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Cook, Arthur B.
Zeus: a study in ancient religion (Band 1): Zeus god of the bright sky — Cambridge, 1914

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14695#0457

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The Oasis of Siwah

38i

white salt: it was dug up in large crystals, packed in palm-baskets,
and taken by certain priests of Ammon to Egypt as a gift for the
Persian king or other favoured individual, being in request for
sacrificial purposes1. It is still an article of export. As to the
shells mentioned by Eratosthenes, G. Rohlfs found and figured a
variety of fossils, including astroite, ostracite, etc.2 He also ob-
tained from a running ditch near Siwah a number of small fish,
which K. A. Zittel identifies with the Cyprinodon dispar discovered
by Desor in the artesian wells of Algeria and regards as a relic of
the primeval Sahara-lake3.

Fig. 289.

Despite the saline character of its soil, the Oasis can boast
more than thirty springs of fresh water. Of these the most famous,
though no longer the most copious, is Ain el ham-mam (fig. 28<p)4

1 Arrian 3. 4. 5f., itin. Alex. 52 p. 160 Muller, Deinon Persica frag. 15 {Frag. hist.
Gr. ii. 92 Muller) ap. Athen. 67 A—B, Eustath. in Od. p. 1500, 2. On sal Hammoniacus
see further Plin. nat. hist. 31. 78 f., Ov. 711edic.fac.fem. 94, Colum. 6. 17. 7, Cels. de med.
6. 6. 39. The name has passed into the modern pharmacopoeia as ' sal ammoniac,'
' Saimiah,' etc. G. Rohlfs Von Tripolis nach Alexandrien2, ii. 121 pi. 4, 2 describes and
illustrates a salt-crystal from the Oasis.

2 Id. ib. pis. 3 f.

3 G. Rohlfs Drei Monate in der libyschen Wiiste p. 187 n. 1.

4 G. Steindorff Durch die Libysche Wiiste zur Amonsoase pp. 58 fig. 43, 62, 101 f.
 
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