Bir Meheriqa is a spring situated in the mouth of a small gully at the foot of Gebel Balatitda, close to the east side of Wadi Di-ib, and practically on the same level as the wadi floor (120 metres above sea-level), so that it is extremely easy of access. The floor of the gully is covered with conglomerate of recent formation and in this are several holes with pools of clear water about one metre in diameter by twenty centimetres deep, which fill as fast as emptied. The water is rather salt, but is drinkable. The portion of Wadi Di-ib which lies among the mountains has a floor of sandy mud, with abundance of trees and plants, among which several gazelles were grazing as I passed through.

About six kilometres below Bir Meheriqa, Wadi Di-ib is joined from the west by Wadi Warabeit, which drains a rather large extent of high hills to the west and cuts through the hills north of Adar Aweib to reach Wadi Di-ib. This wadi forms the route to Bir Meisah from Bir Meheriqa via the well known easy passes of Bani Sana and Sarob Kwan; the total distance is about sixty-five kilometres.

Soon after receiving Wadi Warabeit, Wadi Di-ib gets into lower hill country, with great accumulations of drift sand. From near Gebel Tishushi Tiboki it receives the Wadi Qumad Lim from the north-west, and then after passing the extensive group of low hills of Tishushi it is joined by the Wad el Qireira, which drains a large area east of Hadal Aweib Meisah.

From its junction with Wad el Qireira to the sea, Wadi Di-ib is called by the special name of Wadi Kiraf. It is merely an ill-defined drainage channel coursing north-east across a great sandy plain for a distance of thirty-one kilometres to the sea, with only one insignificant feeder, Halal Hendiyeb, joining it from the westward close to the dark little hill called Einiwai. The Wadi Kiraf is almost barren, the great accumulations of sand about the lower parts of Wadi Di-ib probably absorbing most of the drainage. But to the west of the mouth of Kiraf there is quite a dense growth of bushes and trees, covering a large tract and visible from low hills at considerable distances. This locality is called Shekra el Delam; I did not visit it, but the Arabs say there is no wadi there, and it is possibly due to the drainage of Wadi Kiraf running below the surface of the sandy plain and being dammed back by the sea. A salt well, called Bir Adal Deib, exists close to the shore in the same locality.

Of the Wadi Shendib, only a few of the heads are situated in Egypt, Gebel Shendib being a mass of mountains cut through by the 22nd parallel. Collecting from the west face of the mountain group, a number of drainage lines unite, in the lower hills flanking the main mass, to form the main channel of Wadi Shendib, which courses westward through low hill country a little south of the 22nd parallel to join Wadi Di-ib. None of the heads have been surveyed in detail; their position is shown on the map from the statements of guides combined with the knowledge gained by triangulating fourteen of the principal peaks and sketching the mountain forms from a considerable distance. As the mountain peaks are of great height (the highest peak of Shendib, marked by an iron beacon, is 1,912 metres above sea) and frequently wrapped in clouds for days or even weeks together, it is probable that the heads of Wadi Shendib are very steep and convey considerable streams at certain seasons.

Wadi Hareitra, which lies just within Egypt, has likewise only been sketched in from a distance, but having been approached more closely its course is better known than that of Wadi Shendib. Its main head is nearly on the frontier, in longitude 36° 20′, between Gebels Shendib and Hanquf. From its head it makes a nearly quadrantal turn northward and westward, with a radius of about ten kilometres, among the mountains from which it receives tributaries, and then crosses the plain westward, turning south-west among low dark hills to join Wadi Di-ib after a course of about forty to forty-five kilometres from its head.

The unnamed drainage channel which is blocked by sand at O Harbub before reaching Wadi Di-ib heads in a tract of low hills with sandy interspaces about thirteen kilometres west of Gebel Elba; it receives no part, however, of the drainage of Elba itself, which goes northward by other more important channels. It is a broad and shallow ill-defined drainage line across the sandy plain, with very few trees, but its feeders from the low hill tract of Sul Hamid are less barren. The principal interest of this drainage line lies in its forming a convenient direct road from Bir Meheriqa to Bir Akwamtra and Halaib, being far less sandy, as well as shorter, than any alternative route round the north side of Sul Hamid. In using this road, one leaves the drainage line to the south on the plain, and skirts the hills of Sul Hamid till one reaches the flat sandy divide at the head of Wadi Eikwan, with the “Scragged hill” of Qash Amir in view. Here one turns eastward about four kilometres south of Qash Amir, and follows an easy pass into Wadi Siamtit, a small feeder of Wadi Yoider, whence tracks lead to Bir Akwamtra, Bir Kansisrob, and Halaib.

Wadi el Qurat, which joins Wadi Di-ib from the west in latitude 22° 8′, is a broad wadi with great abundance of trees. Its main head, which has not been surveyed in detail, appears to be in Gebel Shiab, about twenty-four kilometres above its junction with Di-ib, and the first part of its course is through a rugged tract of low hills. Before reaching Wadi Di-ib it is joined by the Wadi Dibir, and Wadi Hashimaiyib on the north and by Wadi Oshqeq on the south. The northern feeders are rather complex, owing to numerous anastomosings and cross-connexions in the low hill country between Gebel Mashushenai and Adar Aweib; but they contain abundance of vegetation and give good grazing grounds. The short Wadi Dibir heads in Wadi Mashushenai, part of the drainage of which it captures. Wadi Mashushenai is a little wadi to the south of Gebel Mashushenai, with a well, Bir Mashushenai, near its head; part of its drainage goes south to Wadi Dibir as above mentioned, while the rest continues as Wadi Mashushenai, flowing south-eastward among low hills for about five kilometres to join Wadi Hashimaiyib.

Wadi Hashimaiyib heads between Gebel Warabeit and Gebel Mashushenai. Curving round the north of Gebel Mashushenai almost in a semicircle, it runs south-south-east among low hills to join Wadi el Qurat after a course of about sixteen kilometres. Besides the Wadi Mashushenai above-mentioned, Hashimaiyib receives, just before entering el Qurat, the Wadi Sinqinyeib, which drains part of the west face of Adar Aweib and the hills west of it, with a length along its main channel of ten kilometres. There is an easy road up this wadi, passing close west of Adar Aweib into Wadi Wieqwer, a tributary of Wadi Warabeit; there is no actual pass, because the westward drainage of Adar Aweib actually splits, one part going north by Wadi Wieqwer, and the other south by Wadi Sinqinyeib.

Wadi Warabeit has its most important head at the easy and well known pass of Bani Sana, leading into Wadi Hamida. It is here a rather wide wadi, with a fairly rapid fall (about thirteen metres per kilometre), between the high hills of Gebel Hamida and those forming the south prolongation of Gebel Geror, and receives numerous feeders from either side. For the first six kilometres, it runs south-east; it then arrives at a small open space, where it is joined by eastward drainages from Gebels Hamida and Warabeit, and turns rather sharply to the east-north-east. After coursing in this direction for some five kilometres, it enters another open space, where it receives several feeders, the principal being the Wadi Wieqwer, draining northwards from the hills west of Adar Aweib. It then receives the Wadi Kwileimidaiyeib from the north, and cuts eastward through the hills to join Wadi Di-ib. The total length of the Wadi Warabeit from the pass of Bani Sana to Wadi Di-ib is nineteen kilometres, and in this length it falls from 335 to 113 metres above sea-level, so that its average slope is nearly twelve metres per kilometre. Both the wadi itself and its feeders are abundantly supplied with trees and bushes, while coarse grasses abound in places. Wadi Warabeit forms a convenient road from Bani Sana to Bir Meheriqa, being free from sand and well stocked with camel food.