On certain nights, the secret is revealed. Warm, damp air moving in from the mid-Atlantic is transformed to fog as it crosses the cold coastal current.
A vast blanket of moisture steadily rolls across the desert.
This veil of mist is the saving grace of the Namib. Just a few precious drops but enough to allow life to flourish. A tiny bit of moisture, a tiny bit of food and tens of millions of years of evolution are the secrets to success in this harshest of African deserts.
Where else but the Namib would an ingenious little beetle stagger up the highest dunes on cold mornings, put its back to breeze, and then stand on its head to collect a life-giving drink?Impressive sand dunes dominate the Namib, but to the south and east is a very different kind of desert , an expanse of rocky scrub known as the karoo.
This desert is as old as the Namib, but here it is mainly rain, not fog that drives life. In the karoo, up to 30 centimeters of rain may fall during winter and this extra sprinkle of moisture makes the world of difference.
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words and expression:
1.saving grace: a sancification from God 恩惠
2.life-giving:giving or having the power to give life and spirit給予生命的,挽救生命的
3.srcub: n. bush,shrub,shrubland dominated by shrubs灌木叢,叢林地
4.where else but: here "but" means "except",it is a common grammatical use.