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Fossilized Raindrops Found on Sahara’s Edge Reveal Evidence of Ancient Monsoon Cycles

Last updated: October 31, 2025 10:37 pm
Wajeeha Batool
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October 31, 2025

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On the desolate edge of the Sahara, scientists have uncovered something both delicate and monumental  fossilized raindrop imprints that may rewrite our understanding of North Africa’s ancient climate. These tiny impressions, preserved for tens of millions of years, suggest that the world’s largest desert was once lashed by seasonal monsoon rains.

The discovery was made in a remote section of southern Algeria, where researchers from the University of Oxford and the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) have been studying exposed layers of sedimentary rock. Within those layers, they found shallow, circular dimples  fossilized raindrops  each only a few millimeters wide but astonishingly well-preserved.

“It’s like holding a memory of the sky,” said Dr. Laila Benyoussef, the project’s lead geologist. “Every tiny crater marks a moment when rain touched this land  a time when this desert was alive with storms and water.”

Using micro-imaging drones and 3D scanning, the team reconstructed rainfall patterns and determined that the impressions were formed around 56 million years ago, during the late Paleocene epoch  a time when North Africa was humid and covered with seasonal wetlands. The finding provides rare physical evidence that monsoon cycles once reached deep into what is now one of the driest places on Earth.

The study, published this week in Nature Geoscience, aligns with recent climate modeling that indicates ancient shifts in Earth’s orbit and atmospheric composition once brought intense, short-lived rainy seasons to the Sahara. Over time, tectonic uplift and global cooling transformed the region into the arid expanse we know today.

The discovery also carries modern significance. By studying how monsoon systems expanded and collapsed in the past, scientists hope to better understand how future climate change could reshape weather patterns across Africa.

Standing amid the wind and heat, the research team captured drone footage of the excavation site a pale slab of stone dotted with what look like delicate thumbprints. “You can almost feel the moment the rain stopped,” said Benyoussef. “Then the mud dried, and time took over.”

In a place defined by sand and silence, the desert had spoken  whispering that it once remembered rain.

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