Turkey
is a big and respectively green country as opposed to
what many people may think. It is between 35 and 42
long latitude, and 25 and 44 east longitude. Philadelphia,
Tokyo and Beijing are some of the cities around the
same latitude as Turkey.
Turkey
is divided into 7 geographic regions :
- Marmara (Marmara)
- Aegean (Ege)
- Mediterranean (Akdeniz)
- Southeastern (Guney
Dogu)
- Eastern (Dogu)
- Blacksea (Karadeniz)
- Central Anatolia
(Ic Anadolu)
The
total area Turkey covers is a bit less than 800.000
sq km ( 774,815 sq km ), which makes it one of the biggest
countries in Europe and the Middle East. The neighbours
are Greece and Bulgaria on the norhtwest,Armenia and
Georgia on the northeast, Iran and Irak on the southeast
and Syria on the south. Of all, the Turkish-Syrian border
is the longest.Turkey has no direct border with Russia,
but the Black Sea on the north.The other seas that cover
Turkey are the Aegean on the west and the Mediterrenean
on the south. In other words, Turkey is a huge big peninsula
wrapped up by seas on three sides that looks like the
head of a horse, as a Turkish poet has put it.
The
highest mountain
of Turkey is the Mount Ararat in the east, on which
Noah's Ark is believed to be ,and it is not far from
the lake Van , the biggest lake of the country. Other
known mountains are Mount Erciyes, Mount Hasan, Bursa
Uludag ,and the mountainchain "The Tauruses".
The
Asian part of Anatolia
comprises a large part of the present day Turkey, although
the area mentioned above was only a small portion of
the pre World War I. Once the Ottoman Empire had its
widest borders from the Adriatic Sea to the Persian
Gulf i.e. Indian Ocean. The eastern region of Turkey,
Thrace, lies in Europe and has 23,000 sq km surface
area. The elevation rises from west towards east and
stabilizes at around 800m above sea level in the Central
Anatolian Plateau.
Further
east, the elevation
increases and reaches 2,000-2,200m on the average in
eastern Anatolia. In the South, the taurus Mountains
lay parallel to the Mediterranean with average elevations
around 2,500m, sometimes reaching 4,OOOm above sea level.
In Western Anatolia, the mountain ranges lie from east
to west, perpendicular to the Aegean Sea creating fertile
valleys and fields washed by the rivers of famous ancient
times legends such as the Great Meander, Castros, Pactole
and Selinus. These mountain ranges, perpendicular to
the sea, created many peninsulas and bays and thus,
a coastal line full of natural wonders.
The
high plateaus east of the sunken salt lake bowl contain
many volcanoes with elevations of 3,000-4,OOOm and higher.
The highest of these mountains is Mt. Ararat (5,165m).
The largest lake in the country, Lake Van (3,600 sq
km ) is also in this region. The high plains of Eastern
Anatolia are generally large areas for animal husbandry,
but there are lower, warmer and more fertile plains
such as the Igdir plain. The rivers that originate in
this region, like Euphrates and Tigris, flow south as
the elevation decreases rapidly. They water the South
Eastern Anatolia region and, forming Upper Mesopotamia,
they leave Turkey.
In
the Black Sea, it
is noticeable that the mountains generally lie close
to the sea. As a result of this, only several (Carsamba,
Bafra, etc.) fertile plains were formed, and other than
these plains, the mountains are almost perpendicular
to the coastline.
The
region around the Marmara Sea,
both in Anatolia and in Thrace has very few changes
in elevation , and is comprised of large, flat, fertile
lands
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