Explore Live Cams in Mauritania
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Mauritania is a vast nation in northwestern Africa, bordered by Morocco, Algeria, Mali, Senegal, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west. It is one of the largest countries 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 dunes, rocky plateaus, and ancient dried riverbeds that stretch almost endlessly across its interior.
The ancient city of Chinguetti, once one of the most important centres of Islamic pilgrimage and scholarship in the Sahara, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site of extraordinary historical significance - its medieval mud-brick mosques and libraries of ancient manuscripts rising from the desert sand as a testament to a civilisation that thrived in one of the harshest environments on Earth. The dramatic Adrar Plateau in the north offers some of the most spectacular desert scenery on the continent - vast ergs of golden sand dunes, sandstone canyons, and oasis towns that have sheltered trans-Saharan caravans for centuries. Explore related settings through our UNESCO Sites, Remote Locations, and Scenic Views collections.
Mauritanian cuisine reflects its nomadic Berber and Arab heritage - thieboudienne (fish and rice cooked in tomato sauce, shared with Senegal as a national dish), mechoui (whole roasted lamb), and sweet mint tea served in three glasses are cornerstones of Mauritanian food and hospitality culture. The Atlantic coastline in the west, by contrast, is one of the richest fishing grounds in the world, where cold Canary Current upwellings support enormous concentrations of fish and seabirds. Browse related feeds under Nature, Wildlife, and Beaches on EarthLive.TV.
Prefer exploring visually? Check our live webcam map or browse cameras in Morocco, Senegal, and Mali.
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Mauritania is a vast nation in northwestern Africa, bordered by Morocco, Algeria, Mali, Senegal, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west. It is one of the largest countries 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 dunes, rocky plateaus, and ancient dried riverbeds that stretch almost endlessly across its interior.
The ancient city of Chinguetti, once one of the most important centres of Islamic pilgrimage and scholarship in the Sahara, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site of extraordinary historical significance - its medieval mud-brick mosques and libraries of ancient manuscripts rising from the desert sand as a testament to a civilisation that thrived in one of the harshest environments on Earth. The dramatic Adrar Plateau in the north offers some of the most spectacular desert scenery on the continent - vast ergs of golden sand dunes, sandstone canyons, and oasis towns that have sheltered trans-Saharan caravans for centuries. Explore related settings through our UNESCO Sites, Remote Locations, and Scenic Views collections.
Mauritanian cuisine reflects its nomadic Berber and Arab heritage - thieboudienne (fish and rice cooked in tomato sauce, shared with Senegal as a national dish), mechoui (whole roasted lamb), and sweet mint tea served in three glasses are cornerstones of Mauritanian food and hospitality culture. The Atlantic coastline in the west, by contrast, is one of the richest fishing grounds in the world, where cold Canary Current upwellings support enormous concentrations of fish and seabirds. Browse related feeds under Nature, Wildlife, and Beaches on EarthLive.TV.
Prefer exploring visually? Check our live webcam map or browse cameras in Morocco, Senegal, and Mali.