Kuwait / Geography
Kuwait
lies at the head of the Arabian Gulf, between latitude 28 and
30 north and longitude 46 and 48 east. It has an area of approximately
17,818 square kilometers. It is bounded on the west and north
by Iraq, on the east by the Arabian Gulf and on the south by Saudi
Arabia. Its topography is generally flat, broken only by occasional
low hills and shallow depressions.
The elevations
range from sea level to nearly 1,000 feet/304 meters in the southern
corner of the country. Zor Ridge, one of the main topographic
features, borders the northwestern shore of Kuwait Bay and rises
to a maximum of 475 feet/145 meters above sea level.
Kuwait has
a coastline of 325 kilometers/195 miles, but except for the Gulf,
which dominates Kuwait, the country has no rivers and no lakes.
Throughout
the northern, western, and central sections of Kuwait, there are
desert basins which fill with water after winter rains, forming
important watering places for the camel herds of the Bedouin.
Only one true oasis still remains in Kuwait, and that one is in
Sebihiya, south of Kuwait City. True soils are scarcely found
in the country. Only 8.6% of the land is able to be cultivated
at present, although increases in agricultural investments will
boost irrigated and reclaimed land. At present, local farming
provides much of the country's tomatoes, cucumbers, strawberries,
and vegetable greens. The vegetation of the countryside consists
primarily of scrub, although over 400 species of flora have been
recorded. Between October and March when the showers come, the
desert blooms with flowers. Desert truffles appear in late February
and March, depending on autumn rains, and wild irises appear in
the early spring.