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The Hollow Earth

Chapter 16: XIII. OASES.
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About This Book

The author advances a speculative model of a hollow planetary interior and critiques established geological and astronomical explanations. Organized as short chapters, the text examines heat generation, ocean currents, ice formation, glaciers, earthquakes, volcanoes, springs and wells, and meteor phenomena, arguing that friction, water distribution, and internal cavities better explain observations than molten cores, polar points, or standard gravity laws. It questions accepted origins of the Gulf Stream, ice belts, volcanic activity, and artesian pressures, considers surface influences and polarity shifts, and concludes with a summary and appendix. The tone mixes polemic and popular scientific reasoning to invite readers to reconsider conventional theories.

XIII.
OASES.

These green spots in the great deserts are the counterparts of Islands in the oceans.

If not thrown up and fed by water upheaval, how are they produced? Are they volcanic? The Oasis of Ammonium, or Siwah, six miles long and eight wide, contains the ruins of the famous temple and oracle of Ammon, visited by Alexander the Great, and celebrated for the fountain of the Sun, whose waters are warm at morning and evening, and cold at noon.

There are several oases not long distances west of the Nile in the Great Desert. The ancients considered them as Islands in a Sea of Sand, but they are really elevated lakes, although not manifesting themselves much at the surface, but underlying so closely as to render the climate too unhealthy to live in during the summer and autumn, being of a swampy character, and yet very productive in winter and spring. Where do these waters soak in to produce such spots in the deserts?