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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2014
The exceptional weather during much of the 1971 season at Umm Dabaghiyah provided an unusual opportunity to observe the steppe-country of the Jazira in flood conditions. Series of violent though short-lived storms produced an effect on the land surface which was the more pronounced because of the drought, and consequent de-vegetation, of the previous twelve months. The difficulties of travel in the water-logged countryside in the short time available prevented any systematic survey, nor was the party equipped for geomorphological measurements, but even the limited observations possible revealed much of interest, both from the point of view of present-day land-forming processes, and concerning the possible geomorphological history of the area.
Umm Dabaghiyah lies within the dry steppe zone of the Jazira. The Lower Fars series dips gently to the NNW, and the surface levels consist of redeposited silts and clays, more or less cemented by gypsum, lying upon gypsiferous rocks and gravel. The topography is of shallow valleys between low, smooth hills, often with rock outcrops near their summits. The differences in elevation are usually only of some few metres. There appears to be no coherent system of drainage within the area; storm-water drains from the hills in the form of sheetwash to form playa-lakes in the lowest-lying valleys. Only exceptionally are there signs of a permanent system of linear wadis debouching into the valleys or connecting one playa with the next. Presumably this lack of incised drainage results from the small differences in elevation and the consequent low energy potential of the system.
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