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Shatt al Arab is in Iraq, at the northern end of Persian Gulf.
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The Shatt al Arab is the name of a river in Southwest Asia. It is 120 miles long and located by the mouth of the Persian Gulf, which is also known as the Arabian Gulf.
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They combine at Al-Qurnah to form the Shatt al-Arab and discharge into the Persian Gulf.
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Asia
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The Tigris meets with the Euphrates near Basra, and is known as the Shatt-al-Arab.
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it is in iraq.................javed iqbal khan samttah gizan ksa
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The Persian Gulf.
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The Tigris meets with the Euphrates near Basra, and is known as the Shatt-al-Arab.
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It connects the oil fields of Iraq and Kuwait to the Persian Gulf and easy export.
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It is one of the mains routes of access to the Persian Gulf from both Iraq and Iran. Without control or assurances of usage of the Shatt al-Arab, each side's monetary benefits are in jeopardy because the Persian Gulf is the route through which petroleum is most easily transported.
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Khalid Al-Izzi has written:
'The Shatt al-Arab dispute' -- subject(s): Foreign relations
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The Euphrates River meets the Tigris River in the confluence point of the Shatt al-Arab. The Euphrates is the longest river in Western Asia and is one of two defining rivers of Mesopotamia, the other being the Tigris. The Euphrates originates in Turkey, flows through Syria and Iraq, and when it meets the Tigris in the Shatt al-Arab, empties into the Persian Gulf.
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The Tigris-Euphrates confluence at Al-Qurnah forms the Shatt al-Arab River and that flows into the Persian Gulf.
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The Shatt al Arab is the confluence formed by the Tigres and Eurphrates rivers and is 120 miles long
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Shatt al Arab
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Khalid Izzi has written:
'The Shatt al-Arab River dispute' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, International status
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The Shatt al-Arab and its Iranian counterpart known as Khuzestan were the main pieces of land disputed between Iran and Iraq.
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Origin in Eastern Turkey and mouth at Shatt al-Arab. Basin countries Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran
The Tigris River is 1,150 miles long and begins on the Armenian plateau in Turkey. In Iraq, it receives additional water from four important tributaries: the Greater Zab, the Lesser Zab, the Adhem and the Diyala. As a result, The sites of the ancient cities of Girsu and Lagash are located on today's Shatt al Gharraf.
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Origin in Eastern Turkey and mouth at Shatt al-Arab. Basin countries Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran
The Tigris River is 1,150 miles long and begins on the Armenian plateau in Turkey. In Iraq, it receives additional water from four important tributaries: the Greater Zab, the Lesser Zab, the Adhem and the Diyala. As a result, The sites of the ancient cities of Girsu and Lagash are located on today's Shatt al Gharraf.
Turkey, Iraq and Syria.
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"A river in SW Asia, flowing SE from SE Turkey through Iraq, joining the Euphrates to form the Shatt-al-Arab. 1150 miles (1850 km) long."
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hahaha! like i know.....go somewhere else to find the answer sorry:?
Shatt Al-Arab
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The river is known as Shatt Al-Arab in Arab countries and Arvand Rud (Arvand river) in Iran. Arvand is also the ancient Persian name of Tigris.
Tigris and Euphrates merge at the town of Al-Qurnah in Iraq
Karun joins the last at the Iranian town of Khorramshahr. But right before, it splits into two branches to form a delta. Only one branch, Haffar, flows into Arvand/Shatt Al-Arab. The second, Bahmanshir, flows directly into the Persian Gulf.
The delta created the Abadan Island.
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The river is known as Shatt Al-Arabin Arab countries and Arvand Rud (Arvand river) in Iran. Arvand is also the ancient Persian name of Tigris.
Tigris and Euphrates merge at the town of Al-Qurnah in Iraq
Karun joins the last at the Iranian town of Khorramshahr. But right before, it splits into two branches to form a delta. Only one branch, Haffar, flows into Arvand/Shatt Al-Arab. The second, Bahmanshir, flows directly into the Persian Gulf.
The delta created the Abadan Island.
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Together with the Tigris, it is one of the two defining rivers of Mesopotamia. Originating in eastern Turkey, the Euphrates flows through Syria and Iraq to join the Tigris in the Shatt al-Arab, which empties into the Persian Gulf.
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Basra is the southernmost Iraqi city shown on the map. It is located near the border with Kuwait and is a major port city on the Shatt al-Arab river.
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Both the Tigris River and the Euphrates River flow through Iraq. In the south, these rivers merge to form a new river called the Shatt al-Arab River.
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The Shatt al-Arab is the river formed by the confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in southern Iraq.
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darcy wills is desperate.
a painful secret is ruining her closest friendships at bluford high school. and an even deeper lie is tearing her family apart. unwilling to lose the people she loves, darcy must confront her past and the truth. what she discovers will change her world forever.
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Depends on the cause of loss.
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Not necessarily. Grips could have been replaced.
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The Tigris River flows through Turkey, Iraq, and joins the Euphrates River in southern Iraq to form the Shatt al-Arab River that empties into the Persian Gulf.
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The largest Iranian river that flows into the Persian Gulf is the KARUN RIVER which starts in the Zagros Mountains and winds its way, roughly parallel with the Iraqi Tigris River into the Persian Gulf via a delta in the Iranian portion of the Shatt al-Arab.
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The three bodies of water found in Babylon were the Euphrates River, the Shatt al-Hilla Canal, and the Euphrates-Tigris River system. These waterways played a crucial role in the irrigation and trade networks of ancient Babylon.
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east of the medeterainian sea , mostly in Iraq
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Umm Qasr, which is on Khawr Abd Allah Estuary near the Persian Gulf, functions as Iraq's deep-water port. Basra, a much larger city, sits upriver in the Shatt Al-Arab (at a point south of the Tigris-Euphrates merger) and is Iraq's largest port, but it is a shallow-water port.
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It depends on which part of the Tigris you are looking at. At most points along the Tigris River, the Euphrates River is to the south and west of the Tigris River. In southern Iraq, though, the Tigris and Euphrates rivers fuse into the Shatt al-Arab River which is the outlet into the Persian Gulf.
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Most of the farming in Iraq is concentrated in the fertile plains of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, known as Mesopotamia. This region has a long history of agriculture and is well-suited for growing crops like wheat, barley, and rice.
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the Tigris river starts at the Armenian plateau but I'm not even sure where it ends yet I'm still doing research on it...
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Iraq has no cities on the its Persian Gulf coast. (The closest city is Umm Qasr, but it is technically on the Khawr Abd Allah Estuary, not the Gulf.) Umm Qasr functions as Iraq's deep-water port. Basra, a much larger city, sits upriver in the Shatt Al-Arab (at a point south of the Tigris-Euphrates merger) and is Iraq's largest port, but it is a shallow-water port.
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Part of the answer is that there is no current flow 'through' the Persian Gulf, which is connected by the narrow Strait of Hormuz to the Indian Ocean.
There are rivers that empty into it, notably the Tigris and Euphrates (which combine as the Shatt al-Arab), adding sediment that over time has reduced the coastal depths of the already-shallow gulf. (Average depth just 50 meters or 164 feet.)
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