Page 314 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
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XVIII.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 277


             west-north-west. They are usually of an ob­
             long form, lying at right angles to the streams

             by which they are supplied. Their size varies
             from a circumference of seven or eight miles

             to one, or even less. The singular and labo­
             rious mode by which the natives convey
             water to them, I have already noticed in my

             account of the oases of Bedi’ah.
               For the purpose of obtaining a better soil,

             and facilitating irrigation, the Arabs have
             removed the earth to the depth of six or
             seven feet, and they flood the whole or any

             part at pleasure. Some of these streams are
             public property, others belong to individuals

             or to companies. At a place called Om Ta'ief,
             near to Maskat, the Imam constructed a
             falj at a cost of forty thousand dollars;

            but the water proved so brackish that they
             were forced to abandon it. An estate in

             North Oman, where these subterranean
             rivulets are very scarce, derives its value

             from its situation with regard to them. Some
             of the minor rills are exhausted, or their

             water is greatly diminished in the dry sea­
             son, and the ground is then irrigated from
             the main streams. At Nakh], near to
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