How does anyone survive in a arid dessert climate?

How do people build structures? Sand to me would seem like a terrible foundation for any sort of permanent building.

Settlements come into existence around water sources, frequently on the coast. In Mecca, a city that is well inland, there is the Zam-Zam well. The tale is that this well sprung forth as Hagar, Abraham’s wife, ran between two hills desperately seeking water. It has flowed ever since.

In Afghanistan there is a vast network of karez, artificial caves dug for irrigation. For thousands of years residents of Afghanistan have been digging them, both for defense and to find water. A chronicler from the time of the Mongol invasion reports that the entire population seemed to disappear beneath the ground only to re-emerge later. Probably, they sought refuge in the karez. The Mongols made a point of trying to destroy the network and I understand our forces are doing the same today.

Nicolas Clapp’s The Road to Ubar has some good stuff on a city in the middle of the desert.

Of course, survival in the desert is based around water, but clothing tends to cover the entire body to protect it from the sun. Travel during the really hot middle part of the day is a big no-no, everybody tends to nap instead. Also, it can get very, very cold at night.

People adapt to limited water and the heat. An old man in Saudi Arabia took me on a 45 minute walk, I was sweating like and pig and he never broke a sweat. My wife tells me that in Afghanistan there is a people who drink hot tea during the heat of the day just because it keeps them used to the heat.

Where do people get the matrial to build permanent strctures? How common are trees? I plan on having some rocky and hilly areas but no huge mountions.

Rock, mud-brick and animal hide. The nomads I have seen in Palestine, and Israel use a felt-like material for their tents, but I have no idea when this material came into use. The oasis I have seen, primarily Mecca and Medina, are surrounded by black rocky hills that were used for building materials. But mud-brick was and in many places still is the primary building material.

A strong government can bring in stone in as well.

How common is plant life? What type of plants would one find in a arid dessert area?

Obviously, it is rare. Acacia grows and I have seen small brown thorny plants. Also remember that frankincense was a big export from Arabia’s southern areas, it comes from trees. Date palms were the primary crops of Mecca and Medina.

What kind of animals are going to be there? No such much monsters as typical animals. What sort of large mammals could a dessert eco-system sustain?

Scorpions, and lots of ‘em. Lizards, too. I have read that there are species of fox out there as well.

Hope that is useful,
Corey
 

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Easy.

Create Food and Water

Conjuration (Creation)
Level: Clr 3
Components: V, S
Casting Time: 10 minutes
Range: Close (25 ft. + 5 ft./2 levels)
Effect: Food and water to sustain three humans or one horse/level for 1 day
Duration: 24 hours (see text)
Saving Throw: None
Spell Resistance: No

The food that this spell creates is simple fare of the character's choice—highly nourishing, if rather bland. The food decays and becomes inedible within 24 hours, although it can be kept fresh for another 24 hours by casting a purify food and water spell on it. The water created by this spell is just like clean rain water. The water doesn’t go bad as the food does.


You need twice as much water to survive in an aird climate. Modify the spell to be Create Heaps of Water (or whatever) and have it be enough water to support six (ie three in a desert) with no food generated. In my campaign, I have a whole culture of these guys wandering around with waterskins that have been enchanted to create water like this twice a day.

That being said I'm going to re-read Corey & Iron Sheep's posts. They were excellent.
 

Re: Dune?

olethros said:
Dune is a great work but all the desert living ideas are clearly stolen from the lifestyle of the Beduin nomads.
Try taking a look at the Beduins that live in the Rub al-Khali in Southern Saudi Arabia. They live in the deep desert in the traditional manner.

Another suggestion (that might take less time than reading Dune) is to rent a movie like Lawrence of Arabia and pay attention to the scenes in which the people living in the desert deal with their environment.
 

Don't worry about the dessert/desert misspell.

The easiest way to remember the difference is that the "ss" in dessert (cake, ice-cream) stands for Sweet Stuff.

If you have the time, read Dune. No, I correct myself- MAKE THE TIME TO READ DUNE. It is, aside from its value as an essay of survival in a desert environment, one of the most beautifully crafted and compelling works of science fiction ever written.

-C
 

Another great work to read, if you want an outsider's impression of desert life, is T.E. Lawrence's Seven Pillars of Wisdom, also released in shorter form as Revolt in the Desert. Lawrence is the man who became famous as "Lawrence of Arabia" though the movie diverges sharply from his own version of events.

Anyway, the book is a fantastic record of an Englishman's journey into a world very much unlike his own. It's not an easy read but there's tons of great details and ideas within it.
 

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