When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mesopotamian Marshes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesopotamian_Marshes

    In periods of flooding, water from the Central Marsh, fed by the Tigris can overflow and supply the marshes with water. Hammar Lake is the largest water body within the marsh and has an area of 120 km (75 mi) by 250 km (160 mi), with depths ranging between 1.8 m (5.9 ft)-3 m (9.8 ft). In the summer, large portion of the marshes' and lake's ...

  3. Geography of Mesopotamia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Mesopotamia

    Map showing the extent of Mesopotamia. The geography of Mesopotamia, encompassing its ethnology and history, centered on the two great rivers, the Tigris and Euphrates.While the southern is flat and marshy, the near approach of the two rivers to one another, at a spot where the undulating plateau of the north sinks suddenly into the Babylonian alluvium, tends to separate them still more ...

  4. Draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draining_of_the...

    A further canal, the Prosperity Canal, was constructed to prevent any overflow into the marsh from the main channel of the Tigris as it ran southwards from Qalat Saleh. [15] By the late 1990s, the Central Marsh had become completely desiccated, suffering the most severe damage of the three main areas of wetland.

  5. Marsh Arabs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsh_Arabs

    The Marsh Arabs (Arabic: عرب الأهوار ʻArab al-Ahwār "Arabs of the Marshlands"), also referred to as Ahwaris, the Maʻdān (Arabic: معدان "dweller in the plains") or Shroog (Mesopotamian Arabic: شروگ "those from the east") [3] —the latter two often considered derogatory in the present day—are Indigenous inhabitants of the Mesopotamian marshlands in the modern-day south ...

  6. Mesopotamia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesopotamia

    Mesopotamia [a] is a historical ... built by the Marsh people of southern Mesopotamia for ... Many Assyrian and Babylonian palace walls were decorated with pictures ...

  7. Babylonian Map of the World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonian_Map_of_the_World

    Mesopotamia is surrounded by a circular "bitter river" or Ocean, and seven or eight foreign regions are depicted as triangular sections beyond the Ocean, perhaps imagined as mountains. [3] The tablet was excavated by Hormuzd Rassam at Sippar, Baghdad vilayet, [4] some 60 km north of Babylon on the east bank of the Euphrates River.

  8. Category:Mesopotamian Marshes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mesopotamian_Marshes

    Historically the marshlands, mainly composed of the separate but adjacent Central, Hawizeh and Hammar Marshes, used to be the largest wetland ecosystem of Western Eurasia. It is a rare aquatic landscape in the desert, providing habitat for the Maʻdān and important populations of wildlife.

  9. Lower Mesopotamia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Mesopotamia

    Lower Mesopotamia [1] [2] is a historical region of Mesopotamia. It is located in the alluvial plain of Iraq from the Hamrin Mountains to the Faw Peninsula near the Persian Gulf . In the Middle Ages it was also known as the Sawad and al-Jazira al-sflia ("Lower Jazira"), which strictly speaking designated only the southern alluvial plain, [ 3 ...