*** Welcome to piglix ***

Tigris–Euphrates river system

Tigris–Euphrates river system
Tigr-euph.png
Ecology
Realm Palearctic
Biome Flooded grasslands and savannas
Geography
Area 35,600 km2 (13,700 sq mi)
Country Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Iran
Oceans or seas None
Rivers Tigris, Euphrates, Greater Zab, Lesser Zab.
Climate type Subtropical, hot and arid
Conservation
Conservation status Critical/endangered

The Tigris and Euphrates, with their tributaries, form a major river system in Western Asia. From sources in the Taurus mountains of eastern Turkey they flow by/through Syria through Iraq into the Persian Gulf. The system is part of the Palearctic Tigris–Euphrates ecoregion, which includes Iraq and parts of Turkey, Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Jordan.

From their sources and upper courses in the mountains of eastern Anatolia, the rivers descend through valleys and gorges to the uplands of Syria and northern Iraq and then to the alluvial plain of central Iraq. The rivers flow in a south-easterly direction through the central plain and combine at Al-Qurnah to form the Shatt al-Arab and discharge into the Persian Gulf.

The region has historical importance as part of the Fertile Crescent region, in which civilization is believed to have first emerged.

The ecoregion is characterized by two large rivers, the Tigris and Euphrates. The rivers have several small tributaries which feed into the system from shallow freshwater lakes, swamps, and marshes, all surrounded by desert. The hydrology of these vast marshes is extremely important to the ecology of the entire upper Persian Gulf. Historically, the area is known as Mesopotamia. As part of the larger Fertile Crescent, it saw the earliest emergence of literate urban civilization in the Uruk period, for which reason it is often described as a "Cradle of Civilization".


...
Wikipedia

...