Classroom lesson · The Iron-Ore Train · 🇲🇷 Mauritania

The Iron-Ore Train

One of the world's longest trains - crossing the Sahara

The Mauritanian iron-ore train stretching across the desert with wagons full of dark ore

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Mauritania has one of the longest trains in the world. It carries iron ore - a heavy dark rock that is used to make steel - from mines in the deep desert to the port on the Atlantic coast. The train is sometimes over two kilometres long and has up to 200 wagons loaded with ore, pulled by several powerful locomotives at once.

Tell me more

The journey across the desert takes about 17 hours and covers 704 kilometres - roughly the same as travelling from London to Edinburgh and back again. The train runs through some of the most remote places on Earth, with nothing but sand, rock, and open sky on every side.

Iron ore is a mineral found underground that contains iron - a metal used to make everything from bridges to bicycles to skyscrapers. Mauritania has enormous deposits of it, especially around the town of Zouerat in the far north. Mining iron ore is one of the most important industries in the country.

Here is the most surprising thing: passengers are allowed to ride the train too - not in smart carriages, but by climbing into the open wagons on top of the ore itself. Travellers from all over the world have made this journey, wrapped in warm clothes and scarves to protect from flying dust, watching the Sahara slowly pass beneath a sky blazing with stars.

The train is so heavy that when fully loaded it takes a very long time to slow down - engineers must start braking far in advance. At the port of Nouadhibou, giant machines tip the wagons upside down to pour the ore into ships that carry it to factories around the world.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think it would be useful to have a very long train instead of lots of shorter ones?
  2. 02Iron ore is turned into steel. Look around your classroom - how many things are made from steel?
  3. 03Would you like to ride in an open wagon on the iron-ore train across the Sahara? What would you bring?
Try this

Classroom activity

Measure 2 kilometres on a local map (or use Google Maps) and mark the start and end. Compare it to something your class knows - how many times would it stretch across your school playground? Draw the train to scale on a long strip of paper: make each wagon 1 cm wide and see how long your drawing becomes.