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  2. Western Desert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Desert

    The sea is divided by a long peninsula of rocky desert along the border, leaving the eastern lobe in Egypt and the western in Libya, where it is called the Calanshio desert. On the Egyptian side it was known historically as the "Libyan Desert", taking its name from Ancient Libya , which lay between the Nile and Cyrenaica.

  3. Bahariya Oasis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahariya_Oasis

    Bahariya Oasis (Arabic: الواحات البحرية, romanized: El-Wāḥāt El-Baḥrīya, "the Northern Oases") is a depression and a naturally rich oasis in the Western Desert of Egypt. It is approximately 370 km away from Cairo.

  4. Wildlife of Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Egypt

    In general, Egypt is a very dry country. The Western Desert receives only occasional rainfall, the winters being mild and the summers very hot. The Eastern Desert receives some precipitation in the south in the form of orographic rainfall from winds that have crossed the Red Sea; this may cause torrential flows in the wadis. The winters here ...

  5. Qattara Depression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qattara_Depression

    The depression is part of the Western Desert of Egypt. The Qattara Depression lies below sea level, and its bottom is covered with salt pans, sand dunes, and salt marshes. The depression extends between the latitudes of 28°35' and 30°25' north and the longitudes of 26°20' and 29°02' east. [3]

  6. Bahariya Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahariya_Formation

    Bahariya Formation (Egypt) The Bahariya Formation (also transcribed as Baharija Formation ) is a fossiliferous geologic formation dating back to the early Cenomanian , which outcrops within the Bahariya depression in Egypt , and is known from oil exploration drilling across much of the Western Desert where it forms an important oil reservoir .

  7. Geography of Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Egypt

    Egypt's location. The geography of Egypt relates to two regions: North Africa and West. Egypt has coastlines on the Mediterranean Sea, the River Nile, and the Red Sea.Egypt borders Libya to the west, Palestine and Israel to the east and Sudan to the south (with a current dispute over the halaib triangle).

  8. Category:Western Desert (Egypt) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Category:Western_Desert_(Egypt)

    Articles relating to the Western Desert, an area of the Sahara that lies west of the river Nile, up to the Libyan border, and south from the Mediterranean Sea to the border with Sudan. It is named in contrast to the Eastern Desert which extends east from the Nile to the Red Sea .

  9. List of rivers of Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rivers_of_Egypt

    The Nile is intersected by a number of normally dry tributaries or wadis which traverse the Eastern Desert. The wadis drain run-off rainfall from the mountains along the Egyptian Red Sea coast, though it only rarely reaches the main trunk of the wadis to flow downstream to the Nile. The three principal wadis are: