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An ancient Arabian Ostrich (Struthio camelus syriacus) egg-shell from the Village of Qidfa’, Emirate of Fujairah, United Arab Emirates
By: Dr. Sc. Norman Ali Bassam Ali Taher Khalaf-Sakerfalke von Jaffa
I visited Fujairah Museum, Fujairah 09th December and 15th December 2009. I saw many archaeological which was exhibited.
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One of these interesting findings was an ancient Arabian Ostrich (Struthio camelus syriacus) egg-shell from the Village of Qidfa‟, Emirate of Fujairah. The egg-shell was found in "Qidfa‟ 1" tomb, and was probably used as a liquid container, dating from 1500 - 1000 B.C. This is a material evidence of the historical presence of the Arabian Ostrich in the United Arab Emirates. The Arabian Ostrich is now extinct.
The Arabian Ostrich (Struthio camelus syriacus Rothschild, 1919) : The Middle Eastern Ostrich or Arabian Ostrich (Struthio camelus syriacus Rothschild, 1919) is an extinct subspecies of the ostrich which once lived on the Arabian Peninsula and in the Near East. Its range seems to have been continuous in prehistoric times, but with the drying-up of the Arabian Peninsula, it disappeared from the inhospitable areas of the Arabian Desert such as the Rub' Al-Khali. In historic times, the bird seems to have occurred in 2 discrete subpopulations: a smaller one in the southeast of the Arabian Peninsula and a larger one in the area where today the borders of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Palestine, Iraq and Syria meet. Towards the Sinai Peninsula, it probably intergraded with the North African subspecies (Struthio camelus camelus Linnaeus, 1758) in earlier times. It looked exactly like that form; possibly, the females were of a slightly lighter coloration. The only certain way to distinguish S. c. camelus and S. c. syriacus was the smaller size of the latter, with only marginal overlap: the tarsus was 390 - 465 mm long in S. c. syriacus versus 450 - 530 mm in S. c. camelus (Wikipedia: Arabian Ostrich). Gazelle : The Palestinian Biological Bulletin – Number 96 – December 2009