A Living Fossil.
Posted: Thu Jan 16, 2014 11:33 am
This is the Welwitschia plant that only grows along a narrow strip of land in the Namib Desert, partly in Namibia and partly in Angola.
The age of the plants is difficult to guess at but some are believed to be more than 2000 years old. The Welwitschia manages to survive off moisture brought into the desert in the form of fog from the Atlantic Ocean via The Skeleton Coast. It has two leaves that grow continuously, is believed to be a relic from the Jurassic Period and apparently has hardly changed since then.
I won’t bore you by quoting its scientific name but in Afrikaans, which is one of the local languages, it’s called “tweeblaarkanniedood”, which translated directly means “two leaves that can’t die.”
I’ve been fortunate enough to travel the length and breadth of Namibia not once but twice. It is one of the most desolate yet at the same time most beautiful countries I have ever visited.
The age of the plants is difficult to guess at but some are believed to be more than 2000 years old. The Welwitschia manages to survive off moisture brought into the desert in the form of fog from the Atlantic Ocean via The Skeleton Coast. It has two leaves that grow continuously, is believed to be a relic from the Jurassic Period and apparently has hardly changed since then.
I won’t bore you by quoting its scientific name but in Afrikaans, which is one of the local languages, it’s called “tweeblaarkanniedood”, which translated directly means “two leaves that can’t die.”
I’ve been fortunate enough to travel the length and breadth of Namibia not once but twice. It is one of the most desolate yet at the same time most beautiful countries I have ever visited.