Harrat al-Sham explained
The Ḥarrat al-Shām (ar|حَرَّة ٱلشَّام), also known as the Harrat al-Harra, Harrat al-Shaba,[1] Syro-Jordanian Harrah,[2] and sometimes the Black Desert in English,[3] is a region of rocky, basaltic desert stretching from southern Syria starting at the Hauran region all the way down to the northern Arabian Peninsula. It covers an area of some 40000-3NaN-3 in the modern-day Syrian Arab Republic, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. Vegetation is characteristically open acacia shrubland with patches of juniper at higher altitudes.[4]
The Harrat has been occupied by humans since at least the Late Epipalaeolithic .[5] One of the earliest known sites is Shubayqa 1 (occupied),[6] a Natufian site where archaeologists have discovered the remains of the oldest known bread.[7]
Geology
The Harrat comprises volcanic fields formed by tectonic activity from the Oligocene through to the Quaternary.[8] It is the largest of several volcanic fields on the Arabian Plate,[9] containing more than 800 volcanic cones and around 140 dikes. Activity began during the Miocene; an earlier eruptive stage at the southeastern end of the volcanic field, occurred during the late Pleistocene and the Holocene.[10] It is known to have erupted in historic times.[11] [12]
The Jabal al-Druze, al-Safa and Dirat al-Tulul volcanic fields, among others, form the northern and Syrian part of the ḥarra. The Saudi Arabian portion of the Harrat Ash Shamah volcanic field extends across a 210km (130miles)-long, roughly 75km (47miles)-wide northwest-southeast-trending area on the northeastern flanks of the Wadi Sirhan and reaches its high point at Jabal al-Amud. It is in the Tabuk Province of northwest Saudi Arabia.[13] [14] and is one of a series of Quaternary volcanic fields paralleling the Red Sea coast.
History and economy
The Harrat has traditionally been occupied by nomadic Bedouin of the Anizah confedaration.[15] [16] It It is primarily associated with the Ahl al-Jabal tribe, who graze sheep, goats, donkeys and camels there, but the Rwala, Zbaid, Ghayyath, Sardiyya and other tribes also use the area at times. Although the region as a whole is too dry for rainfed agriculture, seasonal wetlands such as the Qa' Shubayqa are used for growing cereals after they are flooded by winter rains.[17] In the second half of the 20th century, many Bedouin settled in the village of Safawi, which grew up around a pumping station on the Kirkuk–Haifa oil pipeline (H5).[18]
Archaeological sites
Jordan
See also
Further reading
- Ilani, S., Harlavan, Y., Tarawneh, K., Rabba, I., Weinberger, R., Khalil, I., and Peltz, S. (2001), "New K-Ar ages of basalts from the Harrat Ash Shaam volcanic field in Jordan: Implications for the span and duration of the upper-mantle upwelling beneath the western Arabian plate" Geology 29(2):171–174
- Kempe, S. and Al-Malabeh, A. (2005), "Newly discovered lava tunnels of the Al-Shaam plateau basalts", Geophysical Research Abstracts 7, European Geosciences Union
- Salf, S.I. (1988), "Field and petrographic characteristics of Cenozoic basaltic rocks, Northwestern Saudi Arabia" Journal of African Earth Sciences, 7(5):805–809
- Weinstein, Y., Navon, O., Altherr, R., and Stein, M., (2006) "The role of lithospheric mantle heterogeneity in the generation of Plio-Pleistocene alkali basalt suites from NW Harrat Ash Shaam (Israel)", Journal of Petrology 47(5):1017–1050
- Al Kwatli, M.A., Gillot, P.Y., Zeyen, H., Hildenbrand, A., and Al Gharib, I., 2012. Volcano-tectonic evolution of the northern part of the Arabian plate in the light of new K-Ar ages and remote sensing: Harrat Ash Shaam volcanic province (Syria). Tectonophysics, 580, 192–207.
External links
Notes and References
- Book: Edgell, H. Stewart . Arabian Deserts: Nature, Origin and Evolution . 2006 . Springer . 2006 . 978-1-4020-3969-0 . Dordrecht . 327–329, 347.
- Book: Al-Jallad, Ahmad . A Dictionary of the Safaitic Inscriptions . Jaworska . Karolina . 2019 . Brill . 978-90-04-40042-9 . 1.
- Betts. Alison. 1982. A Natufian site in the Black Desert, Eastern Jordan. Paléorient. 8. 2. 79–82. 10.3406/paleo.1982.4322. 0153-9345.
- S.A. Ghazanfar, Vegetation of the Arabian Peninsula (Springer Science & Business Media, 1998) p 272.
- Book: Richter . Tobias . Enzel . Yehouda . Bar-Yosef . Ofer . Ofer Bar-Yosef . Quaternary of the Levant: Environments, Climate Change, and Humans . 2017 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 978-1-107-09046-0 . 715–722 . Natufian and early Neolithic in the Black Desert.
- Richter . Tobias . Arranz-Otaegui . Amaia . Yeomans . Lisa . Boaretto . Elisabetta . High Resolution AMS Dates from Shubayqa 1, northeast Jordan Reveal Complex Origins of Late Epipalaeolithic Natufian in the Levant . Scientific Reports . 5 December 2017 . 7 . 1 . 17025 . 10.1038/s41598-017-17096-5 . 29208998 . 5717003 . 2017NatSR...717025R . en . 2045-2322. free .
- Arranz-Otaegui . Amaia . Carretero . Lara Gonzalez . Ramsey . Monica N. . Fuller . Dorian Q. . Richter . Tobias . Archaeobotanical evidence reveals the origins of bread 14,400 years ago in northeastern Jordan . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences . 31 July 2018 . 115 . 31 . 7925–7930 . 10.1073/pnas.1801071115 . 30012614 . 6077754 . en . 0027-8424. free .
- Al Kwatli. Mohamad Amer. Gillot. Pierre Yves. Lefèvre. Jean Claude. Hildenbrand. Anthony. 2015-09-01. Morpho-structural analysis of Harrat Al Sham volcanic field Arabian plate (Syria, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia): methodology and application. Arabian Journal of Geosciences. en. 8. 9. 6867–6880. 10.1007/s12517-014-1731-1. 129569824. 1866-7538.
- Krienitz. M.-S.. Haase. K. M.. Mezger. K.. Shaikh-Mashail. M. A.. 2007-08-01. Magma Genesis and Mantle Dynamics at the Harrat Ash Shamah Volcanic Field (Southern Syria). Journal of Petrology. en. 48. 8. 1513–1542. 10.1093/petrology/egm028. 0022-3530. free.
- H. Stewart Edgell, Arabian Deserts: Nature, Origin and Evolution (Springer Science & Business Media, 21Jul.,2006) p329-330
- Book: Geological Survey Professional Paper. 1989. U.S. Government Printing Office. 153.
- Peter Vincent, Saudi Arabia: An Environmental Overview (CRC Press, 2008) p22.
- U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper (U.S. Government Printing Office, 1989) pA152
- Geological Survey Professional Paper, Volume 560, Part 1 (U.S. Government Printing Office, 1989)
- Lancaster . William . Lancaster . Fidelity . 1997-02-01 . Indigenous resource management systems in the Bâdia of the Bilâd ash-Shâm . Journal of Arid Environments . 35 . 2 . 367–378 . 10.1006/jare.1996.0169 . 0140-1963.
- Book: Lancaster . William . Lancaster . Fidelity . People, Land and Water in the Arab Middle East . 1999 . Routledge . London . 9781315079257 . 100-102 .
- Jones . Matthew D. . Richter . Tobias . Rollefson . Gary . Rowan . Yorke . Roe . Joe . Toms . Phillip . Wood . Jamie . Wasse . Alexander . Ikram . Haroon . Williams . Matthew . AlShdaifat . Ahmad . Pedersen . Patrick Nørskov . Esaid . Wesam . 2022-10-20 . The palaeoenvironmental potential of the eastern Jordanian desert basins (Qe'an) . Quaternary International . Geoarchaeology from Mediterranean Areas to Arid Margins . 635 . 73–82 . 10.1016/j.quaint.2021.06.023 . 1040-6182.
- Web site: Arid Land Resources and Their Management: Jordan's Desert Margin . 2024-12-17 . Routledge & CRC Press . en.