Arab's Gulf
The Arab's Gulf, also known as the Arab Gulf or Arab Bay (all translating the Arabic name Khalij el-Arab, خليج العرب), is a large bay to the west of Alexandria in Egypt. It is not to be confused with the "Arabian Gulf" (a historic name for the Red Sea) or the Arabian Sea.
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Upper: The World-Wide Atlas (1897).
Lower: Harmsworth's New Atlas of the World (circa 1922)
Lower: Harmsworth's New Atlas of the World (circa 1922)
It contains the southernmost point of the Levantine Sea, which lies about 92 km west-southwest of the center of Alexandria.
Geologically, the Gulf is the result of the Arab Gulf Synclinal Basin, one of a succession of synclines along the northern coast of Africa.[1]
Just west of the apex of the Gulf is a community, developed as an oil port but now a resort, which had little significance before the Second World War: El Alamein, site of the famous 1942 battles.
References
- Integral Consult, Cairo General Structural Setting Of Northern Egypt from environmental report to World Bank
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