Page 621 - Arabian Gulf Intellegence
P. 621

GULF OF PERSIA.                         577
            in four or four and a half fathoms until you deepen into five or six
            fathoms, when you may continue to haul up, as you deepen your
            water, for Rassul, which pass at a distance of'half a mile. If working,
            you may stand close over to the main, there being from four to seven
            fathoms within a few hundred yards of the beach, and four fathoms
            towards Pheleechi, after passing Rassul ; and do not approach nearer
            than seven fathoms on the Grane side, and work to four on the opposite.
            In passing Ras Toosa (which forms the low point near the town), do
            not approach nearer than a mile and a half*, when past it, haul in a little
            towards the town, and anchor off it in any depth from seven to ten
            fathoms.
                                       Muciian Island.
               Muchan island is a small dry sandbank, between Pheleechi and the
            main.
                                      Piieleeciii Island.*
               The town of Pheleechi is in lat. 19° 26' 25" N., long. 48° 15' 50" E.
            The island is eighteen miles round, low, and surrounded by a mud flat,
            running off for a considerable distance, but shoals regularly in approach­
            ing it. Tolerable water is procured here, also a few sheep, fish, and
            poultry. It has about four or five hundred inhabitants, who are mostly
            fishermen, and are subject to the Shaikh of Grane, one of whose relations
            is Shaikh or governor. The western point of the entrance to the river
            Euphrates is in lat. 29° 55' 40" N., long. 48° 27' IS" E. It is very
            low, and scarcely discernible beyond three or four miles. It is
            nearly surrounded by a mud flat, running oft’ to the southward for six or
            seven miles, nearly dry at low-water. The ground is clammy, and
            covered in most seasons with short grass and rushes, and is inhabited
            by straggling parties of Arabs, who reside about there principally for
            the sake of pasture for their cattle.
               On the Euphrates side of the point the water appears to be rather
            gaining on the land, but on the side towards Khore Abdoolla the land
            appears to gain upon the sea; and from the information I have received
            from the pilots, and other intelligent natives, the mud flat on this side
            has extended considerably of late years, so that in a few years more
            what is now a mud flat, covered at spring tides, will probably be firm
            ground. The increase of the land on the side of Khore Abdoolla is also
            much greater than the loss on the side of the river. This remark, from
            all the information I have been able to obtain, applies equally to the
            opposite bank of the river, where the land is gaining ground. Khore
            Abofalla is nearly separated from the Euphrates by the above point,
            and when laying in one you may, from the top, see the masts of the
            vessels plainly in the other. The Khore is navigable to Woorba Island,
              * Vide also report on this island by Lieutenant J, Felix Jones. I N   at pages 52 to 54
            of this Selection.                                  *   ’








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