The journal Nature described Kröpelin as "one of the most devoted Sahara explorers of our time."[11] According to Siddiq Abd Algadir, president of the Sudanese Geologists' Union in
Khartoum and a fellow student with Kröpelin in the 1980s, "Much of what we now know about the geology, the environments and even the people in some of the most remote parts of the Sahara, we really owe to [Stefan Kröpelin] and the expeditions he has led."[11]
Contrary to other evidence that the Sahara suddenly changed from a wet to dry climate 5,000 years ago, Kröpelin's core samples at
Lake Yoa suggests the transition took longer, some 3,000 years from 5,600 to 2,700 BC.[11][12][13]
Kröpelin was instrumental in fighting to have the
Lakes of Ounianga in Chad listed as a UNESCO
World Heritage Site in 2012.[5][14] He was actively lobbying to have the
Ennedi Plateau added as well that has been inscribed as Africa's 6th mixed Natural and Cultural World Heritage property in July 2016.[15]
^Kröpelin, S; Verschuren, D; Lézine, A. M.; Eggermont, H; Cocquyt, C; Francus, P; Cazet, J. P.; Fagot, M; Rumes, B; Russell, J. M.; Darius, F; Conley, D. J.; Schuster, M; von Suchodoletz, H; Engstrom, D. R. (2008). "Climate-driven ecosystem succession in the Sahara: The past 6000 years". Science. 320 (5877): 765–8.
Bibcode:
2008Sci...320..765K.
doi:
10.1126/science.1154913.
PMID18467583.
S2CID9045667.