George Wynn Brereton Huntingford was a British anthropologist, linguist, and historian, who traveled widely and was famed for his perceptive observations of societies and cultures. And if you had to guess which of the many places he traveled during his 77 year life he labeled "the most alien-looking place on Earth," what would you come up with?
His vote was for the island of Socotra, a 132-by-42 kilometer island which lies at at the mouth of the Gulf of Aden. To the north is the Arabian Sea; to the southwest, the Guardafui Channel separates it from the Horn of Africa. It's nearer to Africa than to the Arabian Peninsula (232 versus 380 kilometers), but is controlled by the government of Yemen, as much as Yemen's political disaster is currently controlling anything.
Most of Socotra is desert to semi-desert:
Although it does get more rainfall than either Yemen and Oman (to the north) or Somalia (to the east), so it has a great deal more vegetation than its neighbors:
The main reason for Socotra's uniqueness -- and why evolutionary biologist Lisa Banfield called it "the Galapagos of the Indian Ocean" -- isn't the climate; it's the fact that geologically, it's part of Africa. During the Miocene Period, about twenty million years ago, Africa and the Arabian Peninsula were joined, but a rift formed that split the two, opening up the Gulf of Aden. Socotra is a chunk of the Somali Plate that was torn loose and got separated from the rest of the land mass that now forms the easternmost part of Africa. (Interestingly, the rifting has continued, joining up with a fault system that runs up north through the Red Sea and south into the East African Rift Zone, which one day will tear away a much huger chunk of Africa -- all the way down to Mozambique.)
The issue is that since Socotra's separation from Africa around twenty million years ago, it's been largely isolated, so evolution has veered the community off into its own direction.. This has led to a high degree of endemism -- the fraction of species found nowhere else on Earth. 11% of its bird species, 37% of its plants, 90% of its reptiles, and 95% of its mollusk species are endemic. One of the most iconic plants is the "dragon's blood tree" (Dracaena cinnabari), which looks like it was invented by Dr. Seuss:
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