations are covered in prehistoric rock art spanning thousands of years of human history. Explore related settings through our UNESCO Sites, Remote Locations, and Scenic Views collections.
Libyan cuisine draws on its Berber, Arab, and Mediterranean heritage - bazin (a dense unleavened bread eaten with lamb and potato stew) is the national dish, while couscous, shorba (spiced soup), and fresh Mediterranean seafood feature heavily across coastal regions. The Mediterranean coast west of Benghazi offers some of the clearest and most unspoiled waters in the entire Mediterranean, sheltering rich marine life along reefs and rocky shores largely untouched by mass tourism. Browse related feeds under Oceans & Lakes, Museums & Monuments, and Nature on EarthLive.TV.
Prefer exploring visually? Check our live webcam map or browse cameras in Egypt, Tunisia, and Algeria.
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Libya is a vast North African nation bordered by Egypt, Sudan, Chad, Niger, Algeria, and Tunisia, with a long Mediterranean coastline stretching over 1,700 kilometres. It is the fourth largest country in Africa and one of the most sparsely populated - over 90% of its territory is covered by the Sahara Desert, creating an ocean of sand, rock, and ancient silence that stretches almost uninterrupted from the Mediterranean coast to the heart of the continent.
The ancient Greek and Roman ruins along Libya's Mediterranean coast are among the most spectacular and least visited in the world - Leptis Magna, birthplace of the Roman Emperor Septimius Severus, is one of the best-preserved Roman cities on Earth and a UNESCO World Heritage Site of extraordinary scale and grandeur, its theatres, arches, and market colonnades rising intact from the desert landscape. The Saharan interior hides the Acacus Mountains, another UNESCO site, whose sandstone formations are covered in prehistoric rock art spanning thousands of years of human history. Explore related settings through our UNESCO Sites, Remote Locations, and Scenic Views collections.
Libyan cuisine draws on its Berber, Arab, and Mediterranean heritage - bazin (a dense unleavened bread eaten with lamb and potato stew) is the national dish, while couscous, shorba (spiced soup), and fresh Mediterranean seafood feature heavily across coastal regions. The Mediterranean coast west of Benghazi offers some of the clearest and most unspoiled waters in the entire Mediterranean, sheltering rich marine life along reefs and rocky shores largely untouched by mass tourism. Browse related feeds under Oceans & Lakes, Museums & Monuments, and Nature on EarthLive.TV.
Prefer exploring visually? Check our live webcam map or browse cameras in Egypt, Tunisia, and Algeria.