Page 453 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 453
414 NAKAB EL HAJAR. [di.
sight of nothing which might be turned to
our advantage.
At 10'30 our journey continued over the
same sandy mounts as before; and at T30
we passed a sandstone hill called Jebel MA-
sinah. The upper part of this eminence
forms a narrow ridge, so nearly resembling
ruins, that it was not until my return we
were convinced to the contrary. We now
left the sandy mounds, and crossed over table
ridges elevated about two hundred feet from
the plains below, and intersected by numerous
valleys, the beds of former torrents, which
had escaped from the mountains on either
hand. The surface of the hills was strewn
with various sized fragments of quartz and
jasper, several of which exhibited a very
pleasing variety of colours.
The only rocks we found in the valleys were
a few rounded masses of primitive cream-
coloured limestone, of which formation are
the mountains on either hand, and which
is indeed the predominant rock along the
whole southern coast of Arabia.
A few stunted acacias now first made their
appearance, which continued to increase in