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Introduction:
With
an area of 1,760,000 square kilometers and a Mediterranean coastline
of nearly 1,800 kilometers, Libya is fourth in size among the
countries of Africa and seventeenth among the countries of the
world. It lies between Egypt and Tunisia. Although the oil
discoveries of the 1960s have brought it immense petroleum wealth,
at the time of its independence it was an extremely poor desert
state whose only important physical asset appeared to be its
strategic location at the midpoint of Africa's northern rim. It lay
within easy reach of the major European nations and linked the Arab
countries of North Africa with those of the Middle East, facts that
throughout history had made its urban centers bustling crossroads
rather than isolated backwaters without external social influences.
Consequently, an immense social gap developed between the cities,
cosmopolitan and peopled largely by foreigners, and the desert
hinterland, where tribal chieftains ruled in isolation and where
social change was minimal.
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Geography summary: |
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The
Mediterranean coast and the Sahara Desert
are the country's most prominent natural features. There are
several highlands but no true mountain
ranges
except in the largely empty southern desert near the Chadian
border,
where the Tibesti Massif rises to over 2,200 meters. A
relatively narrow coastal strip and highland steppes immediately
south of it are the most productive agricultural regions. Still
farther south a pastoral zone of
sparse
grassland gives way to the vast Sahara Desert, a barren
wasteland of rocky plateaus and sand. It supports minimal human
habitation, and agriculture is possible only in a few scattered
oases.
Between the
productive lowland agricultural zones lies the Gulf of Sidra,
where along the coast a stretch of 500 kilometers of wasteland
desert extends northward to the sea. This barren zone, known as
the Sirtica, has great historical significance. To its west, the
area known as Tripolitania has characteristics and a history
similar to those of nearby Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco. It is
considered with these states to constitute a supranational
region called the Maghrib. To the east, the area known
historically as Cyrenaica has been closely associated with the
Arab states of the Middle East. In this sense, the Sirtica marks
the dividing point between the Maghrib and the Mashriq.
Along the
shore of Tripolitania for more than 300 kilometers, coastal
oases alternate with sandy areas and lagoons. Inland from these
lies the Jifarah Plain, a triangular area of some 15,000 square
kilometers. About 120 kilometers inland the plain terminates in
an escarpment that rises to form the Jabal (mountain) Nafusah, a
plateau with elevations of up to 1,000 meters.
In Cyrenaica
there are fewer coastal oases, and the Marj Plain --the lowland
area corresponding to the Jifarah Plain of Tripolitania --
covers a much smaller area. The lowlands form a crescent about
210 kilometers long between Benghazi and Darnah and extend
inland a maximum of 50 kilometers. Elsewhere along the
Cyrenaican coast, the precipice of an arid plateau reaches to
the sea. Behind the Marj Plain, the terrain rises abruptly to
form Jabal al Akhdar (Green Mountain), so called because of its
leafy cover of pine, juniper, cypress, and wild olive. It is a
limestone plateau with maximum altitudes of about 900 meters.
From Jabal al Akhdar, Cyrenaica extends southward across a
barren grazing belt that gives way to the Sahara Desert, which
extends still farther southwest across the Chad frontier. Unlike
Cyrenaica, Tripolitania does not extend southward into the
desert. The southwestern desert, known as Fezzan, was
administered separately during both the Italian regime and the
federal period of the Libyan monarchy. In 1969 the revolutionary
government officially changed the regional designation of
Tripolitania to Western Libya, of Cyrenaica to Eastern Libya,
and of Fezzan to Southern Libya; however, the old names were
intimately associated with the history of the area, and during
the 1970s they continued to be used frequently. Cyrenaica
comprises 51 %, Fezzan 33 %, and Tripolitania 16 % of the
country's area.
Before Libya
achieved independence, its name was seldom used other than as a
somewhat imprecise geographical expression. The people preferred
to be referred to as natives of one of the three constituent
regions. The separateness of the regions is much more than
simply geographical and political, for they have evolved largely
as different socioeconomic entities--each with a culture, social
structure, and values different from the others. Cyrenaica
became Arabized at a somewhat earlier date than Tripolitania,
and beduin tribes dominated it. The residual strain of the
indigenous Berber inhabitants, however, still remains in
Tripolitania. Fezzan has remained a kind of North African
outback, its oases peopled largely by minority ethnic groups.
The border
between Tripolitania and Tunisia is subject to countless
crossings by legal and illegal migrants. No natural frontier
marks the border, and the ethnic composition, language, value
systems, and traditions of the two peoples are nearly identical.
The Cyrenaica region is contiguous with Egypt, and here, too,
the border is not naturally defined; illegal as well as legal
crossings are frequent. In contrast, Fezzan's borders with
Algeria, Niger, and Chad are seldom crossed because of the
almost total emptiness of the desert countryside.
Other
factors, too, such as the traditional forms of land tenure, have
varied in the different regions. In the 1980s their degrees of
separateness was still sufficiently pronounced to represent a
significant obstacle to efforts toward achieving a fully unified
Libya.
Geographic
coordinates: 25°00′N, 17°00′E
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Area
and boundaries |
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Area:
total:
1,759,540 kmē
land:
1,759,540 kmē
water: 0
kmē
Area -
comparative: slightly larger than Alaska
Land
boundaries:
total:
4,383 km
border
countries: Algeria 982 km, Chad 1,055 km, Egypt 1,150 km,
Niger 354 km, Sudan 383 km, Tunisia 459 km
Coastline: 1,770 km
Maritime
claims:
territorial sea: 12 nautical miles
note:
Gulf of Sidra closing line - 32 degrees 30 minutes north.
From here you drive 8 miles north and end up in the sea.
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Climate and Hydrology |
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Within
Libya as many as five different climatic zones have been
recognized, but the dominant climatic influences are
Mediterranean and Saharan. In most of the coastal lowland,
the climate is Mediterranean, with warm summers and mild
winters. Rainfall is scanty. The weather is cooler in the
highlands, and frosts occur at maximum elevations. In the
desert interior the climate has very hot summers and extreme
diurnal temperature ranges. The highest official temperature
ever recorded was on September 13th, 1922 at Al 'Aziziyah,
Libya.
Less
than 2 % of the national territory receives enough rainfall
for settled agriculture, the heaviest precipitation
occurring in the Jabal al Akhdar zone of Cyrenaica, where
annual rainfall of 400 to 600 millimeters is recorded. All
other areas of the country receive less than 400
millimeters, and in the Sahara 50 millimeters or less
occurs. Rainfall is often erratic, and a pronounced drought
may extend over two seasons. For example, epic floods in
1945 left Tripoli under water for several days, but two
years later an unprecedentedly severe drought caused the
loss of thousands of head of cattle.
Deficiency in rainfall is reflected in an absence of
permanent rivers or streams, and the approximately twenty
perennial lakes are brackish or salty. In 1987 these
circumstances severely limited the country's agricultural
potential as a basis for the sound and varied economy
Qadhafi sought to establish. The allocation of limited water
is considered of sufficient importance to warrant the
existence of the Secretariat of Dams and Water Resources,
and damaging a source of water can be penalized by a heavy
fine or imprisonment.
The
government has constructed a network of dams in wadis, dry
watercourses that become torrents after heavy rains. These
dams are used both as water reservoirs and for flood and
erosion control. The wadis are heavily settled because soil
in their bottoms is often suitable for agriculture, and the
high water table in their vicinity makes them logical
locations for digging wells. In many wadis, however, the
water table is declining at an alarming rate, particularly
in areas of intensive agriculture and near urban centers.
The government has expressed concern over this problem and
because of it has diverted water development projects,
particularly around Tripoli, to localities where the demand
on underground water resources is less intense. It has also
undertaken extensive reforestation projects.
There
are also numerous springs, those best suited for future
development occurring along the scarp faces of the Jabal
Nafusah and the Jabal al Akhdar. The most talked-about of
the water resources, however, are the great subterranean
aquifers of the desert. The best known of these lies beneath
Al Kufrah Oasis in southeastern Cyrenaica, but an aquifer
with even greater reputed capacity is located near the oasis
community of Sabha in the southwestern desert. In the late
1970s, wells were drilled at Al Kufrah and at Sabha as part
of a major agricultural development effort. An even larger
undertaking is the so-called Great Man-Made River, initiated
in 1984. It is intended to tap the tremendous aquifers of
the Al Kufrah, Sarir, and Sabha oases and to carry the
resulting water to the Mediterranean coast for use in
irrigation and industrial projects.
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Terrain and land use |
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Terrain:
mostly barren, flat to undulating plains, plateaus,
depressions
Elevation extremes:
lowest
point: Sabkhat Ghuzayyil -47 m
highest
point: Bikku Bitti 2,267 m
Natural
resources: petroleum, natural gas, gypsum
Land
use:
arable
land: 1%
permanent crops: 0%
permanent pastures: 8%
forests
and woodland: 0%
other:
91% (1993 est.)
Irrigated land: 4,700 kmē (1993 est.)
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Environmental concerns |
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Natural
hazards: hot, dry, dust-laden ghibli is a southern wind
lasting one to four days in spring and fall; dust storms,
sandstorms
Environment - current issues: desertification; very limited
natural fresh water resources; the Great Manmade River
Project, the largest water development scheme in the world,
is being built to bring water from large aquifers under the
Sahara to coastal cities
Environment - international agreements:
party
to: Climate Change, Desertification, Marine Dumping, Nuclear
Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection
signed,
but not ratified: Biodiversity, Law of the Sea
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References |
This
article contains material from the Library of Congress
Country Studies, which are United States government
publications in the public domain. From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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