Arabian Peninsula
From Free net encyclopedia
Template:Redirect Image:Ev3240 S2000062090456.jpg The Arabian Peninsula (in Arabic: شبه الجزيرة العربية) is a peninsula in Southwest Asia at the junction of Africa and Asia consisting mainly of desert. The Arabian peninsula is an important part of the greater Middle East, and plays a critically important geopolitical role due to its vast reserves of oil and natural gas.
The coasts of the peninsula touch, on the west, the Red Sea and Gulf of Aqaba; on the southeast, the Arabian Sea (part of the Indian Ocean); and on the northeast, the Gulf of Oman, the Strait of Hormuz, and the Persian Gulf.
Its northern limit is defined by the Zagros collision zone, a mountainous uplift where a continental collision between the Arabian plate and Asia is occurring. Geographically, it merges with the Syrian Desert with no clear line of demarcation.
Politically, the Arabian peninsula is separated from the rest of Asia by the northern borders of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. The following countries are considered part of the peninsula:
- Iraq
- Bahrain — technically an island just off the coast of the Peninsula
- Kuwait
- Oman
- Qatar
- Saudi Arabia
- United Arab Emirates
- Yemen
With the exception of Yemen, these countries (called the Persian Gulf states) are among the wealthiest in the world in relation to their small populations, thanks to their hydrocarbon reserves.
The country of Saudi Arabia covers the greater part of the Peninsula. The majority of the population of the peninsula lives in Saudi Arabia and in Yemen. The peninsula contains the world's largest reserves of oil. It is home to the Islamic holy cities of Mecca and Medina, both of which are in Saudi Arabia. The UAE and Saudi Arabia are economically the wealthiest in the region. Qatar, a small peninsula in the Persian Gulf on the larger peninsula, is home of the famous Arabic language television station Al Jazeera. Kuwait, on the border with Iraq, was claimed as an Iraqi province and invaded by Saddam Hussein during the first Gulf War; it is an important country strategically, forming one of the main staging grounds for coalition forces mounting the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Geologically, this region is perhaps more appropriately called the Arabian subcontinent because it lies on a tectonic plate of its own, the Arabian Plate, which has been moving incrementally away from northeast Africa (forming the Red Sea) and north into the Eurasian plate (forming the Zagros mountains). The rocks exposed vary systematically across Arabia, with the oldest rocks exposed in the Arabian-Nubian Shield near the Red Sea, overlain by earlier sediments that become younger towards the Persian Gulf. Perhaps the best-preserved ophiolite on Earth, Semail ophiolite, lies exposed in the mountains of the UAE and northern Oman.
The peninsula is thought to have been the original homeland of the Proto-Semitic peoples, ancestors of all the Semitic peoples in the region — the Akkadians, Arabs, Assyrians, Hebrews, etc. Linguistically, the Peninsula was the cradle of the Arabic language (spread beyond the Peninsula with the Islamic religion during the expansion of Islam beginning in the 7th century CE) and still maintains tiny populations of speakers of South Semitic languages such as Mehri and Shehri, remnants of a language family that held greater importance in earlier historical periods when the kingdom of Sheba flourished in the southern part of the peninsula (modern-day Yemen and Oman).
Geographically, the peninsula consists of:
- a central plateau with fertile valleys and pastures used for the grazing of sheep and other livestock.
- a range of deserts, the Nefud in the north, stony; the Rub' Al-Khali or Great Arabian Desert, a perfect Sahara, in the south, with sand estimated to extend 600 ft. below the surface; and between them, the Dahna.
- stretches of dry or marshy coastland with coral reefs on the Red Sea side.
- ranges of mountains, primarily paralleling the Red Sea on the western (e.g. Asir province) and southeastern end (Oman). The highest, Jabal Al-Nabi Sho'aib in Yemen, is 3666 m high.
Arabia has no lakes or permanent rivers, only wadis, which are dry except during the brief rainy season. Plentiful ancient aquifers exist beneath much of the peninsula, however, and where this water surfaces, oases form (e.g. the Al-Hasa and Qatif oases) and permit agriculture. The climate being extremely hot and arid, the peninsula has no forests, although desert-adapted wildlife is present throughout the region.
See also
- Arab World
- Araby
- Rub' al Khali (desert)
- Arabia Deserta
- Arabia Petraea
- Arabian Desert and East Sahero-Arabian xeric shrublands
- Mashreq
Template:Regionar:شبه الجزيرة العربية fa:خليج فارسي bg:Арабски полуостров bs:Arabija ca:Aràbia cs:Arabský poloostrov da:Arabiske Halvø de:Arabische Halbinsel es:Arabia fr:Arabie ko:아라비아 반도 id:Jazirah Arab is:Arabíuskaginn it:Penisola araba he:חצי האי ערב kw:Arabi sw:Bara Arabu la:Arabia nl:Arabisch Schiereiland ja:アラビア半島 pl:Półwysep Arabski pt:Arábia ru:Аравийский полуостров simple:Arabia sk:Arabský polostrov fi:Arabian niemimaa zh:阿拉伯半岛