One reason for the uncertainty over the Sahara’s age is that researchers use such different methods to estimate it; these include studying desert dust found in sediment under the Atlantic Ocean, analyzing sandstone and modeling the ancient climate. To help settle things, geomorphologist Daniel Muhs of the U.S. Geological Survey (lead author on the new research) and his colleagues looked at sediment on Spain’s Fuerteventura and Gran Canaria islands, where they found evidence of Saharan dust. The dust appeared in ancient soil layers, whose age they assessed on the basis of fossils found in the same layers—and that age agreed with earlier marine sediment studies. The researchers reported their finding in November in Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology.
“The conclusion of the study is very good,” says Zhongshi Zhang, a climate modeler at the University of Bergen in Norway, who was not involved in the work. Because the dust found on the islands is distinct from the marine record, Zhang adds, it helps to build the case for a multimillion-year age.