In the absence of paper, the shoulder bones of camels (slait) were employed traditionally as writing tablets in Quranic schools. Scanned from the book The Craft Heritage of Oman; 2003; Neil Richardson & Marcia Dorr

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In the absence of paper, the shoulder bones of camels (slait) were employed traditionally as writing tablets in Quranic schools. Scanned from the book The Craft Heritage of Oman; 2003; Neil Richardson & Marcia Dorr

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The coiled, leather-covered basket is used for the milking of camels. Scanned from the book The Craft Heritage of Oman; 2003; Neil Richardson & Marcia Dorr
The skeleton of a three-year-old camel, found buried on its side together with a necklace of soft stone, shell, glass and semi-precious beads, was discovered in a pre-Islamic cemetery near Samad ash Shan. The beads are of late Iron Age provenance (300 BC - AD 793) and testify to the value placed on the camel at this early time.
Scanned from the book The Craft Heritage of Oman; 2003; Neil Richardson & Marcia Dorr
Sharon Ya’ari
Camels, 2009 from Jerusalem Blvd
via Wolfgang Hasselmann on Unsplash

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Tuareg; Algeria, 1975. Scanned from the book Le Désert des Kel Ahaggar; 1982; Henri Bancaud
Rabari woman from Kutch. Photo by Jyotindra Jain. Scanned from the book Living Traditions of India: Crafts of Gujarat; 1985; Jasleen Dhamija