Dasht-e Kavir

Location:

Intro

Dasht-e Kavir, also known as the Great Salt Desert, is one of the two major deserts of Iran. It covers approximately 77,000 square kilometres in north-central Iran. The terrain consists of salt marshes, mudflats, and sand dunes and is largely impassable.

Background

History

The Dasht-e Kavir has been a barrier and a mystery throughout Iranian history. Its salt crusts, treacherous mud beneath the surface, and extreme temperatures made crossing almost impossible without local knowledge. Caravans avoided the interior and traced routes around the edges, connecting Tehran, Isfahan, and Khorasan through the oasis towns of Qom, Kashan, and Semnan on the northern and western margins. The desert’s isolation made it a natural boundary between the settled plateau cities and the nomadic and semi-nomadic populations of the east. No major empire made systematic use of the interior; it was simply avoided.

Present Day

The Dasht-e Kavir today is sparsely inhabited. Its eastern and southern margins contain small oasis settlements sustained by qanats. The desert is used for military testing and has strategic significance as a vast unpopulated buffer zone. Climate change is expanding the desert’s effective boundary as aquifer depletion reduces the extent of irrigated agriculture on its margins. Salt dust storms from the dried surfaces of seasonal lakes within the desert are an increasing environmental problem for surrounding provinces.

Future Outlook

Population

Map


Articles

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Event Timeline

Night of 16-17 March 2026

Israeli Strikes in Tehran Killing Larijani

On the night of 16-17 March 2026, Israeli airstrikes in the Tehran area killed Ali Larijani (Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council and de facto leader) and Gholamreza Soleimani (commander of Iran’s internal Basij militia).

1951-1953
1979-1981

Iran Hostage Crisis

In 1979, Iranian students seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, holding 52 Americans hostage for 444 days and transforming U.S.-Iran relations.

28 February 2026
June 2025
1850-1864

Taiping Heavenly Kingdom (Taiping Rebellion)

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1949
1953-1957
1958-1962

Great Leap Forward

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1911

Xinhai Revolution

The Xinhai Revolution overthrew the Qing Dynasty and ended over two millennia of imperial rule, leading to the establishment of the Republic of China.

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