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Book The Desert of Southeast Arabia

Download or read book The Desert of Southeast Arabia written by K. W. Glennie and published by . This book was released on 2005 with total page 222 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Geology of the Oman Mountains  Eastern Arabia

Download or read book Geology of the Oman Mountains Eastern Arabia written by Mike Searle and published by Springer. This book was released on 2019-05-24 with total page 487 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book describes in detail numerous geological sites throughout the mountains of Oman and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in Eastern Arabia. The region is well known for its oil and gas reserves in the desert interior, and Permian-Mesozoic shelf carbonates exposed in the mountains of the Musandam peninsula, Jebel al-Akhdar and Saih Hatat, where deep wadi canyons provide impressive three-dimensional views into the crust. The region has numerous globally important geological sites, including the world’s largest and best-exposed ophiolite complex, the Semail Ophiolite, which is a vast thrust sheet of Cretaceous ocean crust and upper mantle emplaced onto the Arabian continental margin. Other sites include spectacular fossil localities, subduction zone metamorphic rocks (eclogites, blueschists, amphibolites), fold-thrust belts, giant sheath folds and Precambrian salt domes, as well as the huge sand dunes of the Rub al’Khali, the Empty Quarter, and the separate Wahiba (Sharkiyah) sandsea of Eastern Oman. Written by Mike Searle, who has worked on geological research projects throughout Oman and UAE almost every year since 1978, this book describes the field geology of each site and includes a wealth of maps, field photos and diagrams illustrating key features. It also discusses the history of exploration of Arabia and the search for its hidden geological secrets. The book provides the geological basis for the establishment of a series of World Heritage Sites, National GeoParks and Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) throughout the region. As such, it is of interest to geologists, tourists, mountaineers, trekkers, rock climbers and naturalists.

Book Arabian Deserts

    Book Details:
  • Author : H. Stewart Edgell
  • Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
  • Release : 2006-07-21
  • ISBN : 1402039700
  • Pages : 644 pages

Download or read book Arabian Deserts written by H. Stewart Edgell and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2006-07-21 with total page 644 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This is the first comprehensive survey of all the deserts of Arabia, based largely on the author’s 50 years of experience there. The text deals with every kind of desert in the region, from vast sand seas to clay pans and stony plains to volcanic flows. Along with dune types unique to the region the author outlines climatic changes, current ecology and human influence on desertification.

Book The Southern Arabia    History

Download or read book The Southern Arabia History written by MEENACHISUNDARAM.M and published by MS SOFTWARE LABORATORIES. This book was released on 2024-09-04 with total page 513 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Title: THE SOUTHERN ARABIA Author: M. Meenachi Sundaram [Translator] TABLE OF CONTENTS Title: SOUTHERN ARABIA.. 2 THE SOUTHERN ARABIA.. 4 CHAPTER I: MANAMAH AND MOHAREK. 4 CHAPTER II: THE MOUNDS OF ALI 22 CHAPTER III: OUR VISIT TO RUFA'A.. 38 MASKAT. 54 CHAPTER IV: SOME HISTORICAL FACTS ABOUT OMAN.. 54 CHAPTER V: MASKAT AND THE OUTSKIRTS. 74 THE HADHRAMOUT. 84 CHAPTER VI: MAKALLA.. 84 CHAPTER VII: OUR DEPARTURE INTO THE INTERIOR. 96 CHAPTER VIII: THE AKABA.. 104 CHAPTER IX: THROUGH WADI KASR. 116 CHAPTER X: OUR SOJOURN AT KOTON.. 132 CHAPTER XI: THE WADI SER AND KABR SALEH.. 149 CHAPTER XII: THE CITY OF SHIBAHM... 168 CHAPTER XIII: FAREWELL TO THE SULTAN OF SHIBAHM... 192 CHAPTER XIV: HARASSED BY OUR GUIDES. 209 CHAPTER XV: RETRIBUTION FOR OUR FOES. 236 CHAPTER XVI: COASTING EASTWARD BY LAND.. 249 CHAPTER XVII: COASTING WESTWARD BY SEA.. 261 DHOFAR AND THE GARA MOUNTAINS. 269 CHAPTER XVIII: MERBAT AND AL HAFA.. 269 CHAPTER XIX: THE GARA TRIBE. 288 CHAPTER XX: THE GARA MOUNTAINS. 303 CHAPTER XXI: THE IDENTIFICATION OF ABYSSAPOLIS. 317 CHAPTER XXII: SAILING FROM KOSSEIR TO ADEN.. 328 AN AFRICAN INTERLUDE: THE EASTERN SOUDAN.. 340 CHAPTER XXIII: COASTING ALONG THE RED SEA.. 340 CHAPTER XXIV: HALAIB AND SAWAKIN KADIM... 352 CHAPTER XXV: INLAND FROM MERSA HALAIB. 358 CHAPTER XXVI: MOHAMMED GOL. 366 CHAPTER XXVII: 'DANCING ON TOM TIDDLER'S GROUND, PICKING UP GOLD' 371 CHAPTER XXVIII: BEHIND THE JEBEL ERBA.. 387 THE MAHRI ISLAND OF SOKOTRA.. 407 CHAPTER XXIX: KALENZIA.. 407 CHAPTER XXX: ERIOSH AND KADHOUP. 419 CHAPTER XXXI: TAMARIDA OR HADIBO.. 428 CHAPTER XXXII: WE DEPART FOR THE LAND'S END—i.e. RAS MOMI 440 CHAPTER XXXIII: MOUNT HAGHIER AND FEREGHET. 448 CHAPTER XXXIV: BACK TO THE OCEAN.. 463 BELED FADHLI AND BELED YAFEI 473 CHAPTER XXXV: EXPERIENCES WITH THE YAFEI SULTAN.. 473 CHAPTER XXXVI: AMONG THE FADHLI 489 CHAPTER XXXVII: FROM THE PLAIN OF MIS'HAL TO THE SEA.. 501 ABOUT THE AUTHOR. 512 THE SOUTHERN ARABIA CHAPTER I: MANAMAH AND MOHAREK The first Arabian journey that we undertook was in 1889, when we visited the Islands of Bahrein in the Persian Gulf; we were attracted by stories of mysterious mounds, and we proposed to see what we could find inside them, hoping, as turned out to be the fact, that we should discover traces of Phœnician remains. The search for traces of an old world takes an excavator now and again into strange corners of the new. Out of the ground he may extract treasures, or he may not—that is not our point here—out of the inhabitants and their strange ways he is sure, whether he likes it or not, to extract a great deal, and it is with this branch of an excavator's life we are now going to deal. We thought we were on the track of Phœnician remains and our interest in our work was like the fingers of an aneroid, subject to sudden changes, but at the same time we had perpetually around us a quaint, unknown world of the present, more pleasing to most people than anything pertaining to the past. The group of islands known as Bahrein (dual form of Bahr, i.e. two seas) lies in a bay of the same name in the Persian Gulf, about twenty miles off the coast of El Hasa in Arabia.

Book Desert Kingdom

    Book Details:
  • Author : Toby Craig Jones
  • Publisher : Harvard University Press
  • Release : 2011-03-15
  • ISBN : 0674059409
  • Pages : 321 pages

Download or read book Desert Kingdom written by Toby Craig Jones and published by Harvard University Press. This book was released on 2011-03-15 with total page 321 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Oil and water, and the science and technology used to harness them, have long been at the heart of political authority in Saudi Arabia. Oil’s abundance, and the fantastic wealth it generated, has been a keystone in the political primacy of the kingdom’s ruling family. The other bedrock element was water, whose importance was measured by its dearth. Over much of the twentieth century, it was through efforts to control and manage oil and water that the modern state of Saudi Arabia emerged. The central government’s power over water, space, and people expanded steadily over time, enabled by increasing oil revenues. The operations of the Arabian American Oil Company proved critical to expansion and to achieving power over the environment. Political authority in Saudi Arabia took shape through global networks of oil, science, and expertise. And, where oil and water were central to the forging of Saudi authoritarianism, they were also instrumental in shaping politics on the ground. Nowhere was the impact more profound than in the oil-rich Eastern Province, where the politics of oil and water led to a yearning for national belonging and to calls for revolution. Saudi Arabia is traditionally viewed through the lenses of Islam, tribe, and the economics of oil. Desert Kingdom now provides an alternative history of environmental power and the making of the modern Saudi state. It demonstrates how vital the exploitation of nature and the roles of science and global experts were to the consolidation of political authority in the desert.

Book Quaternary Deserts and Climatic Change

Download or read book Quaternary Deserts and Climatic Change written by A.S. Alsharhan and published by CRC Press. This book was released on 2020-08-26 with total page 636 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: These proceedings record the results of climate change in many areas which are hyper-arid deserts today but which, almost cyclically, at intervals of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of years, have had a much more humid climate.

Book Southern Arabia

Download or read book Southern Arabia written by James Theodore Bent and published by . This book was released on 1900 with total page 546 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Lithosphere Dynamics and Sedimentary Basins  The Arabian Plate and Analogues

Download or read book Lithosphere Dynamics and Sedimentary Basins The Arabian Plate and Analogues written by Khalid Al Hosani and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2012-09-14 with total page 472 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book will constitute the proceedings of the ILP Workshop held in Abu Dhabi in December 2009. It will include a reprint of the 11 papers published in the December 2010 issue of the AJGS, together with 11 other original papers.

Book In the Heart of the Desert

Download or read book In the Heart of the Desert written by Michael Quentin Morton and published by Green Mountain Press. This book was released on 2007 with total page 290 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In the heart of the desert is the biography of exploration geologist Mike Morton, written by his son who grew up with his father's stories and first came to experience the desert on their field trips together. Making use of Mike's journals and letters and writings of his contemporaries, the author describes his father's jouneys and what it was like for westerners to live in the Middle East in the post-World War II years. The book is also a history of oil exploration in the Middle East, relying onthe author's extensive research into company archives and eye-witness accounts of activities in the field. -- Provided by publisher.

Book The Evolution of Human Populations in Arabia

Download or read book The Evolution of Human Populations in Arabia written by Michael D. Petraglia and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2009-11-27 with total page 314 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The romantic landscapes and exotic cultures of Arabia have long captured the int- ests of both academics and the general public alike. The wide array and incredible variety of environments found across the Arabian peninsula are truly dramatic; tro- cal coastal plains are found bordering up against barren sandy deserts, high mountain plateaus are deeply incised by ancient river courses. As the birthplace of Islam, the recent history of the region is well documented and thoroughly studied. However, legendary explorers such as T.E. Lawrence, Wilfred Thesiger, and St. John Philby discovered hints of a much deeper past during their travels across the subcontinent. Drawn to Arabia by the magnifcent solitude of its vast sand seas, these intrepid adventurers learned from the Bedouin how to penetrate its deserts and returned with stirring accounts of lost civilizations among the wind-swept dunes. We now know that, prior to recorded history, Arabia housed countless peoples living a variety of lifestyles, including some of the world’s earliest pastoralists, c- munities of incipient farmers, fshermen dubbed the “Ichthyophagi” by ancient Greek geographers, and Paleolithic big-game hunters who were among the frst humans to depart their ancestral homeland in Africa. In fact, some archaeological investigations indicate that Arabia was inhabited by early hominins extending far back into the Early Pleistocene, perhaps even into the Late Pliocene.

Book Quaternary Carbonate and Evaporite Sedimentary Facies and Their Ancient Analogues

Download or read book Quaternary Carbonate and Evaporite Sedimentary Facies and Their Ancient Analogues written by Christopher G. St. C. Kendall and published by John Wiley & Sons. This book was released on 2011-02-18 with total page 757 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book is part of the International Association of Sedimentologists (IAS) Special Publications. The Special Publications from the IAS are a set of thematic volumes edited by specialists on subjects of central interest to sedimentologists. Papers are reviewed and printed to the same high standards as those published in the journal Sedimentology and several of these volumes have become standard works of reference. This volume commemorates the eclectic research of Douglas James Shearman into evaporites, which was initiated by his studies of the prograding UAE coastal sabkhas or salt flats that incorporate evaporite minerals which displace and replace earlier carbonate sediments. His subsequent proselytization of the study of ancient evaporites in sedimentary sections all over the world led to fundamental advances in our understanding of arid zone carbonate sedimentology. The papers presented here are based on presentations made in Abu Dhabi, UAE 12-14th October 2004 and 7th –8th November 2006. They provide a retrospective from the 1960's and 70's of Holocene evaporites and carbonates, recapturing Shearman's contribution by revisiting the Holocene coastal evaporite and carbonate sediments of the Arabian/Persian Gulf from Abu Dhabi, Qatar, and Oman. The first set of papers considers these sediments from the perspective of their coastal geomorphology, sedimentary character and their geochemistry. Later papers examine the significance of these settings in the ancient geological section world-wide, including examples from the Mesozoic-Cenozoic of the Moroccan Atlantic margin and the Upper Jurassic Arab Formation of the Arabian Gulf.

Book The Archaeology of Prehistoric Arabia

Download or read book The Archaeology of Prehistoric Arabia written by Peter Magee and published by Cambridge University Press. This book was released on 2014-05-19 with total page 327 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book provides the first extensive coverage of the archaeology of the Arabian peninsula from c. 9000 to 800 BC. Providing a wealth of detail on the environmental and archaeological record, it argues that this ancient region was in many ways very different from the surrounding states in Egypt and Mesopotamia. It examines the adaptation of humans to Arabia's environment and the eventual formation of a unique society that flourished for millennia.

Book Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture

Download or read book Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture written by William H. Stiebing Jr. and published by Taylor & Francis. This book was released on 2023-07-03 with total page 684 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture offers an historical overview of the civilizations of the ancient Near East spanning ten thousand years of history. This new edition is a comprehensive introduction to the history and culture of the Near East, from prehistory and the beginnings of farming to the fall of Achaemenid Persia. Through text, images, maps, and historical documents, readers discover the material, social, and political world of cultures from Egypt to India, allowing students to see how these intertwined cultures interacted throughout history. Now fully updated and incorporating the latest scholarship on society, religion, and the economy, this book highlights the changing fortunes of these great civilizations. A special feature of this book is its many "Debating the Evidence" sections, where the reader becomes familiar with scholarly disputes concerning the interpretation of textual and archaeological evidence on a variety of topics and case studies. The fourth edition of Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture remains a crucial textbook for undergraduates and general readers studying the ancient Near East, particularly the political and social history of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, as well as students of archaeology and biblical studies who are working on the region.

Book In the Desert Margins

Download or read book In the Desert Margins written by Michel Mouton and published by L'Erma Di Bretschneider. This book was released on 2014 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Historically, Ancient Arabia has been pictured as a vast, empty desert. Yet, for the last 40 years, by digging buried cities out of the sand, archaeological research has challenged this image. From the second half of the 1st millennium BC to the eve of Islam in East Arabia, and as early as the 8th century BC in South Arabia, the settlement process evolved into urban societies. This study aims at reviewing this process in South and East Arabia, highlighting the environmental constraints, the geographical disparities and the responses of the human communities to ensure their subsistence and to provide for their needs. Evolution was endogenous, far from the main corridors of migrations and invasions. Influences from the periphery did not cause any prominent change in the remarkably stable communities of inner Arabia in antiquity. The settlement process and the way of life was primarily dictated by access to water sources and to the elaboration of ever-spreading irrigation systems. Beyond common traits, two models characterise the ancient settlement pattern on the arid margins of eastern and southern Arabia. In South Arabia, the settlement model for the lowland valleys and highland plateaus results from a long-term evolution of communities whose territorial roots go back to the Bronze Age. It grew out of major communal works to harness water. Into a territory of irrigated farmland, the south-Arabian town appeared as a central place. Settlements constituted networks spread across the valleys and the plateaus. Each network was dominated by a main town, the centre of a sedentary tribe, the capital of a kingdom. In East Arabia, the settlement pattern followed a different model which emerged in the last centuries BC along the routes crossing the empty spaces of the steppe, in a nomadic environment. Each community spread over no more than one, two or three settlements. These settlements never grew very large and the region was not urbanised to the same degree as in the southwest of the Arabian Peninsula. Permanent settlements were places for exchanges and meetings, for craft productions, for worship, where the political elites resided, where the wealth from long-distance trading was gathered, and where surplus from the regional economy was held. Each town was isolated, like an island in an empty space.

Book The Syrian Desert

    Book Details:
  • Author : Christina Phelps Grant
  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Release : 2013-09-05
  • ISBN : 1136192719
  • Pages : 471 pages

Download or read book The Syrian Desert written by Christina Phelps Grant and published by Routledge. This book was released on 2013-09-05 with total page 471 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: First Published in 2007, This historical survey written by a scholar and traveller gives the reader a well informed and readable account of an area of the world which has held and still holds a most significant geographical location in the Middle East - both culturally and commercially. Topics covered include - the bedouin trouble in the area, their origins and organization, ancient and medieval trade, early travellers, accounts of the important Altar of Damascus, Aleppo, Baghdad, Al Wasera, the caravan, state, the 'hajj', and much more.

Book The Encyclopedia Britannica

Download or read book The Encyclopedia Britannica written by and published by . This book was released on 1910 with total page 1122 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Archaeology of the United Arab Emirates

Download or read book Archaeology of the United Arab Emirates written by Daniel T. Potts and published by Trident Press Ltd. This book was released on 2003 with total page 342 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: