Rub' al Khali

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Rub' al Khali (الربع الخالي)
Empty Quarter
sand desert
Rub al Khali 002.JPG
Sand dunes in the Rub' al Khali.
Countries Saudi Arabia, Oman, United Arab Emirates, Yemen
Length 1,000 km (621 mi)
Width 500 km (311 mi)
Area 650,000 km2 (250,966 sq mi)
Location of the empty quarter in Arabia.

The Rub' al Khali (Arabic: الربع الخالي‎‎ ar-Rubʿ al-Ḫālī ,[note 1] "Empty Quarter") is the largest contiguous sand desert in the world (erg),[1] encompassing most of the southern third of the Arabian Peninsula. The desert covers some 650,000 square kilometres (250,000 sq mi) (the area between long. 44°30′ −56°30′E., and lat. 16°30′ −23°00′N) including parts of Saudi Arabia, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen.[2] It is part of the larger Arabian Desert.

Description

Typical pale gravel plains surrounded by huge sand dunes.
Water found just 3 meters deep from ground level.

Terrain

The desert is 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) long, and 500 kilometres (310 mi) wide. Its surface elevation varies from 800 metres (2,600 ft) in the southwest to around sea level in the northeast.[3] The terrain is covered with sand dunes with heights up to 250 metres (820 ft), interspersed with gravel and gypsum plains.[2][3] The sand is a reddish-orange color due to the presence of feldspar.[3]

There are also brackish salt flats in some areas, such as the Umm al Samim area on the desert's eastern edge.[3]

Lake beds

Along the middle length of the desert there are a number of raised, hardened areas of calcium carbonate, gypsum, marl, or clay that were once the site of shallow lakes. These lakes existed during periods from 6,000 to 5,000 years ago and 3,000 to 2,000 years ago. The lakes are thought to have formed as a result of "cataclysmic rainfall" similar to present-day monsoon rains and most probably lasted for only a few years. However, lakes in the Mundafen area in the southwest of the Rub' al Khali show evidence of lasting longer, up to 800 years, due to increased runoff from the Tuwaiq Escarpment.[2]

Evidence suggests that the lakes were home to a variety of flora and fauna. Fossil remains indicate the presence of several animal species, such as hippopotamus, water buffalo, and long-horned cattle. The lakes also contained small snails, ostracods, and when conditions were suitable, freshwater clams. Deposits of calcium carbonate and opal phytoliths indicate the presence of plants and algae. There is also evidence of human activity dating from 3,000 to 2,000 years ago, including chipped flint tools, but no actual human remains have been found.[2]

Climate

The region has a hot desert climate typical of the larger Arabian Desert. The region is classified as "hyper-arid", with typical annual rainfall of less than 3 centimetres (1.2 in). Daily maximum temperatures average at 47 °C (117 °F) and can reach as high as 51 °C (124 °F).[3]

Biodiversity

Fauna includes arachnids (e.g. scorpions) and rodents, while plants live throughout the Empty Quarter. As an ecoregion, the Rub' al Khali falls within the Arabian Desert and East Saharo-Arabian xeric shrublands.[3] The Asiatic cheetahs, once widespread in Saudi Arabia, are regionally extinct from the desert.

Oil

Geologically, the Empty Quarter is the most oil-rich site in the world.[citation needed] Vast oil reserves have been discovered underneath the sand dunes.[citation needed] Sheyba, at the northeastern edge of the Rub' al Khali, is a major light crude oil-producing site in Saudi Arabia. Ghawar, the largest oil field in the world, extends southward into the northernmost parts of the Empty Quarter.

History

Satellite image of sand dunes in the Empty Quarter.

Desertification has increased through the millennia. Before desertification made the caravan trails leading across the Rub' al Khali so difficult, the caravans of the frankincense trade crossed now virtually impassable stretches of wasteland, until about AD 300.[4] It has been suggested that Ubar or Iram, a lost city, depended on such trade.[5] The traces of camel tracks, unidentifiable on the ground, appear in satellite images.[6] More recently, tribal populations were also present in certain parts of the Empty Quarter, with the largest in the Najran region. A few road links were connected with these tribal settlements to the water resource and oil production centers.

Expeditions

The first documented journeys by non-resident explorers were made by British explorers Bertram Thomas in 1931 and St. John Philby in 1932.

Between 1946 and 1950 Wilfred Thesiger crossed the area several times and mapped large parts of the Empty Quarter including the mountains of Oman, as described in his 1959 book Arabian Sands.[7]

In June 1950, a US Air Force expedition crossed the Rub' al Khali from Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, to central Yemen and back[8] in trucks to collect specimens for the Smithsonian Institution and to test desert survival procedures.[9]

In 1999 Jamie Clarke became the first Westerner to cross the Empty Quarter of Arabia in fifty years. His team of six, including three Bedouin, spent 40 days crossing the desert with a caravan of 13 camels.[10]

On 25 February 2006, a scientific excursion organized by the Saudi Geological Survey began to explore the Empty Quarter. The expedition consisted of 89 environmentalists, geologists and scientists from Saudi Arabia and abroad. Various types of fossilized creatures as well as meteorites were discovered in the desert. The expedition discovered 31 new plant species and plant varieties, as well as 24 species of birds that inhabit the region, which fascinated scientists as to how they have survived under the harsh conditions of the Empty Quarter.[11]

On 28 March 2012, Hajar Ali of Urbane Nomads became the first recorded woman to cross the Empty Quarter.[12] The expedition began in Al-Ain, Abu Dhabi and ended in Salalah, Oman.

In 2012, Alastair Humphreys and Leon McCarron pulled a specially designed cart from Salalah to Dubai.[13] They produced a documentary film about their journey and how it compared to those of Wilfred Thesiger.[14]

On 4 February 2013, a South African team including Alex Harris, Marco Broccardo and David Joyce claimed that they became the first people to cross the Empty Quarter unsupported and on foot,[15] in a journey which started in Salalah and lasted 40 days, eventually ending in Dubai. The team only made use of three water stops along the journey, and pulled a specially designed cart which housed all the supplies necessary for the entire expedition.[16]

In 2013 from 18 February to 28 March, South Korean explorer Young-Ho Nam led a team (Agustin Arroyo Bezanilla, Si-Woo Lee) on a crossing through the Empty Quarter on foot from Salalah, Oman, to Liwa Oasis, United Arab Emirates. The crossing was performed with permission from the governments of Oman and UAE. Dewan Ruler's Representative for Western Region, Emirate of Abu Dhabi recognized it as the world's first on-foot crossing of the Empty Quarter.[17]

In fiction

  • Rub' al Khali near Abu Dhabi was used in location shooting for the film Star Wars: The Force Awakens.[18]
  • In Donald Tyson's book "Alhazred," based on the fictional character created by H.P. Lovecraft, the main character, Abdul Alhazred, is banished to the "Empty Space" after being mutilated for sleeping with his master's betrothed.
  • In Nelson DeMille's 2012 best-seller, The Panther, U.S. agents hunt down a terrorist to Rub' al Khali, and main character John Corey jokes that "The Empty Quarter" isn't a great name if promoting tourism.
  • The desert features in H. P. Lovecraft's Call of Cthulhu: "Of the [Cthulhu] cult, he said that he thought the centre lay amid the pathless desert of Arabia, where Irem, the City of Pillars, dreams hidden and untouched." His story "The Nameless City" also reflects this idea of a lost city in Arabia.
  • Rub' al Khali is one of the settings for the PlayStation 3 video game Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception, in which protagonist Nathan Drake searches for the Iram of the Pillars.
  • The Empty Quarter plays an important role in Clive Barker's Jericho, and in his novel Weaveworld, and in Tim Powers' Declare.
  • It also serves as the site of Machine City, Zero-One, in the Matrix series.
  • Gerald Seymour's novel Unknown Soldier is almost entirely set in the Rub' al Khali.
  • Jack Higgins sets much of the action in his novels Edge of Danger and Midnight Runner in the Empty Quarter.
  • The Empty Quarter is also mentioned several times in The Black Stallion series of books from Walter Farley.
  • Much of the SIGMA Force book Sandstorm by James Rollins takes place in the Empty Quarter.
  • The Empty Quarter serves as the setting of the fictional "Ocean of Fire" horse race in the 2004 film Hidalgo. Filming of the movie actually occurred at various locations in the U.S.A. and Morocco.
  • In the Japanese light novel series Zero No Tsukaima, Rub' al Khali is thought to be the place of origin of the main character, Hiraga Saito.
  • In Daniel Easterman's second novel, The Seventh Sanctuary, it is the location of the lost city of Iram, where the eponymous seventh sanctuary is situated.
  • The Fremen people of [Frank Herbert]'s Dune novels are said to stem from tribes of the Rub' Al Khali.
  • Josephine Tey's novel The Singing Sands (1952) investigates the murder of a young man who believes he has discovered the fabled city of Wabar while flying over the Rub' Al Khali.
  • In Daniel Silva's novel Portrait of a Spy.
  • It is the site of Hammond Innes's novel, The Doomed Oasis. Innes traveled to Saudi Arabia to research for this book.
  • In season two of the Japanese animated series Mobile Suit Gundam 00, one cell of the anti-government force "Kataron" operates from a hidden base in Rub' Al Khali.
  • In the videogame 80 Days the Rub' Al Khali is one of the possible destinations of Fogg and Passepartout. There they meet Al-Talib, a woman with a teletransportation machine.
  • In the video game Fallout 4, a character's ancestor is said to have found a mystical artefact in a ruin in the Empty Quarter that gave him powers including being almost immortal.

Additional images

See also

Notes

  1. Other standardized transliterations include: ar-Rubʻ al-Khālī / ar-rubʿ al-ḵālī. The ar- is the assimilated Arabic definite article, al-, which can also be transliterated as al-.

References

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  8. http://www.zianet.com/tmorris/june1950expedition-1.jpg
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  10. Everest to Arabia. Clarke J. Azimuth Inc. 2000
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External links