Page:Africa by Élisée Reclus, Volume 1.djvu/359

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS.
285

The Central Highlands.

To the west of the border chain which skirts the Red Sea, the mountainous ridges run transversely either from the east to the west, or from the north-east to the south-west, in the same direction as the portion of the Nile comprised between Abû-Hamed and Dabbeh. Some of these ridges are continuous; such, for instance, os that of the "Cataracts," which forms the natural barrier between Nubia and

Fig. 90. — Nubian Gold Mines
A. Auriferous hills are coloured red on the plan. D. Road to Ta Menat-ti. K. Cistern.
E. Face of the Mountain. L. Wells
B. Gold Mountain. F. Abode of Ammon. M. Road to the Coast.
C. Shrine of Ammon on the Holy Mountain. H. Houses for Storing the Gold. N. Another Road to the Coast.
I. King Ramanem's Stele. O. Road to Tapimat.

Egypt, west of Assuan; such also is the range whose culminating point is the Jebel-Shikr, north-east of Abû-Hamed.

Other ridges are intersected at intervals by broad breaches, and from a distance present the appearance of walls partially crumbling away. Like the mountains of the border chain, those of the highest transversal chains consist of crystalline rocks, granites, gneiss, porphyries, syenites, diorites, and volcanic formations. In many parts of the desert occur metamorphic sandstones, which have overflowed into the crevasses in the soil. But between the mountains, which form the backbone of Eastern Nubia, are other projections of less height, nearly all isolated, although