Page 349 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 349
310 TRAVELS IN OMaN.
about two years ago they wholly deserted
their former quarters, and are now only
found in the vicinity of Gambran on the
Persian shore. I have heard it related by
the inhabitants, that about every fifth or sixth
year the fish on the coast are visited by
*
some epidemic, which destroys them in vast
numbers, and many are then thrown up on
the shore. In the running streams there are
numerous small fry, but the natives do not
eat them. The insects and reptiles are
locusts, wasps, bees, tortoises, lizards, scor
pions, and many others common to India.
A considerable diversity in the geographi
cal features of the country produces in Oman
a corresponding variation in the climate.
Away from the sea-coast, to the westward of
the mountains, the air is very dry in the cold,
and excessively hot in the warm season ; but
in Batna, the high mountains which retreat
considerably from the coast arrest the pro
gress of the vapours exhaled and wafted from
the ocean, and it is comparatively cool and
moist. The exuberant vegetation of the
oases reduces the temperature, but the cli
mate, at the same time, is especially obnox-