the geography of the middle east part one

68

Upload: aphrodite-stephenson

Post on 03-Jan-2016

100 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The Geography of the Middle East Part One. What is the Middle East ?. Pair-Share. What do you think when people say the Middle East? What images come to mind? Why?. Geography of the Middle East. The region known as the Middle East straddles three continents: Europe, Asia, and Africa - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 2: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

What is the

Middle East ?

Page 3: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Pair-Share

• What do you think when people say the Middle East?

• What images come to mind?

• Why?

Page 4: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Geography of the Middle East

• The region known as the Middle East straddles three continents: Europe, Asia, and Africa

• It has connected major trade routes since ancient times between Europe, India, and China

• People, ideas, goods, and religions have originated in and flowed through this region

Page 5: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Crossroads of Continents

Africa Europe Asia

Page 6: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

6

A Crossroads

• Physical– Trade

– Migration

• Cultural

• Religious

Enhanced by human actions

Page 7: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

SOUTHWEST ASIA IS MORE COMMONLY CALLED THE “MIDDLE EAST”

NORTH AFRICASOUTHWEST ASIAMIDDLE EAST

Page 8: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Arab Countries

Arab CountriesNon-Arab Countries

Saudi Arabia

Oman, UAE

Yemen, Qatar

Syria, Bahrain

Iraq, Jordan

North Africa

Israel (Jewish)

Turkey

Iran

Page 9: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Ethnicities • Arabs • Jews• Turks • Persians • Kurds

Page 10: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 11: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 12: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Bodies of Water

Page 13: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Bodies of Water

TigrisRiver

Nile River

EuphratesRiverJordan

River Persian Gulf

ArabianSea

Mediterranean Sea

IndianOcean

Red Sea

Black Sea

Gulf of Aden

Strait ofHormuz

Suez Canal

Dardanelles Strait

AtlanticOcean

Gulf of

Oman

Caspian Sea

Page 14: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Major Water Features

• Mediterranean

Sea• Red Sea• Arabian Sea• Persian/Arabian

Gulf• Nile River

Page 15: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Bodies of Water

• Rivers & Sea– The Nile River– The Tigris & Euphrates Rivers– The Jordan River– The Red Sea

• Gulfs - – Persian Gulf, – Gulf of Suez, – Gulf of Aqaba

Page 16: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Bodies of Water• The countries of the Middle East have a very hot and dry

climate. • Four large oceans or bodies of water border the Middle

East.• Mountain ranges close to many of the coastal areas

block rains coming from these bodies of water and result in much of the interior being desert.

• Because there are coastal areas as well as a number of large rivers, other parts of the region have enough water to support agriculture and towns and cities of significant size.

Page 17: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Coastline• Many Southwest Asian cities are based around

ports. • These cities usually have major industries. • Ports make it easier to ship the things produced

by industries. • Port cities with major industries usually pollute

their water supplies. • Oil is the main export in Southwest Asia. • Huge ships and oil spills pollute the waters of

the Persian Gulf.

Page 18: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Persian Gulf

• The Persian Gulf is also known as the Arabian Gulf.

• The term Arabian Gulf is used by Arab countries near the Persian Gulf such as Saudi Arabia, Oman, and the U.A.E. but it is not recognized by the United Nations.

Page 19: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Seas

Page 20: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Red Sea

• The Red Sea is connected to the Mediterranean Sea by the Suez Canal.

• The Suez Canal does not have locks like the Panama Canal or the St. Lawrence Seaway because there is no change in elevation.

Page 21: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 22: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Dead Sea

• Landlocked salt lake

• Lowest point on Earth- 1,320 feet below sea level

• Saltiest water in the world (33%)– So salty that only bacteria live in it– You float in the water!

• Average of 330 days of full sunshine a year

Page 23: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 24: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Black Sea

• Major importance to states that fringe its coasts• Shallow near Danube Delta / exceeding 7,000 ft.

in south slopes of Pontic Mountains• Deep water ports in northern Turkey

• Receiving plentiful freshwater; moderately salty• Virtually tideless• Overflows through Bosporus into Sea of

Marmara and then through Dardanelles into the Aegean Sea

Page 25: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

• Inland “sea” without outlet • The surface is 92 ft below sea level• Most of inflow from Volga

• sea level dropping due to utilization of Volga and other waters for irrigation

• Freight, ferries, passenger ships and fishing boats

• As with Persian Gulf, tectonics that created Caspian Sea were favorable for huge accumulations of fossil fuels

• Prior to 1991 negligence in protecting the environment

Caspian Sea

Page 26: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Straits and

Waterways

Page 27: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Strategic Waterways

• The Middle East has many strategic waterways, or narrow bodies of water that are important for trade or defense.

Page 28: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Bosporus and Dardanelles

• The Bosporus and Dardanelles connect the Black Sea with the Mediterranean Sea.• Made up of the Dardanelles, the Bosporus, and the

Sea of Marmara

• The Bosporus splits the country of Turkey into two parts: Small part in Europe, Small part in Europe

• Istanbul is an important city because it is located on the Bosporus and controls this important trade route.

• The Asian part of Turkey includes the large peninsula called Anatolia.

Page 29: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Bosporus & Dardanelles Straits

Page 30: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Strait of Hormuz

• The Strait of Hormuz connects the Persian Gulf with the Arabian Sea.

• Iran is on one side of the strait and the U.A.E. and Oman are on the other side.

• The strait is important because most of the oil in the world must be transported from the Persian Gulf to world markets.

Page 32: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 33: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Suez Canal

• The 101-mile artificial waterway connects the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea

• It was completed by the British in 1869• The Suez Canal is used to transport

goods to and from all three continents.• The Suez Canal separates the Sinai

Peninsula from the rest of Egypt. • Ships carry oil and goods from the

Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea through the canal.

Page 34: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Suez Canal

Page 35: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Pair-Share

• If you had to explain to your parents about the water features of the Middle East, how would you summarize it for them?

• Why?

Page 36: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Rivers

Page 37: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Rivers

• There are very few major rivers in the region • The Tigris, Euphrates, and Nile rivers are the

longest and most powerful• These rivers run through just a few countries of

the entire region • Rivers are the main source of water for drinking

and for power in many Southwest Asian countries – Countries without major rivers must also find

other ways to generate electricity

Page 38: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Mighty Nile

Page 39: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

• THE WORLD’S LONGEST RIVER with 4,240 miles, draining one tenth of Africa

• The Nile gets its name from the Greek word "Nelios", meaning River Valley

• Formed by union of Blue Nile and White Nile• The Nile and its tributaries flow though nine countries (flowing north)• Its source: The White Nile: Lake Victoria, Uganda

• The Blue Nile: Lake Tana, Ethiopia. • Masses of water traverse the full width of the Sahara Desert!• White Nile from Lake Victoria into Sudd, joining Blue Nile (from Lake

Tana) at Khartoum• Blue Nile is fed by monsoon rains of Ethiopian Plateau

• Fluctuations of Blue Nile formerly led to famous floods in Egypt• Series of 5 cataracts / creation of the delta

• Delta Egypt

The Mighty Nile River

Page 40: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Mighty Nile RiverContinued…

• Water has been the key to life in this arid environment, since the beginning of time.

• The Nile is an example of an exotic river because it receives its water as runoff in humid regions or from highland zones and then flows across large expanses of desert before reaching the Mediterranean Sea.

• Along 2% of the Egyptian territory (Nile Valley and Delta) live more than 95% of the Egyptian population (72,100,000 in 2003). 95% OF THE PEOPLE LIVE IN 5% OF THE LAND

• Other examples of exotic river systems are the Tigris-Euphrates system and the Jordan River.

Page 41: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

• Empties into the Mediterranean Sea

• The land along the Nile is very fertile.

• Floods on the river deposit silt, or finely ground fertile soil, all along the river.

• Before it reaches the sea, the Nile fans out into a huge fertile delta.

• Completion of Aswan High Dam in 1971 greatly altered the rivers regime (Lake Nasser)

• The Aswan High Dam controls flooding on the Nile.

• Because of the lack of silt, farmers need to use fertilizer to grow crops.

The Mighty Nile RiverContinued…

Page 42: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 43: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Egypt: The “Gift of the Nile”

Annual Nile Flooding

Annual Nile Flooding

Nile DeltaNile

Delta

Page 44: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Everyday Activities on the Nile

• Tourism• Farming • Fishing• Sometimes you’ll even see crocodiles!

Page 45: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Tigris and

Euphrates Rivers

Page 46: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

• Both come from eastern Anatolian Highlands in Turkey and enter Gulf through Shatt al-Arab

• They lose water as the cross flat deserts and their waters are diverted for irrigation

• 90% of actual water is flow from runoff in Turkey• Euphrates is longer, but Tigris carries 25% more

water • Increasing diversion of Euphrates by Turkey and

Syria• Diversion of Tigris waters via Lake Tharthar to

Euphrates• Iraq’s “third river” from Baghdad to Basrah (in 1992)  

Tigris and Euphrates

Page 47: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

1. What two rivers run through the

Fertile Crescent?

2. Which two river valley civilizations are shown on this

map?

In what present day country is Mesopotamia

located?

Page 48: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Mesopotamia – The Land Between Two Rivers

• Mesopotamia was a place where many cities began to grow

• As its name suggests, Mesopotamia was located between two rivers.

• The two rivers were the Tigris River and the Euphrates River.

• Mesopotamia was located in the Middle East, and surrounded by desert. (what is now Iraq)

• People came to Mesopotamia because the soil between the two rivers was very fertile.

• Mesopotamia was part of a larger region called the Fertile Crescent.

Page 49: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Fertile Crescent

• Arc-shaped region that stretches from the Tigris and Euphrates river valley to the Persian Gulf

• Very fertile soil, where civilization started• Is prone to flooding• Constantly invaded by foreign powers throughout

history:– Sumerians-Hittites-Assyrians-Babylonians-

Persians-Greeks-Parthians-Romans-Arabs-Ottomans- British and French-United States

• The shape is somewhat similar to a crescent (think of a crescent roll, or a crescent-shaped moon).

Page 50: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Cradle of Civilization• Mesopotamia is located in the Middle East, which is

located in Southwest Asia.

• As we’ve discussed before, the first civilizations and examples of writing were found in Southwest Asia. These things began in Mesopotamia.

• When a newborn baby begins life, he or she is placed in a cradle.

• Mesopotamia is called the cradle of civilization because the first civilizations began there, about 5,500 years ago in 3500 B.C.

Page 51: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 52: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 53: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Fertile Crescent

Page 54: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Tigris & EuphratesRiver System

Mesopotamia: “Land Between the

Two Rivers”

Mesopotamia: “Land Between the

Two Rivers”Marsh Arabs, So.

IraqMarsh Arabs, So.

Iraq

Page 55: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Dust Storms Along the Tigris-Euphrates Flood Plains

Page 56: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Jordan River

Page 57: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Jordan River

• The Jordan River begins in Syria and flows south through Israel and Jordan.

• The river empties into a large lake called the Dead Sea.

• The Jordan River provides water for both Jordan and Israel.

• In the 1960’s, the Arab nations tried to divert water away from Israel by cutting off the supply of the Jordan River.

• Because Israel controls Golan Heights, Jordan was unable to carry out this plan.

Page 58: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Jordan River Basin

Page 59: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

TheJordan River

System:

Israel & Jordan--A Fight Over

Water Rights?

Page 60: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 61: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Jordan River Source• There are 5 countries entitled to a share of the available resource.

– Jordan, Syria, Israel, Palestine and Lebanon. • Obviously politics and border issues continue to play a role in the

division. • It is “agreed” that approximately 1200 million m3 is the total

“sustainable” shared abstraction. Most recent plans refer back to the

• Johnston Plan (1955) which allocated this resource as follows Jordan: 720 mcm 56%

Israel: 400 mcm 31%Syria: 132 mcm 10.3%

Lebanon: 35 mcm 2.7%• Palestine's share was to be part of Jordan’s.

– WHICH LEADS TO PROBLEMS

Page 62: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

The Jordan River Source

• Current abstraction from the Jordan river is unsustainable.

• The Palestinian share is zero.

• In 1967 all farms and lands along this traditionally rich farming area were confiscated.

• Today the banks of the Jordan river are a closed military zone.

Page 63: The Geography of the Middle East Part One
Page 64: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Wadis and

Oasis

Page 65: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Wadis• Wadis

dry stream/riverbed that fill with water only after rainfall in a desert or steppe region.

• A wadis is a dry riverbed in a desert that fills up when it rains.

Page 66: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Wadis – Instant Springs

Page 67: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

OASIS• Oasis is a place where

vegetation can grow because water comes to the surface in desert area.

• "oasis" is believed to come from an ancient Egyptian word, "wah," meaning "fertile place in the desert."

• About 75% of the Sahara's population live in a oasis

Page 68: The Geography of the Middle East Part One

Pair-Share

• Based upon what we have learned about the freshwater rivers of the Middle East, summarize the top THREE water issues.

• Explain.