Account
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
Il Nuovo Mediterraneo
  • Home
  • Work with us
  • Mediterranean countries
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Asia
  • AI Presenters
  • Overseas
  • Italian
No Result
View All Result
Il Nuovo Mediterraneo
  • Home
  • Work with us
  • Mediterranean countries
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Asia
  • AI Presenters
  • Overseas
  • Italian
No Result
View All Result
Il Nuovo Mediterraneo

Atlantropa: the crazy blockage of the Mediterranean

Almost a century ago, a German architect presented the Atlantropa project: the crazy idea of a mega continent with serious global consequences.

Maya Rao by Maya Rao
14 September 2023
in Green
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
atlantropa

Credits: Tom Fisk.

Contents

  • Atlantropa: a “controlled” drying
  • A project with global consequences

Questo articolo è disponibile anche in: Italian

How many continents are there? Nowadays we would answer, without any hesitation, 7. But there was a time, almost a hundred years ago, when this answer could have changed drastically, artificially reducing them to 5, uniting Europe and Africa in Atlantropa: a single , immense continent. The idea came from the German architect Herman Sörgel: using a system of dams, he hypothesized the closure of the Mediterranean Sea, artificially causing it to dry up and effectively uniting Africa and Europe.

But the utopian optimism, caused also by the historical period during which this project was hypothesized, soon ran out, especially when the consequences that such a monumental architectural work could have caused were understood, not only on the countries involved, but throughout the globe.

Atlantropa: a “controlled” drying

When the project was planned in 1927, it was not the first time that talk of a drying up of the Mediterranean Sea had been heard. It happened, in fact, millions of years earlier, during the Messinian salinity crisis. Even then, the great sea dried up, for reasons that scientists still try to discover today: almost certainly, it was a tectonic movement, or a glaciation. This event endend in a gigantic and catastrophic flood, which brought the Mare Nostrum back to its previous levels, saving it from becoming an immense expanse of salt.

Herman Sörgel, also thanks to the great positivism that characterized the early years of the 20th century, thought of emulating this natural cataclysm with his project, but in a more controlled way. For this reason, he reasoned about a system of dams, the largest of which would be built on the Strait of Gibraltar, blocking the only connection between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean and, in fact, creating a sort of artificial connection between Africa and Europe, making them a single continent.

Furthermore, further dams would have been created in other important points of the Mediterranean: for example, between Sicily and Tunisia, or even between the Suez Canal and the Dardanelles Strait. By controlling the drying of the sea, caused by its known salinity, a huge area would be freed up, which would be used for the construction of farms and agricultural centres.

Not only that: the dam system would have allowed the construction of numerous hydroelectric power plants. Furthermore, this project would have made it possible to irrigate the Sahara desert, creating an artificial lake thanks to a specially built dam on the Congo river, to be joined with Lake Chad and subsequently with the Mediterranean itself, bringing the water through the area of desert.

How the Mediterranean could have changed with the Atlantropa project. Credits: Ittiz via Wikipedia.

A project with global consequences

Despite the grandiose premises, Atlantropa was a project that never saw the light. The first to reject it, a few years after its conception, was Adolf Hitler himself: although one of the aims of the project was the expansion of the territories belonging to the Reich, the necessary collaboration between nations posed itself as an insurmountable obstacle.

Si susseguirono una serie di rifiuti, sia da parte dell’Italia fascista che persino dall’America: fu impedito a Sörgel di presentare il proprio progetto oltreoceano. Anni dopo la morte dell’architetto, si continua a discutere di tale, imponente opera architettonica: sarebbe fattibile al giorno d’oggi?

Il più grande imprevisto sarebbe costituito, in effetti, dalle catastrofiche conseguenze che un prosciugamento del mar Mediterraneo avrebbe su tutto il globo. Chiudendo lo Stretto di Gibilterra, infatti, si modificherebbe in modo evidente la Corrente del Golfo: il risultato sarebbe la fine del clima temperato che caratterizza l’Europa, con un raffreddamento costante e radicale.

Non solo: Sörgel non tenne in considerazione, nel suo progetto, l’alta salinità del mar Mediterraneo, mitigata proprio dal continuo scambio con le acque oceaniche. L’interruzione di tale interscambio potrebbe far prosciugare la distesa d’acqua ancor più di quanto progettato, riducendola alla stregua del Mar Morto: circondato da un deserto di sale, ed esso stesso talmente salato da potervi galleggiarci.

Atlantropa, dunque, resta un sogno certamente utopico, nato da un inizio di secolo all’insegna della positività e della fiducia nell’inventiva dell’uomo. Tale progetto a suo modo “green” resterà sempre un argomento di discussione tra architetti e ingegneri: la sua realizzazione, tuttavia, resta oltremodo lontana.

 

Stay up to date by following us on Telegram!

Aggiungi ai Preferiti
Please login to bookmark Close

You might also like

No Content Available

No account yet? Register

Tags: AtlantropaHerman Sörgel
ShareTweetSendShare
Previous Post

The Pearl of the Black Sea: Odesa and its Italian soul

Next Post

Olentzero: the pipe-smoking Basque “Santa Claus”

Maya Rao

Maya Rao

Classe '97, umanista digitale, appassionata di storia, cultura, costumi e tradizioni. Ogni volta che scrive un articolo, impara sempre qualcosa di nuovo.

Recommended For You

The struggle for Syria: the Russian intervention in the Syrian Civil War

by Antonio Iannaccone
19 April 2024
0
The struggle for Syria: the Russian intervention in the Syrian Civil War

The renewed clash between Israel and Palestine, as well as the confrontation between Iran and the Jewish state in recent days, has once again demonstrated the centrality of...

Read moreDetails

Marathon des Sables and the terrible experience of an Italian

by Simona Rubino
23 April 2024
0
Marathon des Sables and the terrible experience of an Italian

The Marathon des Sables and the story of Mauro Prosperi, the "Robinson Crusoe" of the desert who faced death in the Sahara.

Read moreDetails

The enchanting melody of the oud, the Arabian lute: between past and present

by Simona Rubino
30 April 2024
0
The enchanting melody of the oud, the Arabian lute: between past and present

Father of the lute and ancestor of the guitar, the Arabian oud is among the oldest musical instruments in the world, but has a versatile modern soul.

Read moreDetails

4 traditions of Easter: Catholic, Orthodox, Jewish and pagan

by Simona Rubino
23 April 2024
0
4 traditions of Easter: Catholic, Orthodox, Jewish and pagan

An ancient and solemn feast that combines Christian, Jewish and pagan traditions: it is Easter, celebrated between March and April.

Read moreDetails

An Italian come from afar: Queen Bona Sforza of Poland

by Antonio Iannaccone
22 March 2024
0
An Italian come from afar: Queen Bona Sforza of Poland

Bona Sforza of Aragon brought great wealth, innovations and court intrigues to the Polish-Lithuanian lands of the early 16th century. Her decisive and shrewd character greatly surprised the...

Read moreDetails
Load More
Next Post
Olentzero

Olentzero: the pipe-smoking Basque "Santa Claus"

Related News

Immortals Fenyx Rising

Immortals Fenyx Rising: Greek mythology in an ironic way

23 August 2023
Ostara

Ostara, pagan Easter: parallels and traditions in the Mediterranean

24 April 2024
sabbia

Sand sports: from desert hockey to sand boarding

23 April 2024

Browse by Category

  • Africa
  • AI presenters
  • Art
  • Asia
  • Cinema
  • cooking
  • current events
  • Customs and Traditions
  • Education
  • Europe
  • Excellent People
  • Green
  • History
  • Lifestyle
  • Literature
  • Mediterranean countries
  • Non categorizzato
  • Overseas
  • Pop Culture
  • Presentatori AI
  • Travel

The cultural observatory on the 22 countries on the Mediterranean Sea.

Contact:
info@ilnuovomediterraneo.com

Editorial Board:
press@inm.news

Follow us

Aree del Mondo

  • Mediterranean countries
  • Mediterranean countries
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Overseas
  • Overseas

Categorie

  • Africa
  • AI presenters
  • Art
  • Asia
  • Cinema
  • cooking
  • current events
  • Customs and Traditions
  • Education
  • Europe
  • Excellent People
  • Green
  • History
  • Lifestyle
  • Literature
  • Mediterranean countries
  • Non categorizzato
  • Overseas
  • Pop Culture
  • Presentatori AI
  • Travel

Latest News

The struggle for Syria: the Russian intervention in the Syrian Civil War

The struggle for Syria: the Russian intervention in the Syrian Civil War

19 April 2024
Marathon des Sables and the terrible experience of an Italian

Marathon des Sables and the terrible experience of an Italian

23 April 2024
The enchanting melody of the oud, the Arabian lute: between past and present

The enchanting melody of the oud, the Arabian lute: between past and present

30 April 2024

© 2023 ilNuovoMediterraneo - Newspaper to be registered.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • it Italiano
  • en English
  • Home
  • Home
  • Mediterranean countries
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • Overseas
  • Mediterranean countries
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Overseas

© 2023 ilNuovoMediterraneo - Testata in attesa di registrazione

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?