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Geography
Israel is on the eastern Mediterranean, bordered by Lebanon and the
Syrian Arab Republic to the north, the Palestine National Authority
(West Bank) and Jordan to the east, and Egypt to the south. Gaza, a
small coastal strip between Israel and Egypt, is administered by the
Palestine National Authority. Although only the size of Wales or
Massachusetts, Israel contains a great variety of terrain and four
climate zones. The north of the country is the fertile hill region of
Galilee, rising to Mount Hermon and Golan in the northeast. The
fertile Plain of Sharon runs along the coast, while inland, parallel
to the coast, is a range of hills and uplands with relatively barren
stony areas to the east. The country stretches southwards through the
Negev Desert to Eilat, a resort town on the Red Sea. The Great Rift
Valley begins beyond the sources of the River Jordan in the north and
extends south through the Dead Sea (the lowest point in the world),
into the Red Sea, continuing on into Eastern Africa. |