about 2 to 4 hours, depends on which road you go and in what speed you go
In the city of Eilat, which is in the southern-most part of Israel.
Average winter daytime highs range from 11 degrees C (Jerusalem and the North) to 20 degrees C (Eilat, Dead Sea). Of course, occasionally there are higher or lower daytime winter maximums, with 24 degrees C not unheard of (Jerusalem in January). Temperatures in the rest of Israel fall between those of Jerusalem and Eilat.
There are loads of lovely beaches in Israel! Tel Aviv, Hertziliya, Ashdod, Ashkelon, Netanya, to name a few, on the mediterranean shore as well as Eilat on the Red Sea. There are also beaches on the Sea of Kinneret and the Dead Sea.
Eilat is located at the northern tip of the Red Sea
The Dead Sea is not located in a state. The Dead Sea is located between Jordan and Isreal, approximately 31 degrees north and 36 degrees west. The Dead Sea is actually a lake, in the Jordan Rift Valley.
Parts of Israel's borders are defined by the Mediterranean Sea, the Sea of Galilee,the Dead Sea, and the Gulf of Aqaba (which is the far north end of the Red Sea).
There is no "Lake of Death" however the Dead sea is on the border between Israel and Jordan. Just north of Masra.
JordanThe Dead sea lays on the border of Israel and Jordan
The Dead Sea forms part of the Israel - Jordan border.
In the north, the border between Jordan and Israel or Jordan and the Israeli-Occupied West Bank is the Jordan River. However, the river ends at the Dead Sea. A far longer border in the desert between Jordan and Israel follows the Wadi Arabah from the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Aqabah.
Jerusalem is in the dead center of Israel.
Despite its small area, Israel possesses a range of geographic features:The Negev desert in the southFertile central valleysMountains, ranging from rolling hills to snow-capped peaksThe Kinneret Lake (Sea of Galilee)The Coastal PlainThe Jordan River Rift ValleyThe salty Dead SeaThe Gulf of Eilat, with access to the Red Sea.More about Israel