Page 37 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 37

Chapter One

                   described in geological terms as eruptive salt-plugs. Dalma Island, 45
                   kilometres north of the western coast of Abu Dhabi, has fresh-water
                   wells on it which used to provide water for the seasonal pearling fleet
                   and support a small resident population. Facilities for producing,
                   storing and exporting off-shore oil from Abu Dhabi are located on
                   Das Island, 170 kilometres from the capital; on al Mubarraz Island,
                   100 kilometres away; on Arzanah Island, 190 kilometres away; and
                   further facilities are under construction on Zirku Island, 140
                   kilometres from Abu Dhabi. One of the largest of Abu Dhabi’s
                   islands, Sir Bani Yas, is situated to the west of one of the few deep­
                   water channels which reach the coast. The rocky hills of Jabal al
                   Dhannah on the mainland opposite Sir Bani Yas provided a suitable
                   site for the establishment of a tanker terminal for the oil produced in
                   the desert.
                     The capital of Abu Dhabi, bearing the same name as the State, is
                   also located on an island, which is connected to the mainland by two
                   road bridges. The triangular island has about 10 kilometres of
                   waterfront and extends for 16 kilometres towards the mainland
                   between lagoons and other islands. It accommodates at present most
                   of the capital’s administrative and residential buildings, including
                   the international airport.
                     Sabkhah is the local name for the sally mud-flats, formed in
                   geologically recent times from dried-up lagoons, which extend along
                   the full length of this coast.9 They are saturated with salt and cannot
                   support any vegetation. Tidal movement or rain turn even those parts
                   which might be passable at other times into a treacherous swamp
                   unsafe for camel or car. The Sabkhah Matti, near the north-western
                   border of the State with Qatar and Saudi Arabia, extends over 100
                   kilometres inland from the coast and provides an added hindrance to
                   communications with neighbouring regions. The sabkhah belt
                   stretches almost uninterrupted the whole length of the coast from the
                   western border with Qatar near Khaur al 'Udaid to beyond Dubai in
                   the north-east. Some rock outcrops and sand-spits relieve the utter
                   monotony of this sabkhah landscape and afford access to the mostly
                   sandy shoreline and its maze of tidal lagoons, sandbanks and
                   islands.
                     The sands generally begin between 5 and 15 kilometres from the
                   shore and rise gently towards the east and south, the oasis of al 'Ain
                   being situated in the east at the foot of the mountains and about 200
                   metres above sea level. The extent to which the desert is habitable

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