
Skeleton Coast
A desert graveyard
The Skeleton Coast is one of the most inhospitable places on earth
yet amazingly alluring to those eager to experience first hand its
bleak beauty and desolate loneliness. Its name relates to the many
shipwrecks that have occurred along this part of the coast; where
the cold waters of the Atlantic Ocean meet the warm shores of the
Namibian coastline, a dense fog is formed.
A perilous stretch of coastline
This natural phenomenon has been the downfall of many a sailor
over the years and if you visit the Skeleton Coast today, you will
see that there is nothing to interrupt the smoothness of the rolling
dunes except the occasional trace of a shipwreck, ancient and sand-blown,
left stranded and soon to be swallowed by the shifting sands.
The fear that sailors had of becoming shipwrecked along this bit
of coastline was compounded by the knowledge that if they did make
it ashore, their survival would be virtually impossible owing to
the merciless conditions that would await them.
The name 'Skeleton Coast' actually only refers to the bit of coastline
between the rivers Ugab and Kunene although it has also become
a generic term for Namibia's entire desert coast. Despite its
desert-like conditions, the Skeleton Coast is home to flourishing
populations of seals, penguins, flamingos, dolphins and brown
hyena - an extraordinary contrast supported by icy cold seas
and scorching hot desert.
Photographs by kind permission of Dana Allen and
Wilderness Safaris