| With an area of 1,648,000
square kilometers, Iran ranks sixteenth in size among the
countries of the world. Iran is about one-fifth the size of
the continental United States, or slightly larger than the
combined area of the contiguous states of California,
Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and Idaho.
Located in southwestern
Asia, Iran shares its entire northern border with the Soviet
Union. This border extends for more then 2,000 kilometers,
including nearly 650 kilometers of water along the southern
shore of the Caspian Sea. Iran's western borders are with
Turkey in the north and Iraq in the south, terminating at
the Shatt al Arab (which Iranians call the Arvand Rud). The
Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman littorals form the entire
1,770-kilometer southern border. To the east lie Afghanistan
on the north and Pakistan on the south. Iran's diagonal
distance from Azarbaijan in the northwest to Baluchestan va
Sistan in the southeast is approximately 2,333 kilometers. |
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Iran is one
of the world's most mountainous countries. Its mountains
have helped to shape both the political and
the economic history of the country for several centuries.
The mountains enclose several broad basins, or plateaus, on
which major agricultural and urban settlements are located.
Until the twentieth century, when major highways and
railroads were constructed through the mountains to connect
the population centers, these basins tended to be relatively
isolated from one another. Typically, one major town
dominated each basin, and there were complex economic
relationships between the town and the hundreds of villages
that surrounded it. In the higher elevations of the
mountains rimming the basins, tribally organized groups
practiced transhumance, moving with their herds of sheep and
goats between traditionally established summer and winter
pastures. There are no major river systems in the country,
and historically transportation was by means of caravans
that followed routes traversing gaps and passes in the
mountains. The mountains also impeded easy access to the
Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea.
LANDSCAPE
A series of massive,
heavily eroded mountain ranges surround Iran's high interior
basin. Most of the country is above 1,500 feet, one-sixth of
it over 6,500 high. In sharp contrast are the coastal
regions outside the mountain ring. In the north, the
400-mile strip along the Caspian Sea, never more than 70
miles wide and frequently narrowing to 10, falls sharply
from the 10,000-foot summit to 90 feet below sea level. In
the south, the land drops away from a 2,000 foot plateau,
backed by a rugged escarpment three times as high, to meet
the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman.
LAKES AND SEAS
The Caspian Sea The
Caspian Sea, which is the largest landlocked body of water
in the world (424,240 sq. km.), lies some 85 feet below the
sea level. It is comparatively shallow, and for some
centuries has bene slowly shrinking in size. Its salt
content is considerably less than that of the oceans and
though it abounds with fish, its shelly coasts do not offer
any good natural harbours, and sudden and violent storms
make it dangerous for small boats. The important ports on
the Caspian coast are: Bandar Anzali, Noshahr, and Bandar
Turkman.
Other Lakes Along the
frontier between Iran and Afghanistan there are several
marshy lakes which expand and contract according to the
season of the year. The largest of these, the Seestan
(Hamun-Sabari), in the north of the Seestan &Y Baluchistan
province, is alive with wild fowl.
Real fresh water lakes
are exceedingly rare in Iran. There probably are no more
than 10 lakes in the whole country, most of them brackish
and small in size. The largest are: Lake Urmiya (area:
3,900-6,000 sq. km. depending on season) in Western
Azerbaijan, Namak (1,806 sq. km.) in the Central province,
Bakhtegan (750 sq. km.) in Fars province, Tasht (442 sq.
km.) in Fars province, Moharloo (208 sq. km.) in Fars
province, Howz Soltan (106.5 sq. km.) in Central province.
The Persian Gulf The
Persian Gulf is the shallow marginal part of the Indian
ocean that lies between the Arabian Peninsula and south-east
Iran. The sea has an area of 240,000 square kilometres. Its
length is 990 kilometres, and its width varies from a
maximum of 338 kilometres to a minimum of 55 kilometres in
the Strait of Hormuz. It is bordered on the north,
north-east and east by Iran, on the north-west by Iraq and
Kuwait, on the west and south-west by Saudi Arabia, Bahrain
and Qatar, and on the south and south-east by the United
Arab Emirates and partly Oman. The term Persian Gulf is
often used to refer not only proper to the Persian Gulf but
also to its outlets, the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf of
Oman, which open into the Arabian Sea.

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