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I guess this is close enough.

 

Indeed, it is the Ancash earthquake and this lake is just under Huascarán - it is lake Llanganuco. My special attachment to the lake is that, in 1970 there was a Czech mountaineering expedition camped at the lake and when the quake struck, they were all burried and are still there...... Among them was a friend of mine - Vilém Heckel, an excellent mountain photographer who climbed most of the world's peaks until Huascarán put an untimely end to his life.

 

One side of Huascarán levelled Yungay, the other side, above lake Llanganuco, burried the expedition with a much smaller slide - this the ultimate being at the wrong place at the wrong time.

 

Much later, I trekked from Yungay to Santa Cruz, around the Huascarán and Alpamayo peaks and placed a few flowers at a beautiful memorial erected by the Czechoslovak embassy at the lake.

 

Over to you, John.

 

Cheers,

 

Jan

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Nice touch, Jan. As hard as I looked, I couldn't find the name of the lake, though I suppose Google Earth might have done the trick!

 

Mine is far more prosaic.

 

Name the body of water, and the country.

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No, Michael, not the North East of Africa either.

 

I need to be a little careful giving too much guidance here ...

 

It does look like it could be the Nile or in that area, but I can say it's Sub-Sahel, if that helps

Edited by IkarusJohn
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Yes, the River Niger - about 4 metres up.

 

Country?

 

And for a bonus point, what is the nearby fabled medieval city of gold, slavery and salt trade, and Islamic scholarship; the town was recently, briefly, under the control of local Tuoareg, who were ousted by the French. Al Qaida supported Islamists tried to retake the town on 30 March, and they were thrown out on 1 April.

 

The nearby town is a UNESCO World Heritage site, though it was a dusty dump, with fortified doors on all the houses, when I was there in 1988.

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