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Ancient kasbah town of Ait Benhaddou on a former Caravan Route beside the Ouarzazate River, often used as a film location, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Morocco, North Africa, Africa
Ancient kasbah town of Ait Benhaddou on a former Caravan Route beside the Ouarzazate River, often used as a film location, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Morocco, North Africa, Africa
Kasbah Ait Benhaddou, an ancient fortified village (Ksar) on the old caravan route between The Sahara Desert and Marrakech, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Morocco, North Africa, Africa
Kok-Moinok Canyon, a clay-sand structure formed on the slopes of arid mountains cut by water streams, Kyrgyzstan, Central Asia, Asia
Kasbah Ait Benhaddou, an ancient fortified village (Ksar) on the old caravan route between the Sahara Desert and Marrakech, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Morocco, North Africa, Africa
Aerial view of sand dunes with caravan route in the Gobi desert, silk road, Dunhuang, Gansu, China, Asia
Aerial view of sand dunes in the Gobi desert with caravan route, Silk Road, Dunhuang, Gansu, China, Asia
Rotel coach, a bus incorporating a mobile hotel, travelling on Route 178 in Death Valley, Death Valley National Park, California, USA, North America
Aerial view of sand dunes with caravan route in the Gobi desert, silk road, Dunhuang, Gansu, China, Asia
Camel traders and herders sit in a tea hut in a camel market in El Obeid, Sudan on February 16, 2006. Yussuf Gamaa, 2nd from L, is a camel herder from Darfur. About 150,000 camels cross over from Sudan into Egypt every year, the majority as cattle as an inexpensive source of protein. Today the camel is both the caravan and the cargo. Camels from this market will travel the Forty Days Road or Darb el-Arbein a 1,200 mile desert trail into Egypt and the oldest trade route in the Sahara. Desert nomads like Yussuf depend on the profitable camel trade for their livelihood.