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فسيلة - transplant
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00:05I can't believe it
00:07I finally found the treasure after twenty years.
00:20You, Ashraf
00:22You, my friend
00:31Forgive me, the price was higher.
00:40Bigger than your life's nest
00:42twenty million dollars
00:45This is much bigger, actually.
00:46But I still can't believe it
00:48My friend and beloved Ashraf does all this.
00:52Because I'm not honorable
00:54I am Dr. Ibrahim
00:57Dr. Ibrahim?
00:58Yes, Dr. Ibrahim
01:00The one who stole his scientific research
01:01And you published it as your research.
01:03But I wasn't your research, Doctor.
01:04But Dr. Hisham's research
01:06Who am I, Dr. Hisham?
01:09impossible
01:10But Dr. Hisham died in an accident.
01:12And the only one who survived this incident
01:14She is his mother
01:15What am I
01:16I kept Dr. Hisham's mother
01:22mama?
01:23Hisham?
01:24I missed you, Mom
01:34Dear viewers
01:35Prayer and blessings
01:35Welcome to two new episodes of Al-Daheeh program
01:38I ask you, my dear, what is the last place reached by European explorers?
01:42Two centuries of planetary exploration
01:44My dear friend, your answer will likely be the South Pole, Antarctica.
01:48Who will come down to live in Galilee so we can explore it?
01:50So, is this the place we didn't know who might be sitting there?
01:53It was the last place I wanted to explore
01:55This hour witnessed a crazy race
01:57The truth, my dear, is that this place made two people compete to explore it.
02:01One of them is English and one is Norwegian
02:03The Englishman's name is Robert Scott
02:04The Norwegian's name is Roald Amnesson
02:06This race would end with the Norwegian winning in 1911
02:09Congratulations to the young men of Norway
02:10Experts explained that Amson was better suited to the Galilee environment.
02:14He is a man who lives in Norway above
02:15He will be able to deal with the Galilee below.
02:17The place I live in is white, white
02:18In the Norwegians' preparations, you'll find that they were more prepared.
02:21For example, they traveled with three times the provisions of the British.
02:24They used draft animals like dogs
02:26Which was actually more suitable for Galilee than the harvest, which the English used.
02:30And the result is that not only did the Norwegians reach first place.
02:32The British Free Actley Mat
02:34He was all buried in Galilee
02:35But my dear, what you think is true
02:37And Tamam and Ziyal have one mistake
02:40The fact is that the South Pole was not the last place Europeans would explore.
02:44Hey Abu Hamid, are there any new decisions we don't know about or what?
02:47My dear English, this won't be their last stop.
02:49Because they need to leave the icy environment where they lost their lives
02:53They were buried under the ice and went to explore a more difficult environment.
02:56A place where neither the north nor the south of the planet is emasculated
02:58This is a place in the heart of the ancient world
03:00They're going, my dear, to a scary place called, aptly, the Empty Quarter.
03:04This is a desert, a desert with an area of ​​650,000 square kilometers.
03:08In southeastern Arabia
03:10This place, my dear, is so difficult
03:12Arabs living in the Arabian Peninsula are afraid of him.
03:15Even if, my dear, you consider the South Pole a harsh, terrifying, frightening environment
03:19Let me tell you that the temperature in the Empty Quarter reaches fifty degrees Celsius
03:24Oh, Abu Ahmed, what's the problem?
03:27In Kuwait, the temperature can reach fifty degrees Celsius.
03:30What are you saying, uncle?
03:31My dear, I'm talking about when you're under the shade.
03:34What? Really, Abu Ahmed?
03:36Why did she ask, "Why are we cutting it off?"
03:36The temperature is fifty degrees in the shade, and that's not good for reptiles.
03:39In the sun, my dear, the temperature can reach eighty degrees Celsius.
03:43Eighty?
03:44Abu Ahmed, did anyone tell you that I want shawarma now?
03:45You want it? If you go there and die, you'll be a mess.
03:48No problem, Abu Ahmed
03:49This is definitely during the peak of summer; hopefully, it will decrease in winter.
03:52A dry, hot, and mild climate prevails in winter.
03:54No, Safi, my dear
03:55In winter the temperature reaches zero degrees Celsius
03:58It means a bitterly cold climate
03:59An area without bodies of water or ice, like Antarctica
04:03or any vegetation cover
04:05It has no vegetation cover because it receives 1.2 out of 10
04:09I walk every year, rain
04:11But my dear, its climate wasn't full of terrifying sandstorms.
04:15To the point that the madness that lives around the Empty Quarter
04:18Finally, she sits on the periphery
04:19She never enters except for one kilo
04:21And during the days of observation in the winter season
04:23This is normal because the Empty Quarter is classified
04:25It is the largest sand area in the world.
04:28My dear Arab, the whole region was called Ramla.
04:31That's all because there are no other distinctive features.
04:33They have a famous saying that goes
04:34Like the sands of Yabrin
04:35This is a metaphor for the palace
04:36According to one Yabrin
04:38Abu Hamad, you clarified the example, and I know what one is.
04:40Abu Hamad, I'll issue a statement with you, I know her.
04:42My dear, I'm giving you an example, I mean
04:43Shant Baaref
04:44When someone from there tells you
04:45One, Yabrin, you, do you have an idea?
04:47This one is located in the northern part of the Empty Quarter.
04:49In his book, Penetrating the Arabian Peninsula
04:51British archaeologist Hessegl
04:53George Hoeger, 1904
04:55All the historical efforts that explored the region
04:57From the first days of Alexander the Great
04:59And the campaign of the Roman governor of Egypt
05:01George will collect all these attempts as material
05:03So that you can help the explorers
05:05The new ones who want to explore them
05:06He will try, my dear, but he won't be able to.
05:09He is exploring the Empty Quarter
05:17They say they don't want compensation, so they go to the desert.
05:18What would make someone go and see sand?
05:21Well, we already know, so what's new?
05:22The truth, dear explorers, is that they didn't choose the Empty Quarter.
05:24Is it because of the sand, or even to compensate?
05:26Explore them for the South Foot
05:28They were looking for treasure, my dear.
05:31My dear treasure, not the one on the trip.
05:32What cannot live is not a true treasure
05:34Hello my dear, he's telling you her story
05:35Once upon a time, my dear, there was a king named Shaddad
05:38After his brother Shaddad died, he decided to build a city that would be a miniature version of paradise.
05:42What I see about it in old books
05:43With its palaces, rivers, and fruits
05:45It will bring together engineers and builders
05:47And they will say it is a vast, pure desert, free of mountains.
05:52View Pass Sand
05:53This is the ideal location
05:55Hugh, 220 years old, is building
05:57A brick of Dahl and a brick of silver
05:58Its pillars are aquamarine and ruby
06:00And the harvest obeyed her anxiety
06:01Its scent is musk and saffron
06:03And then, my dear, they never finish building.
06:05King Shaddad will go to this place.
06:07He and his family are on a journey that will take 20 years.
06:10A cry of divine wrath descends upon him.
06:12He and his family perished and didn't achieve anything.
06:14None of them ever arrives
06:16Just a second, Abu Hamid
06:17And how did you live? It takes 20 years.
06:18So you're going to stop this and let the road take 20 years?
06:20He who builds with a brick of gold and a brick of silver
06:22And your sand will be a gurgle gurgle
06:24I was just trying to get Abu Hamid to do these things.
06:26I didn't want to embarrass you
06:27The truth is, my dear, all your questions are legitimate and accurate.
06:30Because I'm telling him a fictional story
06:32So, Abu Hamid, you're the one telling me things that aren't true.
06:34My dear, this is a story from the tales of One Thousand and One Nights.
06:36Specifically from night 277
06:38For two hundred and seventy-nine
06:39From you, my dear, this was a bit expensive.
06:41So you found this need was
06:42The story might also have roots
06:45Before the book One Thousand and One Nights itself
06:47Because it contains the name of the king, Abu Shaddad
06:49He came back, and that's why they tie it up.
06:51In the city of the people of 'Ad, which was not created
06:53The same applies to the country, as I mentioned.
06:55In the Holy Quran, once, my dear, it is named
06:57This city has returned, and again
06:58Qarm and Marra Abbar
07:00But the story is one, and the tales of One Thousand and One Nights
07:03Which will reach Europe, as we saw.
07:04There, a legend will be created about
07:06The Arabic images that are there
07:09Europeans, I'll tell you yo yo yo yo yo yo
07:10What is this? This Arab box has a genie in it!
07:13Jinn and treasure
07:14We're going to explore it and colonize it.
07:16This is the comfort of petroleum, he told you.
07:19There is definitely a city of cypress trees.
07:20Buried in the Arabian Peninsula
07:22In the pain of the penis under the sands of the Empty Quarter
07:24This city will remind Europeans of their myths
07:27It's like the city of Atlantis, that's why some people call it that.
07:29Atlantis of the Sands
07:30Atlantis of the Sands, just a second, Abu Hamid
07:32Is it conceivable that an explorer would come to the desert based on its legends?
07:35He pays money and enjoys his life
07:37Its source is One Thousand and One Nights
07:38Actually, my dear, the sources weren't like that, but
07:40Any researcher would indeed be looking for the origins of the Arabian Peninsula
07:43He will find that it is only five thousand years old
07:45This desert was not a barren desert
07:48any?
07:48Amlakati ya Abu Hamid
07:49Why are you sitting there like that?
07:51What is this?
07:51My dear, it was a great center for the frankincense trade.
07:54And you're just being sly, huh?
07:55Okay, three or four people will understand it.
07:57In Saudi Arabia or Lebanon, just to be clear
08:00Isn't it Samara?
08:01Oh Abu Hamid, who brought the one with the pretexts that we are talking about?
08:04We are talking about oil and the Arabian Peninsula.
08:06What's clear, my dear, is that I'm a woman.
08:08He was hasty, you are the tree sap
08:10He uses it to make incense that smells nice.
08:12It was a common ingredient in folk medicine.
08:14It was also considered sacred in all pagan temples at that time.
08:17And it was named after him the famous trade route
08:19or the incense trade route
08:21Taya, my dear, the entire region is a sacred and avenging place.
08:25Other regions would have preferred its location.
08:27That's why it was named
08:27Happy Arabs
08:29Everyone envies him for his prosperity
08:31I, Abu Hamid, am envied by Arabs for my prosperity
08:33Oh my dear, the time of prosperity is gone, and hope has returned.
08:36If you bought this mixture, my dear, from the sixteenth century
08:38You will find that the Empty Quarter is part of the region that Europeans considered to be the region of the Happy Arabs
08:43Even if the story is mythical, it contains a rich and religious presence.
08:46And trade allows for the existence of ZD City
08:50The topic isn't all fantasy, so it's not entirely imaginative.
08:51Despite this, they attribute it to the fact that we hear about trips undertaken by Europeans or, especially, English people.
08:55British explorer Bertram Thomas's costume
08:57The first one to record the empty-headed trips
08:59However, this legend of the treasure
09:02You'll make the English say, "Well, what a good mentor, what a great mentor again!"
09:05Even if we have it, we will declare it there, even if we explore it there in the treasure.
09:10British explorer St. John Philby, or Hajj Philby after his conversion to Islam
09:13He will hear about a small town there called Al-Hudaydah
09:17This is because it contains iron blocks the size of a camel.
09:19He will indeed search for it, my dear, and will be even more encouraged when he finds volcanic rock formations that are foreign to the soil of the region.
09:25O God, I pray for her, O Abu Habil, this is not the treasure.
09:32This, my friend, is called the Al-Wabar meteorite, and it fell 250 years ago; it's not something ancient.
09:36And the worst part, my dear, is that even if you're not going to find the city, it's not a problem, but I discovered a meteorite and I'll name it after myself.
09:41You'll discover, my dear, that the meteorite has already been discovered before.
09:44Hey? From 1863
09:45Why? And that's not all, my dear.
09:48There are pieces of the meteorite in the British Museum
10:01Hi?
10:02The famous Lawrence of Arabia
10:03Dear radish, the entrance to the work of the honorable
10:05Which, according to some points, is the most amazing entrance in cinema
10:08My dear friend, this is a cinematic piece of information I learned from the film critic Mustafa Arafa.
10:11Who is this Abu Habib Mustafa Arafa? A mechanical engineer in Potterdale.
10:14Abu Habid, I'm sorry, Abu Habid, but what's with the nonsense you're saying?
10:16And who is Edward Lawrence D?
10:18Edward Lawrence was the political envoy who mobilized the Arab image in the Arabian Peninsula against the Ottomans.
10:24Why? To help Britain in the First World War.
10:26They were fighting the Ottomans, so we exploited the Arabs to fight with us against the Ottomans.
10:30Not only that, my dear
10:31There is Sir Wilfred Thesiger
10:33The one sent by the British Foreign Office
10:35In order to track and study desert and Arabian locusts
10:37The one who destroyed the fortified ones
10:39But while he was doing his job
10:41He starts making a few side trips
10:42He tries to reach the lost city
10:44You're really not possible.
10:45no
10:46Older people and their lives remain marginalized by this kind of talk.
10:49Leave him alone, my dear
10:50Go on a walk
10:50Let him go
10:51Not only that
10:52Since they were British pilots during the war, the second care
10:55Pilots along the Arabian Magic Strip
10:57They will accidentally fly deep into the Empty Quarter
11:00They claimed to have seen the ruins of walls and towers
11:04That's what pilot Raymond Douchet would say, my dear.
11:06You are devoted, my dear, to this legend.
11:07Until it is announced to the world
11:09Congratulations, everyone!
11:11We found the ruins the pilots were talking about.
11:13He'll just discover that it's a new location in Maska
11:15In Oman
11:16It's not an old city or anything
11:17And there is no trace of the ruins.
11:18Imagine, my dear, the obsession with this region of the world.
11:21And one day, my dear
11:23A diplomatic envoy on a mission that will change history
11:26Haskari is on a scientific mission studying insects.
11:28Soldiers in a world war fighting Hitler
11:31And everyone left their jobs and became surrounded by legends
11:33Imaginary many obsessions
11:34A diplomatic envoy on a mission that will change history
11:37Or a soldier on a scientific mission studying insects
11:40Or two soldiers who left World War II and Hitler
11:43And they explored the sea with their planes
11:45Everyone left their work and became preoccupied with legends.
11:47This obsession, my dear, will continue until 1993.
11:50When a team from Los Angeles, NASA
11:53She will photograph the area with industrial equipment.
11:55By comparing the routes of ancient caravans
11:57The one who left such paths behind
11:58Because the one who was kissing her was moving on her, then the others moved on.
12:01So he made a road
12:02These things require an industrial command from above to photograph them.
12:05He has an old map dating back to approximately the year 200
12:08The Christian era of the Greek-Egyptian geography of Ptolemy
12:10This map shows the location of an ancient city in the region.
12:14The team will announce that they have reached the ruins of the city of Qabar
12:17And it will create a complete picture of it
12:19From the remains they found, the structure is neglected.
12:21Which is, my dear
12:22This city was built on top of limestone caves.
12:25Quite simply, it collapsed
12:26It means he was in the city of Ah
12:27There were things underneath that weren't fixed in place.
12:30The city was attacked
12:31The city's structures couldn't withstand the weight and collapsed.
12:34This is what NASA found.
12:35Dear Bram'a, the discovered city
12:37Oh, Hamad, just one second
12:38This isn't the story of the people of Ad.
12:40Qurmah City of Columns
12:41Khalilna, my dear, explain
12:42The remains of this city contained pottery and coins.
12:45It dates back to 2800 BC
12:47But the truth is there's no evidence.
12:50This city is linked to the story of Ad.
12:52Which is found in the Holy Quran
12:53What might have happened
12:54These people want to do marketing
12:56Their discovery
12:57So, we say that this is the city.
12:59Which exist in Islamic cultures
13:01We work with ballistics and BR
13:03We publish our discoveries and receive rewards and such
13:05My dear, they also linked it to the city mentioned in One Thousand and One Nights.
13:09It's likely that she's carrying a BR, and it seems they were successful.
13:11But how can Habo Hamad say that?
13:12That means they will find a lost city in the same area.
13:15Didn't it turn out to be the same thing?
13:16The truth, my dear, is not a joke, it just happened.
13:18But the disappearance of cities in the Empty Quarter region
13:20Something very cash
13:22Normal need
13:23The area has a difficult terrain with frequent sandstorms.
13:26If you want, my dear, to see proof of this, Ya Live
13:29His soul is man
13:29You will find a village called Wadi Al-Mur village
13:31The one that was swallowed up by the sands 30 years ago
13:33A city that exists, swallowed up normally
13:36We have entire cities hidden in the Empty Quarter, my dear.
13:39We erase it from the earth's nest
13:40We bury the city underground
13:41To this day, my dear, the village of Wadi Al-Mur still exists.
13:44And the photographers go there
13:45As you can see from my childhood
13:46Ready, my dear? History isn't the best key to unlocking the Empty Quarter.
13:49Unfortunately, the nature of its sands is such that they are capable of burying any story.
13:52Even if it's the size of a city
13:54So, Abu Habib, do you see another key in her quiver?
13:56Did you bring her old quiver, boy?
13:57From the one who sells quivers
13:58Ah, Tabam, not
13:59Let's turn to geography, my friend.
14:01All my dear friends who have seen the Empty Quarter have likened its geography to the sea.
14:05The sea of ​​Al-Ramar is so treacherous that you could drown in it, so he said, "That's a wrong move."
14:09Because you're on dry land, its features change all the time.
14:11There isn't a single fixed sign
14:12You're saying cities are being buried?
14:14But we have a vast expanse, like the sea.
14:16A place with sand dunes that reach a height of 300 meters
14:20If we look back at the history and geography of the region, we'll find that the Empty Quarter was actually a sea, not a metaphor.
14:24Teaching the Middle East as we know it today
14:27It was created by long and slow changes
14:29Or, in the world of geography, we call it continental drift.
14:32What? I repented and said, "O Abu Ahmad."
14:34continental drift
14:35There is no power or strength except with God. How long have you had this?
14:37My dear, I'm talking about the container, you're the drifter.
14:39Write down, my dear, the simplified definition that I made myself.
14:42Continental drift is a dynamic geological system based simply on the massive movement of the Earth's tectonic plates.
14:48Which is known in this region as the Arabian Plate
14:50I hope I have explained it thoroughly and that you have understood it completely.
14:54Abu Hamdani didn't understand anything.
14:56Why the statement?
14:56Look, my dear
14:57It's as if the Earth is made up of sheets, pieces like sheets.
15:01Plains
15:01These plates get in, things come out and things go down, that's how it is
15:05So this happens, this is the drifted continent
15:07There's movement, and there are things that go under other things, and so on.
15:09Simply put, this is an imaginative simplification.
15:10If you want to understand more, go to the explanation I gave.
15:13My dear, we have something called the Arabic plate.
15:15This plate separated from Africa
15:17About the African Plate
15:18And when this happened, she told us the truth.
15:20So she opened a section for us, listen to the Red Sea
15:22The Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of Aqaba
15:23And thus, the features of the current area were formed.
15:26If we saw a timeline of photos of the Empty Quarter
15:29Before and after this drift
15:30This drift
15:31We will find that it was nothing more than part of the seabed of ancient Tethys.
15:34Thesis Ochan
15:35I mean, my dear, if you had come to this rugged area
15:39From 30 million years ago
15:40You would have been swimming at the bottom of the New Tesis Ocean
15:43Don't be surprised, my dear
15:44The entire area surrounding the bay
15:46Not just the Empty Quarter
15:47It was a sedimentary basin that formed a sea.
15:49In the past ten years, my dear
15:51The Max Planck Institute organized
15:52A project called Ancient Sahara
15:54Using remote sensing technology
15:56The project will find more than just one era in the region.
15:58It is an ancient river network.
16:00And ancient lakes, the number of which exceeds
16:03The ten thousand is perplexing
16:04In the Arabian Peninsula, Muhammad
16:05Yes, my dear, like the buried mystery
16:08Southwest of the Empty Quarter, which is
16:09When we examined it using common carbon lenses
16:11From eighty to one hundred and thirty thousand years
16:13These discoveries suggest that the region is not just
16:16It was teeming with people; this was a fundamental station.
16:18In the famous human migration from Africa
16:20They went to Asia and Europe
16:22For the peninsula because it was
16:24All rivers, wonders, and seas
16:26There was Waterpark there, my dear
16:28By doing this, my dear project will find the tools
16:30Stone for human settlements
16:31The lifespan of these tools may exceed
16:33Four hundred thousand years and fossils indicate
16:35Despite the animal diversity of its amazing creatures
16:38And meat, cows and elephants
16:40And a hippopotamus, let me tell you, my dear
16:42This hippopotamus needs flat land.
16:44Deep water for one of this size
16:47He goes down, he's a duck
16:48These excavations shouldn't be here unless there is actually water.
16:50And in 2011 it will be discovered
16:53A huge statue of an animal from the horse family
16:55This statue is 9000 years old
16:57It is likely that at that time, humans did not only know horses.
16:59This one wants it too
17:00And this, my dear, is a very important discovery.
17:01Because horse training originated in Europe and Asia from
17:043000 years only, and so is North Africa.
17:06And the oldest thing we know is for breaking in horses
17:08It was in the Butai culture in Kazakhstan
17:10This was 5500 years ago
17:12Fatab suggests that the Arabian Peninsula may be
17:14The first place in the world to train horses
17:17And if that is not proven by the evidence of the drop
17:19Or the brain, depending on where you are.
17:20Here, my dear, I am not drawing you a frightening and treacherous sea of ​​sand.
17:23Seas and oceans
17:25forests and trees
17:27And he gave glad tidings of riding his horses and making
17:28His tools and he travel
17:30Even Mr. Ashta is playing in the river
17:31And a duck, happy among them, specializes and swims
17:33And he spends
17:34There's nothing left of this dreamer.
17:37Change the largest sand area
17:39Extended on this coke
17:41Scientists believe that this frightening transformation
17:43It happened 5000 years ago, but
17:45The truth is, he didn't know.
17:46Time is needed, there's no answer from the calculator
17:48But if we analyze the nearest neighbor to the Empty Quarter
17:50The Sahara Desert in North Africa
17:52According to the scientist David K. Wright
17:54Man is deceived by grazing and animals
17:56This creates what is called overgrazing.
17:58So, my dear, that's how it is in the country.
18:00Animals of humans
18:01When they were eating the wonders, they would finish off all the wonders in the area.
18:05At the same time, plants and wonder
18:06They were creating humidity
18:07The disappearance of these plants and consequently the disappearance of moisture
18:10Let the sun create a desert for us.
18:12In the absence of plants and in the absence of moisture
18:14There will be complete dryness with this scorching sun.
18:17And the desert is made up
18:18According to this theory, man is a disgrace to God.
18:20The truth is, my dear, he's not a hardened criminal.
18:22For example, consider Jesse Caterini's words.
18:24Professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Arizona
18:26The Earth is subject to many orbital changes.
18:28So, Abu Hamad, it means orbital changes, in other words
18:30A little rain means humans will grow.
18:32It transforms from a place of rejection to one that provides security.
18:34Livestock and a more reliable food source
18:36Grazing will cause drought, as we explained.
18:38Abu Hamad, you told a story
18:40The Empty Quarter once was, from a historical perspective
18:42And once from a geographical perspective
18:43And once from the perspective of animals
18:45Tell us the story of the Empty Quarter from the eyes
18:47Inhabitants of the Empty Quarter
18:48And he's not from the population? No, my dear, he's closer.
18:51Because he was blind to the population
18:53Does anyone dare?
18:55Is Yahya living in a terrifying, monstrous desert?
18:57If you look, Aziz, at the plants of the Empty Quarter, you will find some of them.
18:59Static or coated with a layer of wax
19:01It protects it from moisture loss
19:02For example, plants, like Zidan Al-Sheikh, that's his name.
19:04The plant grows on top of the sand dunes
19:07It's doing that, but the roots are down.
19:09Under Jamin to reach
19:11For any grain of water
19:12The gazelles that live in this area lick the plants.
19:15The gazelles of the desert prefer to dig.
19:17Until it reaches the roots of the plants
19:19The one who filled us with water
19:20What I want to say is that every creature in this region has an advantage.
19:23His adaptation to this place
19:24If he really wanted to survive, he would live there, along with the people who lived there.
19:26Isn't Sanaa from this base?
19:27Our episode, my dear, began with a British team dying in Galilee.
19:30Because he did not respect the environment in which he lived
19:32And he didn't know how to deal with it using the right tools.
19:34The story of the inhabitants of the Empty Quarter is the complete opposite.
19:36The people there know very well
19:38The nature of the place and its difficulties
19:39That's a joke, my dear, when you talk to the residents.
19:41Their greeting was strong, meaning "May God strengthen you."
19:44May God strengthen you. What was her response?
19:46I saved him or I saved him, meaning
19:48May God save you
19:50Thank God I survived, that's the first thing I saw when I saw you
19:52Their greeting here is a wish
19:54Strength and survival in a difficult place
19:56Those who were born in Hatla, one day they'll pull tricks like that
19:58So that they can, for example, move around in the middle of this desert
20:01They rely on the stars
20:02A star like the North Star, for example, so they can determine their directions.
20:05And they will breed their happy animals
20:06Face the challenges of the desert like hunting dogs
20:08Those that can shelter wild rabbits
20:10That no human being alone could keep up with its speed
20:13The camel is the ship of the desert
20:14The people of the island tamed it 6000 years ago
20:16They used it for transportation 4000 years ago
20:19My dear, a child is an animal that produces milk, wool, and meat.
20:21He moves 50 kilometers a day
20:23And it can endure hunger and thirst for days.
20:26If a sandstorm were to blow
20:27Manakhir opened her nostrils and her rubber band was talking in the sand
20:30So don't let the sand in, it will taste like it.
20:32And his long eyelashes protect his blindness in the depths
20:34His clear eyelid allows him to see, and a cloud of darkness descends.
20:37Because the sand doesn't get into his eye
20:39His long leg protects him from the sandy dust.
20:41My dear, you need something like a camel calling to a person
20:43Almost all means of survival
20:45Okay, what does a camel gain from a human?
20:47Honestly, my dear, this is first and foremost human control.
20:49This is number one
20:50Number tone: The human being is the one who directs the camel.
20:53For places that have food and water
20:54Where is Fadia? Where is Situation?
20:56I give you brains and intelligence, and you give me
20:58Movement, protection, and camel liver
21:01Camels, my dear, unfortunately have no senses.
21:03To monitor needs like this
21:11Humans use their intelligence and memory
21:13So they know where the gazelle went.
21:15They remember the places where he found grass or water.
21:18He protects the camel
21:20And using sentences that help them move around
21:22They take him away
21:23I understand what's happening in Teamwork.
21:25The camel will be a staple animal of the Arabian Peninsula.
21:27To the point that the writer Richard Pollitt
21:29In his book, The Camel and the Wheel
21:31He says that the presence of camels will delay
21:33Arabs' reliance on the wheel
21:34Because they simply don't need it.
21:36On the contrary, we have a much better animal.
21:38At least if you got lost and hungry, they might eat.
21:40If you're thirsty, maybe...
21:43The second one, either one, or my father and Hamid
21:44There's a lot of small things in what you're saying, my dear, a lot of small things.
21:46The gazelles find water, and there is water in the Empty Quarter.
21:49And he's sorry, I mean the second one
21:50The Empty Quarter isn't empty, sorry.
21:52One Point Two Inch from the Rain
21:54What do they do annually? Good question, my dear.
21:57That's a question, my dear.
21:58The rain, my dear, is pouring down on the chains
22:06It absorbs this water, and because of the Arabian Peninsula
22:09It leans towards the east, so it takes the water.
22:11A journey from western Arabia
22:12To its east and with defiance from beneath the Empty Quarter
22:15It becomes trapped in layers of rock.
22:16And my friend's wells work for me, I tell you, my dear
22:18Interesting fact: Places to land
22:20Water pools get their name from them
22:22houses
22:24Jay's houses are from the house we brought in to the city
22:26This is the place where the water goes down
22:28The lives of nomadic populations, which involve constant movement.
22:30To the house where the water falls
22:33For another house he prefers
22:34In the place called the house with the water
22:36Until they finish, then they go to another house.
22:39Unlike our house, we live in the city.
22:40We'll keep living in this life, my dear, through thick and thin.
22:43It will be a special culture
22:45For example, in this culture
22:46Hospitality duty
22:48Because if you have tribes whose entire lives are nomadic
22:50Her chances of survival will double.
22:52If every place they went to offered them hospitality
22:54That's why every tribe has an honor and status.
22:56It is determined by the number of wells
22:58I got tired of digging it because, my dear, it's very simply
23:01Hayat presented a hundred
23:02For the thirsty in a world like this, water
23:04It is the elixir of life
23:05But it means zooming in on the episode and zooming in on the hot sauce.
23:08The one from the episode, and in every tribe
23:10The adults teach the young ones that they shouldn't carry burdens.
23:12Any plant, green or not even green
23:14Because it's possible any rain or any water will come
23:16And it turns into a good crop
23:18The people of these regions are skilled at adapting
23:20Literally everywhere in the desert
23:22You'll be talking about the British explorers we mentioned.
23:24In the first episode, they asked for and gave them, and supported them.
23:26For example, Bertrand Thomas
23:27First foreign explorer of the Empty Quarter
23:30Those who dress like them and learn their language
23:31He refrains from smoking alcohol out of respect for their traditions.
23:34To help him on their journey
23:35Why, and what about Abu Hamid? I'm just noticing a problem with your street.
23:38Fadel Azizi
23:38When we, Abu Hamid, talked about history, we reached the ruins.
23:41When we talked about geography
23:42We talked about a world that no longer exists.
23:44Even when we talked about the reality of the population
23:46Life has become ingenious, but it's all cruelty.
23:49Where is Abu Hamid Al-Khair in this place?
23:51Why are these people still living there?
23:53Life, my dear, is the Empty Quarter
23:55Not all of his stories are sad.
23:56The Empty Quarter may be devoid of life.
23:58But it is full of death
24:00In particular, the death of certain organisms
24:03She was buried and subjected to pressure
24:04And here, my dear, begins our economic story
24:08For the greatest twist
24:09His testimony regarding this spot
24:10The one whose history is difficult and whose companionship is difficult
24:12Life there is difficult for the people.
24:13Remember, my dear, when I told you that the quarter and the entire Gulf region
24:17Sobie was present
24:18The ancient Tethys Sea, 30 million years old
24:21Remember
24:21And Abu Hamid's memories are still there, I'm tired of remembering.
24:24The ocean has layers
24:26From the remains of microorganisms
24:28Like the dreams that were buried at the bottom
24:30And it prefers that layers of maps be formed within it.
24:33In the absence of oxygen
24:34A substance known as kerogen is formed
24:37The material below
24:38Pressure and heat for millions of years
24:40They're producing a product that people are dying to have right now.
24:43So that you may have good fortune
24:44I'm talking, my friend, about fossil fuels, oil and gas.
24:47Oh, my dear club, you were exposed
24:49For the sake of removing the burden of the problem from us.
24:51The Empty Quarter and the Gulf region, my dear
24:53They make up 3 and 4 out of 10
24:54% of the land area
24:56But the past of this region is the opposite
25:00The two sides that we were talking about at the beginning
25:02There was a real church underneath it
25:04But it's not a city anymore, not one made of gold or diamonds.
25:06Neither from Yaut nor from Zabarghat
25:08Listen to this number and pay close attention to it.
25:10His desk and banner are 48 and 4
25:12One hundred percent of the world's crude oil
25:14Hahahahaha Congratulations
25:17Eight and 38 cash
25:18of the world's natural gas
25:22Hahahahaha
25:23Leo says, "My dear."
25:24The obsession with the lost city
25:26In his thirties, he increased strongly
25:27Around the same time, King Abdulaziz granted the first oil exploration concession.
25:33The credit goes to the company that wants to search for oil.
25:35Come on, you have a privilege to look for
25:37This company was Standard Oil of California.
25:40And what you will finally find after four years of excavation in 1938
25:44Oil well on a hill in Dhahran Mountain
25:47The area that currently houses Aramco's headquarters
25:50Aramco, which is the world's largest oil company
25:52It could remain the third or fourth largest company in the world
25:55The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia acquired it in 1880.
25:58The point, my dear, is that this twist could only have happened with the presence of the people of the Empty Quarter.
26:03They were also the jokers who helped companies and workers
26:06Those who didn't know anything about the region's trends
26:08If they were to leave for even an hour, they could get lost and die from hunger, thirst, and sandstorms.
26:13Perhaps the most famous of these guides was Khamis bin Ramthan al-Ajam
26:16The one who led the Qaramanites to all the oil field locations
26:20This man is dear to me; acknowledge his merit and honor him.
26:22If only a man would immortalize his name on an oil field and a tanker.
26:25Ramthan
26:26Imagine, my dear, and reflect on the words we are saying
26:28The brutal, cruel, terrifying place
26:31The place is full of legends, genies, demons, and lost cities.
26:35Now it has become a stronghold of the oil revolution.
26:37A revolution that allowed for road construction and provided technology for extracting groundwater
26:42Modern opinion engineering
26:43Like the Wadi Al-Dawasir project in the northern Empty Quarter
26:46If you see the surah, my dear, it's a breathtaking sight.
26:47Those tiny little things, the tiny things you see
26:50Akshli is very large
26:51My dear, more than 4000 hectares were reclaimed in 2016.
26:55To the point that flocks of birds migrated over this barren desert
26:59For many years it began to change its course
27:01And she tells you, "No, I'm going down here."
27:02This area has begun to have greenery and a paradise again, and water and food.
27:07And what remains of the desert and the seas
27:09It is no longer a source of fear and terror.
27:10It is a material for natural beauty.
27:12For civilization and technology
27:14What is the transformation of the Empty Quarter?
27:15What was a deadly maze before
27:17Part of the map of the famous Dakar Rally
27:19One of its routes ends in the Al-Shabita area there
27:22In the end, my dear
27:23The story of the Empty Quarter
27:24It is the story of the relationship between man and place.
27:26At first, our human being is afraid
27:28And exciting legends are woven around it.
27:30Treasure costume and terrifying
27:32Costume of a genie and a demon
27:33But with some humility and adaptability
27:35This person becomes part of this place
27:37And the atmosphere of this place creates life
27:39It was difficult with them
27:40With more science and technology
27:42He can sometimes convert it
27:44Part of a much more beautiful system
27:46From what it was
27:46This, my dear, is the real treasure
27:48The one who doesn't need a legend or a longing created for him
27:50Or terrifying
27:50That's all, my dear
27:51Good or bad, oh good
27:52Recorded, look at the life that passed
27:53See what life holds next
27:53Tanzi looks at the sources
27:54We are a joint YouTube channel.
27:55You know, my dear
27:56Despite the difficult circumstances
27:57The ones located in the Empty Quarter
27:58The chickens there are dead
27:59All of them are unclean
28:00Thank God, I mean
28:01This is a blessing from God.
28:02But, my dear
28:03This was an episode about the Empty Quarter
28:04Next episode then
28:05We will work on a colloquial text
28:06The next episode
28:07Three or four, my aunt
28:08God willing, we will complete the season.
28:10With the whole family

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