Page 35 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 35

Chapter One

                  proper for months with not much more than their camels and a few
                  dates to live off. This desert was crossed for the first time by a
                  European when Bertram Thomas rode by camel in 1930-31 from
                  Salalah in Dhufar on the Indian Ocean to Doha, the capital of Qatar.0
                  Only in the last few years have the routes of commercial airlines
                  begun to cross the length and breadth of this desert.
                    The fringes of the desert are ill-defined, because a period of several
                  years without any rain can convert areas which were abundant in
                  thorn-bushes and seasonal vegetation into utterly lifeless terrain for
                  decades until rain falls again and the dormant plant life is revived. In
                  times of drought or as a result of the ravages of sandstorms the desert
                  encroaches on the fertile oases in the settled areas. On the other
                  hand, a year or two of exceptionally heavy rains can open to grazing
                  regions of the desert which have not been frequented for many years.
                    The desert within the borders of the UAE may be divided into two
                  main sections. A desert foreland extends from the west of the
                  mountains between Ra's al Khaimah and the al 'Ain oases towards
                  the coast; in this area the gentle red dunes support extensive verdure
                  in the form of perennial thorn-bushes, tamarisks and some annual
                  vegetation. The more westerly tracts of the desert in the country
                  support less vegetation, and eventually towards the southern border
                  of Abu Dhabi the rolling dunes become distinctive crescent-shaped
                  barren sand mountains encircling equally lifeless gravel plains.

                  The sea
                  The surrounding desert to the south and west accounts for the
                  isolation of the country, whose contact with the outside world has
                  mostly been by way of the sea which it faces in the north. The whole
                  of the Gulf is very shallow, the maximum depth being only 50
                  fathoms (90 metres).7 The southern waters of the Gulf are charac­
                  terised by a great number of coral reefs and sandbanks, which
                  together with the numerous low-lying islands make navigation
                  extremely difficult and hazardous. Most of the southern coast is
                  utterly flat, marshy or sandy; it is indented by a number of creeks
                  along much of the Lower Gulf shoreline of the UAE, except for the
                  short stretch north of Ra’s al Khaimah, where the mountains rise
                  steeply from the sea. Due to the extreme difficulty of approach and
                  the lack of any sizeable natural harbours there was comparatively
                  little long-distance shipping undertaken during the last few cen­
                  turies from the ports of this coast, and overseas trade- at times almost

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