it all start when a dog and a cat start to be come best friend .the dog was like are are dogs and cats .then the cat siad lets go and eat food .and then they went there. abnd went home to kiss /end
Mesopotamia is a part of Iraq, and Iraq still does have the Tigris and Euphrates which remain the most important rivers in the Middle East after the Nile. The difference between Mesopotamia and Iraq in terms of topography mainly concerns the area of Iraq outside of Mesopotamia (such as the Zagros Mountains in the East or the Anbar Deserts in the West). Note: it is not that these areas did not exist during the time of Ancient Mesopotamia, just that they were not part of that region (in the same way that the Rocky Mountains were not part of the Thirteen Colonies, even though they are part of the United States and existed concurrently with the Thirteen Colonies). The other difference is that the silt carried by the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers has pushed the southern point of Mespoptamia further south each year. Half of Kuwait and the Iraqi Shatt Al-Arab region have been formed since the end of Ancient Mesopotamia.
western Asia, northwestern end of the Zagros mountain range, the eastern part of the Syrian Desert and the northern part of the Arabian Desert.[4] It shares borders with Kuwait and Saudi Arabia to the south, Jordan to the west, Syria to the northwest, Turkey to the north, and Iran to the east.
There was the Akkadian Empire (The first Empire of the world). It appeared in 2334 B.C. The Akkadian Empire dominated Mesopotamia from the end of the XXIV century to the beginning of the XXIII century. There was the Assyrian Empire. Assyria appeared in the second millennium B.C. In the VIII and VII century, Assyria controlled territories that are now known as Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Turkey and Iran.
Truman at the start and Eisenhower at the end
The Tigris and Euphrates rivers flow from the mountains of present day Turkey into the Persian Gulf.
The Tigris and Euphrates rivers flow from the mountains of present day Turkey into the Persian Gulf.
The Tigris and Euphrates rivers provided fertile land for agriculture, leading to a surplus of food which allowed for the growth of permanent settlements and eventually cities. The rivers also facilitated trade and transportation, enabling the exchange of goods and ideas that contributed to the development of civilization in Mesopotamia. Moreover, the rivers provided a consistent source of water for irrigation, essential for sustaining agriculture in an otherwise arid region.
the Tigris river starts at the Armenian plateau but I'm not even sure where it ends yet I'm still doing research on it...
They both start at Turkey, then Tigris goes straight into Iraq while Euphrates takes a route inside Syria before going in Iraq. They both flows exactly in the middle of Iraq giving it the name Mesopotamia (The land between the two rivers). Eventually they end up in their final destination south of Iraq in what is called Shatt al-Arab which later merges with the Persian Gulf.
Shatt al-Arab / the Persian Gulf
east of the medeterainian sea , mostly in Iraq
The end of the river. Known as the mouth of the river.
It is formed by convergence of the Xi Jiang, the Bei Jiang and the Dong Jiang Rivers. Finishing in the Pearl River Basin - the estuary, Bocca Tigris.
The confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers forms the Shatt-al-Arab (Arabic, River of the Arabs) or the Arvand Rud (Persian, Swift River), a river of some 120 miles (200 km). The southern end divides Iran and Iraq, and flows into the Persian Gulf.
All rivers start in the high country and end in the Ocean.
The Euphrates river flows and ends in the Persian Gulf.