In the Heart of the Desert - Info and Reading Options
The Story of an Exploration Geologist and the Search for Oil in the Middle East
By Morton, Michael Quentin

"In the Heart of the Desert" is published by Green Mountain Press (UK) in May 2006. 1st edition - Aylesford, Kent, United Kingdom, it has 282 pages and the language of the book is English.
“In the Heart of the Desert” Metadata:
- Title: In the Heart of the Desert
- Author: Morton, Michael Quentin
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: 282
- Publisher: Green Mountain Press (UK)
- Publish Date: May 2006. 1st edition
- Publish Location: ➤ Aylesford, Kent, United Kingdom
“In the Heart of the Desert” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ petroleum - oil - geology - geologist - Iraq Petroleum Company - Buraimi dispute - History - Petroleum geologists - Petroleum - Geologists - Southern Arabia - British - Prospecting - Biography - Discovery and exploration
- People: Mike Morton - Wilfred Thesiger - Ziad Beydoun
- Places: ➤ Abu Dhabi - Oman - Muscat - Yemen - Iraq - Palestine - Jordan - Qatar - Buraimi
- Time: 1945 - 1971
Edition Specifications:
- Format: Hardback
- Weight: 980
- Dimensions: 24 x 17.6 x 2.2
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL23978056M - OL14936470W
- Library of Congress Control Number (LCCN): 2010474656
- ISBN-13: 9780955221200
- ISBN-10: 095522120X
- All ISBNs: 095522120X - 9780955221200
AI-generated Review of “In the Heart of the Desert”:
"In the Heart of the Desert" Table Of Contents:
- 1- Baba Gurgur
- 2- Cold Wind Flowing
- 3- Holy City
- 4- Recapitulation
- 5- Hadhramaut
- 6- The Land of Sun and Fire
- 7- A Province Favoured by Providence
- 8- Aleppo
- 9- The Trek to Buraimi
- 10- They Have No Beards
- 11- Strangers Within the Gates
- 12- The Bedouin Well at Thamud
- 13- Duqm Expeditionary Force
- 14- Greenaway Gardens
- 15- Fahud
- 16- Return to Buraimi
- 17- Lord of the Green Mountain
- 18- Covered Wagons
- 19- Musandam Welcomes You
- 20- Round the Bend
- 21- The Lights of Bukha
- 22- Epilogue
"In the Heart of the Desert" Description:
The Open Library:
The decision of the British Government in 1912 to convert its naval ships from coal to oil set in motion one of the greatest periods of exploration of the twentieth century, the search for oil in the Middle East. In 1945, after a lull caused by the Second World War, exploration was set to expand again and twenty-one year old Mike Morton embarked on an empty troop ship bound for Palestine to begin his career as a geologist with the Iraq Petroleum Company. Arriving in Jerusalem, Mike soon found himself surrounded by the Arab-Jewish conflict which led to the bombing of the King David Hotel. Then moving to Iraq, Mike and his colleague René Wetzel unravelled the geology of many parts of nothern Iraq. Their field work in the 1940s and 1950s has never been repeated and is still the foundation of our knowledge of Mesozoic outcrops today. During a series of ground-breaking expeditions in southern Arabia between 1947 and 1954 , Mike travelled where the famous Arabian explorer, Wilfred Thesiger, had feared to tread: the mysterious Mahra country. He also visited other parts of the Aden Protectorates such as Shabwa, Beihan and the Bedouin well at Thamud, learning the true meaning of the saying, "the closer the bullets, the greater is the affection." In 1954, Mike was posted to Oman where the first attempts to explore for oil from the north were overtaken by the so-called "Buraimi Dispute". He took part in Operation DEF, the "invasion of a foreign land”, when the interior of Oman was opened up to the modern world and oil was eventually found at Jebel Fahud, the "Leopard Mountain". His story moves to Qatar, Bahrain and Abu Dhabi in the days before the oil boom. He was in charge of geological operations in Abu Dhabi when the massive Bu Hasa oilfield was discovered. In 1971, Mike was appointed deputy leader of a Royal Geographical Society expedition and travelled to one of the remotest parts of Arabia, the Musandam Peninsula. Finally, in 1984, working for the Hunt Oil Company, Mike took part in the exploration of Yemen which led to the discovery of the first commercial oil in that country, the Arif field. In the Heart of the Desert is the biography of Mike Morton written by his son. It describes an extraordinary world and a rich parade of characters: autonomous sheikhs and their fiercely independent tribes, nomadic Bedouins, colourful ex-patriots and a group of intrepid geologists driven by an oil company’s search for oil. Mike struck a distinctive figure and, being red-haired with a sometimes fiery temper, the Bedouin called him Shaib al-Ahmar, “Angry Red Man”. The author presents a detailed and thoroughly researched account of his father’s life which culminates in the story of his own journey to southern Arabia and a poignant meeting of the present with the past.
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