“And He has cast in the earth anchorages [mountains standing firm] so that it should
not reel with you, and rivers and roads that possibly you would be guided.” (TMQ, AnNahl:15)
This ayah appears towards the beginning of Surat An-Nahl (The Bee), a Makkan Surah, which gets its
name from the reference Allah makes in it to bees and the special instinct He gave them. He has
inspired them to build beehives, to live an organized life and to follow many paths to the flowers to
provide us with the beneficial liquid that is produced in the bellies of female bees. Allah has given
bees the unique privilege of being able to produce honey.
Surat An-Nahl deals with a lot of important concepts that make up the pillars of the Islamic aqidah
(creed), including:
• Complete belief in Allah’s divinity; that is He is the Creator and has dominion over everything.
• Allah’s absolute Oneness above His creation.
• The absolute and limitless power of Allah.
• The unhindered will of Allah.
• The revelation (of the Qur’an).
• The Prophethood and the message, completed and perfected in the message of the Prophet
Muhammad (SAWS, peace be upon him) who was the “seal” of the Prophets.
• Allah promises that the Qur’an shall be preserved in the form in which it was revealed to
Muhammad (SAWS). The preservation of the previous books was left to the people they were
sent to and were thus corrupted and changed from their original wording and meaning.
Signs of creation in Surat An-Nahl:
1.creation of the heavens and the earth.
2. The creation of man from a drop of sperm; it is this same man who is then often
argumentative and denies his Creator.
3. The creation of cattle, a source of countless benefits for mankind.
4. The creation of horses, mules, and donkeys for transportation and other things of which man
had no knowledge of.
5. The many beliefs of man that cause him to fluctuate between choosing the Straight Path and
misguidance.
6. Allah sends down rain from the sky for the refreshment of mankind, animals and plants
causing vegetation, including olives, date-palms and grapes, to grow out of the earth.
7. The passage of day and night and the passage of the sun, the moon and the stars by His
order to regulate life in the universe.
8. The propagation of different life forms and the various types of surfaces, rocks, minerals and
elements as well as the various cycles (water cycle, life cycle, rock cycles, etc).
9. He has made the sea for man’s use so that man may eat the food therein that is fresh and
tender, so he can extract materials to make ornaments and sail ships that plough through the
waves.
10. He has pegged mountains with deep roots on the Earth to stand firm so that the Earth does
not shake and disrupt life on it and rivers that break rocks as they travel down from their
source on the mountain tops. The soil formation and precipitation of minerals, rocks, and
other resources and the making of roads and pathways in mountains and valleys.
11. He has made landmarks on earth to guide the traveler by day and the stars as a guide at
night for those crossing the land and seas.
12. Allah is the creator of everything; His creation does have not the ability to create.
13. The description given of the punishment of some of the previous nations agrees with our
current understanding of earthquakes, long before anyone knew the mechanisms behind
earthquakes.
14. Allah gives assurance that, just as he punished the sinners by destroying their nations in the
past, he is able to do so now and in the future. This further confirms our current
understanding of the mechanisms of earthquakes and strengthens our belief that mountains
are Allah’s soldiers, punishing the disbelievers, testing those who believe and giving hard
learnt lessons to those who survive them.
15. The creation of milk in the stomachs of cattle originating from between their waste and blood,
yet providing a pure, tasty drink.
16. Allah made the fruit of the date-palm and the vine a source of sustenance but some use it
unwisely to produce intoxicating or alcoholic drinks.
17. Allah created the bee and allowed the females to build beehives on hills, trees and in homes,
to gather nectar and pollen from different flowers and fruits and to travel great distances
without forgetting its way home. The bee then changes the pollen and the nectar in its
stomach into a drink of various colors in which there is a cure for mankind.
18. The cycle of life between creation and death is decided for all living creatures. Among the
living are those who die young and there are those live into old age, losing their memory
partially or totally.
19. Allah holds the birds poised in midair while flying; nothing keeps them there but the power of
their Lord.
20. Allah created the sense of hearing before He created the sense of seeing.
Interpretation of these ayahs by some scholars:
untains standing firm] so that it should not reel with you, and rivers and roads that possibly you
would be guided.) (Surah An-Nahl: 15). Ibn-Kathir said: “Mountains standing firm” means that Allah
created the earth with its strong pillars and deeply rooted mountains which stabilize the earth and
prevent it from shaking and disturbing life on Earth.
As for the words, “rivers and roads”, Allah created rivers that run from one place to another providing
sustenance for believers. They originate in one place and provide sustenance for the inhabitants of
other places and cut across landscapes, wildernesses and wastelands, they cut through hills and
mountains. They pass through whatever Allah has willed and destined for them. He has also made
paths that lead from one land to another, even through mountains, as He says, “And We have made
in them paths”.
Scientific implications in these ayahs:
One of the scientific facts mentioned in these ayahs is the use of the word “pegging” to describe the
formation of mountains, their stabilizing function for the Earth and linking it to the creation of rivers
and mountain paths.
Describing the formation of the mountains as “pegging”:
A mountain is a part of the earth’s surface much higher than the land surrounding it; it has relatively
steep sides and a summit. Mountains are usually found in chains, ranges or systems. Apart from
certain mountains that exist singly, the smallest unit is the range, made up of either a single complex
ridge or a series of ridges generally alike in origin, age, and form. Several closely related ranges, in
parallel alignment or chain-like cluster, are known as a mountain system. An elongated series of
systems forms a mountain chain and an extensive complex of ranges, systems and chains is known
as a belt or cordillera.
There are two theories to explain the origin of mountains in the earth.
1. The Geosynclines Theory:
There were large depositional basins from seas and oceans ranging from hundreds of
kilometers in length, tens of kilometers in width to more than one hundred meters depth.
Many clastic and non-clastic types of sediments were deposited and accumulated in the floors
of theses basins, in the form of throwing from up to down to form sedimentary rocks. The
continuous thickening of these rocks caused loads and led to subsidence of the basin floor.
This subsidence was accompanied by volcanic activity in the form of eruptions throwing the
lava upwardly. The result was a thick intercalated sequence (about 1500m thick) form
sedimentary and volcanic rocks. However, the depositional basins are bounded by active deep
rifting faults which keep the continuous subsidence of the basins and two opposite wards the
processes of deposition downwardly and the eruption of lava upwardly.
2. Plate Tectonic Theory: This recent theory depends on some facts in explaining the origin of
mountains as follow:
a. The earth’s crust is broken up into plates or partitions called “tectonic plates” through cracks
that can range from 65 to 150 kilometers in depth. The plate that forms the ocean floor is
called ‘oceanic plate’ and that which forms the continent is called ‘continental plate’. Around
the earth there are about 12 large plates and several small ones. These plates which formed
from continental or oceanic crust float on hot, semi-molten materials of weak sphere
(Asthenosphere). There is continuous movement between the adjacent plates, which is
extensional, compressional or transformable (sliding), occurs along a relatively narrow zone
where plate tectonic forces are most active. Usually, these movements are accompanied by
volcanic and seismic activities (earthquakes). The volcanoes erupt and throw lava and magma
to the surface until the magma gathers and crystallize as volcanic rocks creating a mountain
which can reach heights of up to thousands of meters above sea level. This is because
volcano activity can last for 20- 30 years (although some volcanoes have been recorded as
staying active for more than a thousand million years).
Examples of volcanic mountains include: Mount Ararat in Turkey (5100m), Mount Etna in
Sicily, Italy (3300m), Mount Vesuvius in Italy (1300m), Kilimanjaro in Tanzania (5900m) and
Mount Kenya in Kenya (5100m).
b.
Throughout the field studies it was noted that; orogenic belts consist of rocks that have been
folded intensively, thrust long distances horizontally, often metamorphosed, intruded with
granite and elevated to form mountain chains. These belts result from the forces of
compression and convergent movements of the plates, which makes up the solid outer part of
the Earth’s crust. These forces usually rise at the margins of discrete rigid plates and are
accounted for by the theory of plate tectonics. Two main types of plate are found as
mentioned before: continental plates that consist of relatively light rocks and heavier oceanic
plates, which lie under most of the ocean basins of the world. Compression occurs when two
plates converge and one sinks below the other along a subduction zone. Convergence, and
the subsequent collision that generates compression, takes in three forms: collision between
oceanic plate with continental one, two continental plates or between two oceanic plates.
The first of these forms develops when convergence occurs along active continental margins where
an oceanic plate is passing under the edge of a continental plate. As the oceanic plate descends into
the mantle of the earth, it is melted and injected back into the crust, with volcanic activity to form
mountain chain consists mainly of volcanic rocks. The second form of collision takes place between
two oceanic plates leading to the subsidence of one of them and forming a series of islands in the
form of ‘volcanic island arc’ in another oceanic plate. If this process continues, the volcanic island arc
can be carried on the oceanic plate towards the continent where it collides with the continental
plate—this is called an arc-continent collision. Sedimentary rocks which have accumulated in the sea
basin between the island arc and the continental plate are folded, faulted, and thrust into an elevated
position over the margin of the continental plate towards the centre of the continent along a plane or
surface known as a decollement. The island arc eventually becomes involved in this compression and
the rocks of which it was composed are often metamorphosed by heat and pressure and injected
with granite.
The third form of compression and orogeny results from continent-continent collision (two continental
plates). Typically in this type of collision, two continents converge, one with a passive margin in
which the continental and oceanic crust are welded together, the other with an active margin where
the subduction of the oceanic crust under the continent eventually causes the closure of the
intervening ocean basin. As closure begins, slices of the oceanic crust and any sediment that they
carry are thrust on to the continental margins. As the thrust continues the slices are folded and
elevated and eventually move horizontally, possibly sliding due to gravity on to the continents to form
huge folds or thrust-nappes. These nappes become eroded to form the mountain chains. As
compression continues in the closing gap, high pressures and temperatures generate a linear zone in
which the rocks are metamorphosed, eventually welding the continents together along a continental
suture.
Forces associated with extension (spreading) or stretching in the Earth’s crust also produce mountain
ranges. Such forces occur where two plates are diverging or moving apart. At the early stages of
development this divergence can lead to continental rupture where arching upwards and splitting of
the crust occurs. Along the line of divergence a rift valley develops with the crack in the centre being
continually filled with rising magma. Blocks on either side fall or slide down the side of the rift
creating a mountainous landscape.
Description of the mountains as having deep roots and acting as anchorages:
The modern theory of plate tectonics holds that mountains act as anchorages for the earth’s
crust. The crust is broken up into several tectonic plates through cracks that range from 65 to 150
kilometers in depth; there are about 12 large plates and several small ones. These plates, which
contain the world’s continents and oceans, float on hot, semi-molten material, drifting and bumping
against one another. Movement between the plates occurs along a relatively narrow zone where
plate tectonic forces are most active i.e. in a weak zone of the earth’s crust. Thus the movement of
those plates floating on molten magma coupled with the Earth’s movement around itself amount to a
lot of force.
In addition, as the ocean basin grows as the sea floor spreads, the magma injected at the line of
divergence creates a new mountain range called a mid-oceanic ridge. Thus, the only factor that limits
the ferocity of the movement of the plates are the mountains that act as definite stabilizers for the
earth’s crust, safeguarding the continents and oceans from constantly running into each other and
not only does it decrease their velocity, it also regulates their movement!
Modern earth sciences have proven that mountains have deep roots under the surface of the ground
and that these roots are several times their elevation above the surface of the Earth. We can thus
safely conclude that the Qur’an’s description is accurate; the mountains are actually pegs in the
earth’s weakest zones to anchor it firmly in the same way that we use anchors to firmly pin ships to
the ground.
The link between the formation of mountains, rivers and paths:
A river is a flow of water along a channel from highlands to lowlands. The great majority of rivers
eventually discharge either into seas or lakes, although some rivers disappear due to water loss
through seepage into the ground and evaporation into the air.
The importance of rivers dwarfs their volumetric size (0.006 percent of all the fresh water of the
earth). This is because river water flows down with gravity, giving it the power to mould the
landscape through erosion, transportation and the deposition of rocks and sediments, making it a
dynamic and renewable natural resource for human, plant, and animal life. The water cycle begins
when water evaporates from the oceans into the atmosphere. Atmospheric water returns to Earth as
precipitation in the form of rain, hail or snow. The amount of water reaching the ground depends on
many factors but in general, highlands receive more precipitation than lowlands and most rivers
originate in mountains. When precipitation reaches the ground, it usually seeps into the soil, either
percolating down to the water-table to become groundwater, or flowing slowly downhill as throughflow. However, during heavy storms, due to human activity compacting the soil surface or covering it with concrete, or if the soil is already saturated, not all the water is able to infiltrate and the excess
collects on the surface before flowing downhill to the nearest stream as overland flow. Water that
reaches the river either by through-flow or overland flow is termed run-off. The role of the river in
the water cycle is to complete the cycle by collecting run-off from the surrounding area (drainage
basin) and carrying it back to the ocean or a lake in order to replace water that has evaporated. At
this point, we can guess the obvious connection between rivers and mountains explained to us in the
Qur’an long ago.
However, with the ever changing climate, rivers can eventually dry out leaving their channels as
pathways and roads for humans and animals alike to use; this is the association the Qur’an points out
between rivers and roads. Rivers are the best means that Allah created for pathways in otherwise
inaccessible locations such as mountains, hills and plateaus.
Conclusion
These facts were unknown to man for a long time. He started to gather information about nature and
its mysteries slowly, but it was only in the mid-nineteenth century that these explanations started to
make some sense and the bigger picture did not come into view until the mid 1960s.
The precise mention of such facts, is an assertion that the Noble Qur’an cannot be man-made and
bears witness to the Prophethood and the message of the seal of the Prophet (SAWS) who received
it. It proves how the Prophet was connected to the revelation and taught by the Creator. This come
in assertion to the words of Allah that can be translated as,
“And those to whom knowledge has
come see that the (Revelation) sent down to thee from thy Lord, is the Truth, and that it
guides to the Path of the Exalted (in Might), Worthy of all praise.” (TMQ, 34:6).
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By: Dr. Zaghloul Al-Najjar