Thursday, September 17, 2009
Camping in Dhofar
Friday, September 11, 2009
The Lost Symbol
A team of archaeologists headed by Dr Juris Zarins unearthed it from a buried fort, which was once an integral part of the ancient frankincense trade. Fort Hamran, as it is now known, lies 25 km east of Salalah in the Dhofar governorate of southern Oman.

The vessel they found was originally purple in colour and marked with six simple Greek crosses. Their conclusion is that it was a Christian chalice! And what was it doing in southern Arabia?
This raises the possibility that Christian monks had set up a centre in what was once a frankincense trading post. "There is a chance that Ain Humran was the missing 'third church' founded by the Byzantine missionary Theophilus Indus in the middle 300s." (Clapp, N. (1998). The road to Ubar : finding the Atlantis of the sands. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p.212)
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Don't count the stars: it might spell your demise!
"One day a boy was outside at night and he decided to see how many stars there were in the sky. Unfortunately, he kept counting until he counted his own star whereupon that star immediately fell to earth and destroyed him and all the inhabitants of his village." I asked Ahmed how they knew it had happened like this when the witness to it had been killed. He said that the person who observed him counting the stars probably got so bored that he walked far from the village and was able to safely observe the arrival of the meteorite!
In any case, just behind Ahmed's village in Shehait (on the road to Tawi Attair) is a sinkhole. It is about 100m in diameter and 40 metres deep.
A similar story is used by locals to explain the formation of the nearby sinkhole at Tawi Attair. However, unanimous scientific opinion says that both these sinkholes were formed by the action of water in the limestone and not by meteorites. Tawi Attair sinkhole is about 150 metres in diameter and is over 200 metres deep.
The above two sinkholes are very impressive. However, my favourite is Teyq, which also happens to be one of the largest sinkholes in the world. It's about 10 km north of Tawi Attair. At first sight it doesn't even look like a sinkhole! Technically, it is described as a collapsed sinkhole. There are two wadis (dry river valleys) which merge in the sinkhole. When it rains water flows along the wadis and then disappears into a large underground cavern. The sinkhole itself is 1.25 km long, 1 km wide and 250 metres deep, with a volume of about 300 million cubic metres.
Friday, August 28, 2009
Nawal Said Atiq
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High in the Dhofar Mountains (khareef poem)
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Ain Razat

Ain Razat is the most important source of spring water in Dhofar. It used to be one of the main sources of water for Salalah. Its water as well as several smaller springs flow into a long pool on the northern side of the carpark at the foot of the jebel. Water flows along a falaj (watercourse) throughout the year, although flow is highest during the khareef. This water flows 7 km to Al-Mamurah Palace, the Sultan's residence when in Salalah. A further 3 km further on the watercourse reaches Razat Farm.

Near the spring is a beautiful fenced garden, which belongs to the Diwan of the Royal Court and is constantly guarded. However, it is open to the public on Thursdays and Fridays and every day during the khareef. The garden is a very popular place for picnics, as is the area under the trees near the pool near the spring.
There are several shallow caves in the limestone hills along the northern side of the spring and pool. Unlike the hills on the jebel side of the Razat Valley, the hills on the southern side of the pool and carpark are much more accessible, and relatively easy to climb. There are numerous animal tracks which zigzag the hillside so there are no problems in finding your way to the top. At the summit there is an uninterrupted panorama of the plain from Salalah to Taqah.

During and immediately after the khareef the whole area comes alive. Fresh growth is seen everywhere: fresh grass, trees with new leaves, and many plants and trees covered in colourful blossom. The new growth and easy availability of water attracts insects and birds - for example, the African Paradise Flycatcher, the White-Breasted White Eye, African Silverbills and Wheatears - which thrive under these conditions.

A generation or two ago, waters from Ain Razat and nearby Ain Hamran, were channelled into cultivated fields. Evidence of the irrigation systems are still visible on the plains in some areas around Wadis Razat and Hamran. There are also the remains of an occasional tower or two which were used by farmers to guard their land. Friends have told me that in the late 1930s the plains between Ain Razat and Khor Soli (near Taqa) were, in season, green with crops of millet, corn and other grains.
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Hamran Fort, Dhofar
Hamran (Hamroun) Fort is situated on the top of a small hill about 20 km east of Salalah, and 7 km from the shores of the Arabian Sea, in the foothills of the Dhofar Mountains.In 1993 the fort was excavated by an American archaeological team led by Dr Yuris Zarins.
They believe that this fort dates to the same period as the fortified cities of Shisr and Samharum (about 2000 years old). Additionally, the three sites - Hamran, Shisr and Samharum - are believed to have been actively involved in the export of the frankincense.
Hamran Fort is very similar in design to the fort at Shisr (on the edge of the Empty Quarter). While Shisr's fort has largely disappeared into the spring under it, this fort at Hamran has the advantage of being structurally intact. The inner fort is about 20 metres square, with several rooms in what originally would have been a three storey structure.
A complete flight of stairs leading to the top storey still remains intact. The inner fort has an area of about 100 metres square surrounding it, all of which is enclosed by a defensive wall.
Looking south from the fort are several areas of graves probably used by the inhabitants of Hamran Fort.
About a kilometre to the north of the fort is a spring – Ain Hamran – as well as fields and houses used by the present local inhabitants. As well as the main fort there are ruins of some small towers which were once used by farmers to watch their land and animals.
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Flying snakes still in southern Arabia?
From ancient times stories about flying snakes in southern Arabia have abounded, especially those which supposedly protected frankincense trees.
Monday, August 17, 2009
Undeciphered inscriptions in south Arabia…
As well as the inscriptions, there are many cave paintings of domesticated animals (camels, cows, goats, horses) as well as wild animals (ibex, wolves, leopards, foxes).
Al-Shahri reached the following conclusions about the incidence of inscriptions and drawings in Dhofar: the largest number of inscriptions and drawings were found in areas distant from well-worn mountain passes and routes taken by caravans. The inscriptions were, in fact, mostly found in areas heavily used by herders and their animals. Inscriptions and drawings were only found in caves which would have been suitable for human habitation. Often the subject of the drawings varies with locality – for example, ibex in the high dry plateaux; palm trees and boats near the coastal plains. However, the techniques, style of inscriptions and drawings, and the materials used are very similar wherever they occur throughout the region.