Mauritania
Summary
Mauritania has a rare combination of off-track desert exploration, ancient manuscript cities like Chinguetti and Ouadane, prehistoric rock art, and lush oases such as Terjit. It\’s a culturally and historically rich stretch of the West Africa Grand Expedition, ideal for travellers interested in trans-Saharan history, archaeology, and remote landscapes.
Table of Contents
Dunes, Stone Tools, and Nomadic Life in the Adrar
Chinguetti: A City Built on Books and Sand
Ouadane: Ruins of a Saharan Trade Capital
Canyons, Rock Art, and the Oasis of Terjit
Nouakchott: Where the Sahara Meets the Sea
Why Mauritania Stays With You
Travel Summary: Mauritania Leg (Days 14–19)
Must-visit Places on a Mauritania Tour
Accommodation During a Tour of Mauritania
Historical and Cultural Facts About Mauritania
Full West Africa Grand Expedition Route
Introduction
Most maps say \”desert.\” But in Mauritania, that label erases more than it reveals.
Here, in the heart of the Sahara, stone towns hold centuries-old manuscripts. Palm-filled canyons appear in the unlikeliest terrain. And trade routes once rich with gold and salt still imprint the land, even if the caravans are long gone.
As part of the West Africa Grand Expedition, Mauritania unfolds across six days, not just as a country, but as a seemingly bottomless archive of memory.
FAQ: Is Mauritania safe for overland travel?
Yes, Mauritania is safe for overland travel when the expedition is organised through experienced local operators and with proper routing. Areas like Adrar and the oasis towns are quiet, remote, and used to receiving expedition travellers.
Dunes, Stone Tools, and Nomadic Life in the Adrar
The journey begins beyond Akjoujt, where the road gradually disappears and is replaced by sand, instinct, and GPS.
Crossing the remote dune basins of Erg Amatlich, the desert here is untracked. Occasionally, ancient stone tools or pottery shards surface: fragments of early human life in this inhospitable landscape. Nomadic families still move with the seasons, and the silence between these rare encounters is one of the most profound parts of the experience.
As we approach the Adrar Massif, the scenery turns cinematic: yellow dunes give way to dark volcanic rock, ochre cliffs, and scattered oases that seem to appear out of nowhere.
FAQ: Can you visit the Adrar region in Mauritania independently?
Yes, but travel to remote regions like the Adrar Massif requires a 4×4, navigation experience, and local permits. Travelling with organised expeditions or trusted overland operators due to the terrain and lack of signage is safest.
Chinguetti: A City Built on Books and Sand
At the edge of the dunes lies Chinguetti, once an important station for pilgrims travelling to Mecca and a centre of Islamic scholarship.
Founded in the 13th century, Chinguetti is still home to some of the oldest surviving libraries in West Africa. At the Ould Habott Library, handwritten manuscripts covering astronomy, theology, mathematics, and law have been preserved through sandstorms and centuries.
The town’s stone mosque, with its square minaret, is believed to be one of the oldest in the Muslim world still in use.
But Chinguetti also lives with the tension of time. Its stone buildings press up against advancing dunes, resisting erasure one season at a time.
FAQ: Are the libraries in Chinguetti still functioning?
Yes, the libraries in Chinguetti are still functioning, though they now serve more as cultural archives than active institutions. Families still care for collections like the Ould Habott Library, and visitors can tour them with prior arrangement.
Ouadane: Ruins of a Saharan Trade Capital
From Chinguetti, we travel off-track through dry creek beds and scattered palm groves to reach Ouadane, the remotest oasis in Mauritania.
Founded in 1147 and fortified by the Portuguese in 1487, Ouadane was once a critical node in the trans-Saharan trade. Its ancient stone houses still cling to the hillside, many abandoned, some still lived in.
There are few places left that feel this far from the present. Fewer still that feel this historically intact.
FAQ: How accessible is Ouadane for travellers?
Ouadane can only be reached by off-road vehicles. The route is sandy and unmarked in places, making a guided 4×4 convoy the safest and most practical option for access.
Canyons, Rock Art, and the Oasis of Terjit
South of the Adrar, the landscape opens into wide gorges and bare volcanic ridges. On the Amogjar Pass, near the ruins of the film Fort Saganne, we visit prehistoric rock art at Agrour: engraved depictions of animals, humans, and symbols that pre-date writing itself.
From there, we reach Terjit, one of Mauritania’s best-kept secrets. This oasis sits within a narrow gorge, shaded by thick palm groves and sustained by a spring that flows down a rock wall. It\’s quiet, cool, and far removed from the harshness of the surrounding desert. Not many people come here, and that’s part of the appeal.
FAQ: Can you swim or bathe in the spring at Terjit?
Yes, many visitors take a dip in the natural spring at Terjit. It’s clean, shallow, and shaded, making it a popular way to cool down after the hike in.
Nouakchott: Where the Sahara Meets the Sea
In Nouakchott, the capital, we visit the National Museum to see artefacts from Aoudaghost, one of the Ghana Empire’s most prominent trading cities. The photos alone, of excavated walls and 6th-century trade goods, anchor everything we’ve seen: Chinguetti, Ouadane, even the ruins near Assa in Morocco. These were once linked by gold and camel.
The day ends at the fishing harbour. Hundreds of wooden pirogues line the beach, crewed by Senegalese fishermen in bright fabrics, hauling in tonnes of Atlantic fish. It’s loud, energetic, and sunlit, the perfect contrast to the stillness of the dunes.
FAQ: What’s the best time to visit the Nouakchott fishing harbour?
Late afternoon is an ideal time to visit the Nouakchott fishing harbour. That’s when most boats return with their catch, and the market becomes a lively hub of colour, sound, and activity.
Why Mauritania Stays With You
Mauritania resists simple labels. It’s neither defined by hardship nor romanticised into a desert fantasy. It holds traces of what came before (manuscripts, mosques, ruins, and routes) and invites you to look closely.
For those interested in travel that connects history, ecology, and culture without rushing past it, Mauritania offers rare ground.
FAQ: Is Mauritania a good destination for cultural travel?
Yes. For travellers interested in history, manuscript preservation, and Saharan heritage, Mauritania offers depth and authenticity without large crowds or over-tourism.
Travel Summary: Mauritania Leg (Days 14–19)
Category
Details
Days Covered
14–19
Regions
Adrar, Chinguetti, Ouadane, Amogjar, Terjit, Nouakchott
Major Stops
Erg Amatlich, Chinguetti, Ouadane, Terjit, Nouakchott
Key Themes
Remote desert travel, trans-Saharan trade history, ancient libraries, oases, archaeology
Recommended Gear
Sand-proof shoes, breathable layers, hydration pack, scarf for dust, desert-rated sunglasses
Best Time to Visit
November–March (dry season)
Must-visit Places on a Mauritania Tour
Erg Amatlich – Vast dune basin with prehistoric artefacts
Chinguetti – 13th-century manuscript city and pilgrimage site
Ouadane – Ruined trade hub and former Portuguese outpost
Agrour (Amogjar Pass) – Petroglyph-rich canyon near Fort Saganne film set
Terjit – Gorge-sheltered oasis with spring water and palms
Nouakchott – Capital city with national museum and coastal fishing culture
Accommodation During a Tour of Mauritania
Location
Accommodation
Notes
Akjoujt
Hotel Sahara
Modern, air-conditioned, self-contained rooms
Chinguetti
La Gueila Guesthouse
Traditional Mauritanian style, Franco-Mauritanian food, Wi-Fi
Nouakchott
Hotel Azalai
4-star, air-conditioned rooms with private facilities
Historical and Cultural Facts About Mauritania
Chinguetti’s mosque is one of the oldest functioning in the Islamic world.
The Ould Habott Library holds manuscripts from the 13th–15th centuries.
Ouadane was once rich enough for the Portuguese to establish a fortified trading post in 1487.
Terjit’s oasis has been a rest point for centuries for Saharan travellers.
Mauritania processes more than 1.8 million tonnes of fish per year, one of Africa’s highest outputs.
Want to see the full route?
This was only Days 14–19.
Forward Travel’s 56-day West Africa Grand Expedition covers:
Morocco
Western Sahara
Mauritania
Senegal
Gambia
Guinea-Bissau
Guinea
Sierra Leone
Liberia
Ivory Coast
Ghana
Togo
Benin
If you\’re curious to follow the full journey or want to join a future departure, get in touch.
Upcoming Departures:
10 November 2025
5 March 2026 (reverse route)
9 November 2026
Check the Grand Expedition page for more information
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