In the island village of Jazirat Al Hamra, people were so connected to the sea that even their homes were built of coral. The abandoned pearling town in Ras Al Khaimah has long been admired as one of the best examples of pre-oil architecture on the Arabian Gulf. Its walls not only tell the story of the area’s people, but the history of the sea itself. Its homes, mosques and courtyard are built from more than 11.97 million pieces of sun-baked coral and each is a clue to the Gulf’s marine history. Biologists at New York University-Abu Dhabi are now analyzing these unusual building blocks to uncover how the coastline has changed in the last 400 years. Jazirat Al Hamra has about 500 buildings built from coral, sand brick and cement. There are 53 km of coral stone walls, averaging 2.85 metres heigh and 50 cm thick. Unfolded, they would almost run from the Abu Dhabi-Dubai border to Sharjah. The average coral piece is about 800 cubic centimeters, slightly larger than a glass Vimto bottle. “They would basically fill a national rugby pitch about a metre high, or a New York city block,” said John Burt, the marine biologist at NYU-Abu Dhabi who led the research project. “So they would have had to have mined about 10 hectares of reef surface.” Pieces were recycled over the centuries. One piece dating from 1551 was found in the wall of a mosque, supporting oral histories that trace the village’s origins to the same period as the decline of the medieval port city of Julfar. A question remains: where did the coral itself come from? Oral histories on coral mining are all but non-existent. There is speculation that the Gulf did not have the reefs to support this industry and that coral was mined from the Gulf of Oman or even east Africa. Dr Burt thinks otherwise. Coastal maps developed by the British navy from the 1820s to the early 1900s show a substantial reef once extended almost ten kilometres along the shoreline between Jazirat Al Hamra to the Umm Al Quwain lagoon. “One argument has been that there was no coral reef nearby and we’ve shown that that was not the case,” said Dr Burt. “It was very close to the coast and potentially could have been mined just on foot during low tide.” ____________ <strong>Read more about coral:</strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/environment/algal-bloom-the-size-of-mexico-could-threaten-uae-marine-life-experts-say-1.76558">Algal bloom the size of Mexico could threaten UAE marine life</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/environment/key-to-saving-corals-from-climate-change-may-lie-in-arabian-gulf-1.618569">Key to saving corals form climate change may lie in the Arabian Gulf</a></strong> ____________ The composition of the reefs appears to have changed little since the 1550s. To date, 11 different genera of coral have been identified from the village walls, with a variety and composition proportional to what exists today. “Brain coral was by far the most abundant on the buildings in Jazirat Al Hamra and is still the most common on reefs in Ras Al Khaimah,” said Dr Burt. “Roughly 40 per cent of the corals in the walls were brain coral and that basically reflects what you’ll find in reefs.” Size ranged from fist-size blocks to great chunks of brain coral used as foundational blocks. Once mined, they were sorted by size in fresh water to kill off the organisms and dried on the beach for a year. The porous blocks were good insulation and one of the only local building materials.* For this reason, many of the UAE’s historic buildings used coral, including the 15th century Al Bidiya mosque in Fujairah and Qasr Al Hosn in Abu Dhabi, part of which is believed to date to the late 18th century. “Coral was the only hard material that people would have had,” said Dr Burt. “You also have to recognise that this was an age long before scuba but we have here an industry that was based off of diving.” The fossilized coral in Jazirat Al Hamra, dated by Dr Julie Retrum at the University of Mississippi, shows the town experienced a construction boom in the 18th century. Coral mining continued into the 20th century. Samples from the Abdul Kareem House, in the village souq, date from 1886 to 1921. Soon, cement would replace coral stone and by the 1970s, the village was largely abandoned. Seascapes, too, were transforming. The reef that extended to Umm Al Qaiwain has been lost to development. “This area has been heavily developed since the 1980s, first for port construction and later for deepening of lagoons to make canals, as well as beach-front modification and near-shore land reclamation,” said Dr Burt. “While occasional patch reefs still occur in this area, the extensive reefs that once occurred in this area no longer exist.” ____________ <strong>Read more about Jazirat Al Hamra:</strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/heritage/about-20-houses-to-be-fully-restored-by-june-at-abandoned-rak-pearling-village-1.716884">About 20 houses to be fully restored by June at abandoned RAK pearling village</a></strong> <strong><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/our-guide-to-the-living-ghost-town-jazirat-al-hamra-ras-al-khaimah-1.604481">Our guide to the living ghost town Jazirat Al Hamra</a></strong> ____________ On Tuesday Dr Burt presented his findings to the Emirates Natural History Group, whose members <a href="https://www.thenational.ae/opinion/how-citizen-scientists-can-give-a-little-and-learn-a-lot-1.48358">helped with documentation of 160 village walls</a> and 2,000 pieces of coral. Volunteers have been essential to the project. Dr Burt credits Noura Al Mansoori, a research assistant in his lab, in developing it as a citizen science project. Their findings are now being written up.