Research Program: Biological ground water survey of the Sultanate of Oman. List of sampling stations March-April 1996

The Sultanate of Oman is an arid country, forming the south-eastern margin of the Arabian peninsula, with coast lines on the Gulf of Oman in the north-east and the Arabian Sea in the south-east. In the interior, it is bordered on the Emirates in the north-west, Saudi-Arabia in the west, and Yemen in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stock, J.H. (Jan H.), Vermeulen, (Jan J.), Mutey Al Nofli, Abdul
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.naturalis.nl/pub/506310
Description
Summary:The Sultanate of Oman is an arid country, forming the south-eastern margin of the Arabian peninsula, with coast lines on the Gulf of Oman in the north-east and the Arabian Sea in the south-east. In the interior, it is bordered on the Emirates in the north-west, Saudi-Arabia in the west, and Yemen in the south-east.\nAlthough today large parts of the Sultanate are formed by hot desert, this has not always been the case in its geological history. The occurrence of huge karst caves shows that precipitation must have been much higher in the past. On the other hand, ancient glacial deposits show that it lay closer to the South Pole some 600 million years (My) and again 300 My ago.