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462                       APPENDIX.
 APPENDIX.
                                  Mcdnvat-en-nabi (the pro-
 Yembu’ (it bubbles up), where there   Jathrippa; Yathrib, or
 are  several  phet’s city), 25° 13' N., 40° 3' E. (Jomard.)
 springs. Thence lo
         Maco-raba, Mekkah, 21° 28' 17" N., 40° 15' 9" E.
 ’Udeibiyah (probably ’Udheibfyah, i.e
 ■ possessed of
 good water), a town so named. Thence to
        (De la Badi'a.)
 Ewwel Dehna (the first plain), a town so called.   Jiddah, 21° 28' 56" N., 39° 20' E.
 Thence to  The data here given will show what approximation
                        made before the survey by the Pa-
 W&sit (the middlemost). At this station lamp   was
 s are  to accuracy
 lighted, and cannon fired off. Thence to
        linurus.
 Bedr [Honein]. Thence to
 Khabeb-el-bizzah (strips of cloth), an  extensive plain.
 Thence to
 Ghi'k, a place on the sea-shore. Thence to  II.
 ’AkabahWaddan (the ascent of Wadd^n). Thence to
         Notes on a Collection of Plants transmitted by Lieut.
 Rabigh, the place where the ihram is put on. In
          J. R. Wellsted. By John Lindley, Esq., F.R.S., &c.
 its neighbourhood is Jolifah*, also called Muhei’ahf.
 Here all the routes to Mecca, six days distant, unite.  “The plants collected by Lieut. Wellsted   are all from
         the Tehama, an unexplored tract between the penin­
         sula of Sinai' and Yemen; bounded on the north by
 The principal ancient towns between Allah and   R&s Mohammed, and on the south by Jiddah. The
 Jiddah are—
         collection does much credit to the industry and scien­
 -dElath, Elath, or Ezion-Geber, 29° 30' 58" N., 35°
         tific devotion of this officer; but, as might be expected
 5' E. (Riippell.)
         from the nature of the country explored, possesses
 Madian at Moghait Shoaib, 27° 40' 21" N., 35°35'
         little of novelty or importance. It is chiefly interest­
 E. (id.)
         's as connecting the vegetation of Sinai and Egypt
 Raunath near Istabil ’Antar, Leucc Come (Albus
         with that of Arabia Felix.
 Pagus), at Haura. Jambia; Yambo’, 24° 7' 6'', 3S°
           “ The whole tract to which the collection refers ap-
 27' (De la Badia).
         pears to be extremely sterile; with the exception
          the almond, of which  some specimens have been pre­
 * Hajefeh, according to M. Bianchi (Recueil de Voy. ii. 153), but  served, there is no species of any interest to man ; nor
 this is a strange oversight.  Burckhardt  ls there  any other tree whatever except the Thuja
 f This itinerary varies somewhat from that given by   complete
 (Travels in Arabia, p. 455): it may also be considered as more  onentalisy of which   some  fragments have been sent
          home.
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