Photos of Africa, taken from a flying lawn chair | George Steinmetz

86,686 views ・ 2018-01-24

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I have to tell you,
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it's more than a little intimidating being up here,
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an old American guy trying to tell Africans
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something new about your own continent.
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But sometimes, an outsider can see things in a different way,
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like from the air.
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That's what I found by flying low and slow all over the African continent
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as I photographed the spectacle of its diversity.
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And I wasn't always an old guy.
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(Laughter)
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This is me in 1979,
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a kid from California backpacking his way through the Ituri Forest of Zaire.
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I was on a yearlong hitchhiking trip.
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I had just dropped out of Stanford University,
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and I went from Tunis to Kisangani to Cairo
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and learned how to live on 10 dollars a day.
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It was an amazing experience for me.
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I spent about a week in this Dinka cattle camp
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on the banks of the Nile in South Sudan.
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The Dinka taught me how to tie papyrus into a shelter,
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and also I observed how they had adapted their way of life
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around the migratory needs of their beloved cattle.
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It was a like a graduate course in ecological ethnography,
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and I got busy taking notes with a camera.
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With no money for rides,
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they often made the Mzungu ride on the roof of the trucks,
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or in this case, on the top of the train going across South Sudan.
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I felt like I was riding on the back of an insect
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going across the enormous tapestry of Africa.
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It was an incredible view from up there,
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but I couldn't help but think,
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wouldn't it be even more amazing if I could fly over that landscape
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like a bird?
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Well, that notion stayed with me,
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and 20 years later,
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after becoming a professional photographer,
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I was able to talk National Geographic
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into doing a big story in the central Sahara,
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and I came back with a new kind of flying machine.
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This is me piloting the world's lightest and slowest aircraft.
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(Laughter)
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It's called a motorized paraglider.
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It consists of a backpack motor and a parachute-style wing,
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and it flies at about 30 miles an hour.
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With 10 liters of fuel, I can fly for about two hours,
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but what's really amazing about it is it gives me an unobstructed view,
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both horizontally and vertically,
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like a flying lawn chair.
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My hitchhiker's dream of flying over Africa came true
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when I spotted these two camel caravans passing out in the middle of the Sahara.
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The one in the foreground is carrying salt out of the desert,
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while the one in the background is carrying fodder
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for the animals heading back in.
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I realized you couldn't take this kind of picture
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with a conventional aircraft.
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An airplane moves too fast,
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a helicopter would be too loud with too much downdraft,
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and it dawned on me that this crazy little aircraft I was flying
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would open up a new way of seeing remote parts of the African landscape
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in a way that had never really been possible before.
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Let me show you how it works.
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(Applause)
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Thanks.
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(Applause)
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This may seem a bit dangerous, but I am not some kind of adventure dude.
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I'm a photographer who flies, and I only fly to take pictures.
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My favorite altitude is between 200 and 500 feet,
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where I can see the world three-dimensionally,
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but also at a human scale.
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I find that a lot of what I'd done over the years in Africa,
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you could try to do with a drone,
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but drones aren't really made for exploration.
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They only fly for about 20 minutes of battery life
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and about three kilometers of range,
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and all you get to see is what's on a little screen.
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But I like to explore.
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I want to go over the horizon and find new things, find weird stuff,
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like this volcanic caldera in Niger.
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If you look at the altimeter on my left leg,
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you'll see that I'm about a mile above takeoff.
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Flying that high really freaked me out,
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but if you talk to a pro pilot,
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they'll tell you that altitude is actually your friend,
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because the higher you are,
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the more time you have to figure out your problems.
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(Laughter)
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As a rank amateur, I figured this gave me more time
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to scream on the way back down.
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(Laughter)
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To calm myself down, I started taking pictures,
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and as I did, I became rational again,
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and I was getting buffeted by a Harmattan wind
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which was coming out of the upper right hand corner of this picture,
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and I started to notice how it had filled the entire crater with sand.
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When I got to the north of Chad, I found a different kind of volcano.
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These had had their entire exteriors stripped away,
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and all that was left was the old core,
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and in the middle of the Sahara,
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I felt like I was seeing the earth with its living skin stripped away.
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Much of the Sahara is underlain by an enormous freshwater aquifer.
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When you go to the basin, sometimes you can see it leaking out.
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If you were to walk through those palm groves,
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you could drink fresh water out of your footsteps.
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But that green lake water?
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Due to extreme evaporation, it's saltier than seawater
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and virtually lifeless.
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In Niger, I was amazed to see
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how the locals learned how to exploit a different kind of desert spring.
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Here, they mix the salty mud with spring water
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and spread it out in shallow ponds,
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and as it evaporated, it turned into a spectacle of color.
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My rig is also amazing for looking at agriculture.
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This picture was taken in southern Algeria,
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where the locals have learned how to garden in a mobile dune field
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by tapping into shallow groundwater.
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I also loved looking at how animals have adapted to the African landscape.
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This picture was taken in Lake Amboseli,
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just across the border from here in Kenya.
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The elephants have carved the shallow lake water up
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into a network of little pathways,
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and they're spaced just enough apart
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that only elephants, with their long trunks,
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can tap into the most succulent grasses.
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In Namibia, the zebra have learned how to thrive in an environment
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that gets no rainfall at all.
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These grasses are irrigated by the dense coastal fog
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that blankets the area every morning.
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And those bald patches out there?
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They call them fairy circles,
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and scientists still struggle to understand what causes them.
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This is Mount Visoke, with a small crater lake in its summit at 3,700 meters.
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It forms the roof of the Great Rift Valley
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and also the border between Rwanda and Congo.
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It's also the center of the reserve for the fabled mountain gorilla.
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They're actually the big money-maker in Rwanda,
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and on this side of the border, conservation has become a huge success.
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Rwanda has the highest rural population density in Africa,
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and I saw it in almost every corner of the country I went to.
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I've heard it said that competition for land
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was one of the things that led to the tensions
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that caused the genocide of the 1990s.
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I went back to South Sudan a few years ago,
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and it was amazing to see how much things had changed.
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The Dinka were still in love with their cattle,
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but they had turned in their spears for Kalashnikovs.
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The cattle camps from above were even more spectacular
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than I could have imagined, but things had changed there too.
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You see those little blue dots down there?
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The Dinka had adapted to the new reality,
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and now they covered their papyrus shelters
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with the tarps from UN food convoys.
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In Mali, the Bozo people have learned how to thrive
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in the pulsating rhythms of the Niger River.
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As the rainy season ends and the water subsides,
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they plant their rice in the fertile bottoms.
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And that village in the lower right corner,
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that's Gao, one of the jumping off points for the major trade routes
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across the Sahara.
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At the end of the harvest,
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the Bozo take the leftover rice straw
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and they mix it with mud to reinforce their roofs and the village mosque.
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I must have flown over a dozen villages like this along the Niger River,
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and each one was unique, it had a different pattern.
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And each mosque was like a sculptural masterpiece,
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and no two were alike.
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I've flown all over the world, and nothing can really compare
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to the cultural diversity of Africa.
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You see it in every country,
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from Morocco
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to Ethiopia,
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to South Africa,
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to Mozambique,
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to South Sudan,
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to Mali.
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The array of environments and cultural adaptations to them
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is really extraordinary,
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and the history is pretty cool too.
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From the air, I have a unique window into the earliest waves
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of colonial history.
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This is Cyrene on the coastal mountains of Libya,
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that was founded by the Greeks, in 700 BC, as a learning center,
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and Timgad, which was founded in what's now Algeria
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by the Romans in 100 AD.
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This was built as a retirement community for old Roman soldiers,
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and it amazed me to think
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that North Africa was once the breadbasket for the Roman Empire.
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But 700 years after Timgad was built, it was buried in sand,
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and even then, the African climate was wetter than it is today.
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The African climate continues to change,
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and you see it everywhere,
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like here in the Gorges de Ziz,
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where a freak rainstorm came barreling out of the Sahara
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and blanketed the mountains in snow.
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I never thought I would see date palms in snow,
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but the kids that day had a great time throwing snowballs at each other.
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But it made me wonder, how are Africans going to adapt
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to this rapidly changing climate going forward?
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In a continent as dynamic and diverse as Africa,
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sometimes it seems that the only constant is change.
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But one thing I've learned
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is that Africans are the ultimate improvisers,
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always adapting and finding a way forward.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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