North Africa and Southwest Asia (Middle East)

Download Report

Transcript North Africa and Southwest Asia (Middle East)

North Africa and Southwest
Asia (Middle East)
Leading countries according to
GDP Per Capita
 Kuwait
 United
 Qatar
 Israel
Arab Emirates
Leading countries according to
Land size
 Algeria
 Saudi
 Libya
Arabia
Leading countries according to
population
 Iran
 Turkey
 Egypt
Physical Characteristics
 Area
is the crossroads of
Europe, Africa, and Asia
 It
has a primarily desert or
semi-arid climate
 Sahara,
Sahel, and steppes are
the primary vegetation region
 Sahara--world’s
largest
desert, it stretches over
most of North Africa and is
growing
 Sahel--area separating the
Sahara from the tropical
rainforest of Africa.
 The
Sahel is an area of
temperate grassland
(steppe) moving into sparse
desert scrub-like vegetation
 Three
main mountain ranges
1. Atlas Mountains in
northern Algeria and Morocco
2. Taurus Mountains in
southern Turkey
3. Zagros Mountains in
western Iran
 Even
though this is a dry
area, water plays a very
large role
 There are several large
bodies of water which
play a major role in world
politics
Examples
:
Persian Gulf/Arabian Gulf
Strait of Hormuz
Arabian Sea
Red Sea
 Other
important bodies of
water
 Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea,
Bosporus Strait, Dardanelles
Strait, Nile River (longest in the
world), Tigris and Euphrates
(home to the world’s first
civilization) and the Jordan
River
 The
area is also subject to
seasonal flooding, alluvial
soils, delta regions, oases,
and wadis
 Seasonal
flooding--several
of the rivers flood regularly
(Nile) which deposit rich
alluvial soil for farming
 The
desert regions are home
to many oases (a place
where fresh water makes it
possible for life to exist in a
dry area) and wadi (a gully
or usually dry river bed cut
by running water after a
downpour)
Economic Characteristics
 The
area has a heavy
reliance on primary
economic activities such as
oil drilling, agriculture and
herding/grazing
 The
area is the home of the
Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries
 Many countries in the area still
belong today
 Major producers of the world’s
oil
 Provide large oil revenues
 Positive
effects--jobs, revenue,
position of power
 Negative
effects--reliance on
one industry, pollution,
unequal distribution of wealth
 Water
is the region’s MOST
PRECIOUS resource
 Aswan
High Dam has had
positive and negative effects on
the region.
 Suez
Canal enhanced shipping
routes in the region
 Positive
effects of the Aswan
High dam
Controls flooding, recreation
areas, power
 Negative effects of the Aswan
high Dam
land losing fertility, lost
homes when dam built,
 There
is a great variation in
the standard of living in the
region.
 It ranges from the relatively
high to the poverty stricken.
 There is also a wide range of
per capita income and
differing levels of development
 Trade
has been important to
the region from the earliest
time.
 Today regional conflicts and
political unrest have affected
trade and tourism
 The area today has
contemporary trade routes (sea
lanes)
Cultural Characteristics
 The
area has experienced
rapid urbanization
 Most
modernization has
centered around urban areas
and more traditional life has
continued in the rural areas
 Large
percentage of the
population is under the age of
15 due to conflict, disease and
the hardships associated with
the region.
 The population is generally
unevenly distributed due to the
environment and resources
 All
but three of the countries
are Arab nations and they use
the Arabic language.
 Turkey,
Iran and Israel are
the non-Arab countries
 North
Africa and Southwest
Asia are the birthplace to three
major monotheistic religions:
Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam.
 All three claim similar holy
places and the dominant group
has changed over the years.
 Since
1949, the region has
been in conflict over the area
known as PALESTINE. This
area is present day Israel.
 Much
of the region has a
nomadic lifestyle
 NOMADIC-to
wander from
place to place behind a food
source or for other reasons
 The
art of the region reflects
the diversity of the religions;
 stained
glass, geometric tiles,
calligraphy, mosaics, and
prayer rugs
Cities as centers of trade and
culture
 Baghdad,
Iraq
 Cairo, Egypt
 Istanbul, Turkey
 Jerusalem, Israel
 Mecca, Saudi Arabia
 Tehran, Iran
Cultural Landscape
 Mosques,
minarets
 Church of the Holy Sepulcher
 Hagia Sophia
 bazaars, sugs
 Western Wall (of Jerusalem)
 Dome
of the Rock
 Kaaba
 Pyramids
 Oil
rigs
 walled cities
 The
End of the Notes
Sahara desert
Oasis
Stained Glass/Mosaics
Prayer Rugs
Oil Rigs
Kaaba
Dome of the Rock
Hagia Sophia
Church of the Holy Sepulcher
Pyramids
Western Wall
Western Wall