Page 57 - Arabian Gulf Intellegence
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PIRATE PORTS.                           15
             Ras-ool-Jabal, retires from the sea, forming low sandy plains, and the
             depth of water begins to decrease.
               From hence to Shargah the coast is generally low, and thinly planted
             with date trees, and full of shallow creeks, well calculated to afford
             protection to the peculiarly constructed boats of the pirate tribes.
             That of Ramse is particularly safe, from a bar at its entrance, on which
             the surf breaks heavily. To ships it were hazardous to approach this
             coast during the prevalence of a north-west wind, lest they become
             embayed ; no danger, however, is apparent to the eye between Mussel-
             dom and Boo Haile, a line of shore nearly thirty leagues in extent. The
             whole of this southern shore of the Gulf, which is very imperfectly
             known, even by tradition, to European hydrographers, is said to
             abound in shoals, with a bottom generally of coral and sand, and bear­
             ing, as far as Grane, in lat. 29° 12' N., beds of the richest pearls in the
             universe.
                                        Ras-ool-Khyma.

               At a distance of seven miles further, lat. 25° 48' N., and long. 56° 4'
             E. we reach Ras-ool-Khyma, the centre of the Pirate Ports, and
             their chief town, containing a thousand houses. If bears SW. & W.
             from the Great Quoin, about lifty-five miles distant. The town is
             situated on a point of land projecting into the sea, in a north-east
             direction, and terminating in a bank, extending itself parallel with the
             coast to the westward, at the distance of two and two and a half miles
             off shore, with two, two and a quarter, and two and a half fathoms,
             hard sand, upon it. Within this point is a deep, narrow bay, which first
             takes a south-westerly direction, to the back of the town, along which
             the Dows and larger boats are sheltered, and hence proceeds further
             inwards in a south-easterly line. The entrance to the bay is shallow,
             and impeded by a strip of land, extending obliquely from the point
             towards the opposite shore, and forming a bar on which, at spring tides,
             there is scarcely eleven feet water, although at these periods there is
             a rise of six feet above the usual level. Small vessels, however, or gun­
             boats, drawing not more than three feet water, may advance within pis­
             tol-shot of the beach, and much within point-blank range of the town;
             but it is not safe for vessels of fourteen feet draught to approach under
             two and a half or three miles. The best anchorage is six fathoms, soft
             sand, the Point bearing SE. about four miles.

                                    Amulgavine, Ejman, &c.
               Eleven miles SW. by W. j W. of Ras-ool-Khyma is situated a small,
             low, sandy island, containing four hundred houses, defended by bastions,
             erected in the most commanding positions. It is insular only at high-
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