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Persian Gulf

The Persian Gulf (Persian: خلیج فارس, romanizedxalij-e fârs, lit.'Gulf of Fars', pronounced [xæliːdʒe fɒːɾs]), sometimes called the Arabian Gulf (Arabic: اَلْخَلِيْجُ ٱلْعَرَبِيُّ, romanizedAl-Khalīj al-ˁArabī), is a mediterranean sea in Western Asia. The body of water is an extension of the Indian Ocean located between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula.[1] It is connected to the Gulf of Oman in the east by the Strait of Hormuz. The Shatt al-Arab river delta forms the northwest shoreline.

Persian Gulf
Persian Gulf from space
LocationWestern Asia
Coordinates26°N 52°E / 26°N 52°E / 26; 52Coordinates: 26°N 52°E / 26°N 52°E / 26; 52
TypeGulf
Primary inflowsGulf of Oman
Basin countriesIran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates and Oman (exclave of Musandam)
Max. length989 km (615 mi)
Surface area251,000 km2 (97,000 sq mi)
Average depth50 m (160 ft)
Max. depth90 m (300 ft)
Persian Gulf at Night from ISS, 2020.

The Persian Gulf has many fishing grounds, extensive reefs (mostly rocky, but also coral), and abundant pearl oysters, however its ecology has been damaged by industrialization and oil spills.

The Persian Gulf is in the Persian Gulf Basin, which is of Cenozoic origin and related to the subduction of the Arabian Plate under the Zagros Mountains.[2] The current flooding of the basin started 15,000 years ago due to rising sea levels of the Holocene glacial retreat.[3]

Geography

The International Hydrographic Organization defines the Persian Gulf's southern limit as "The Northwestern limit of Gulf of Oman". This limit is defined as "A line joining Ràs Limah (25°57'N) on the coast of Arabia and Ràs al Kuh (25°48'N) on the coast of Iran (Persia)".[4]

This inland sea of some 251,000 square kilometres (96,912 sq mi) is connected to the Gulf of Oman in the east by the Strait of Hormuz; and its western end is marked by the major river delta of the Shatt al-Arab, which carries the waters of the Euphrates and the Tigris. In Iran, this is called "Arvand Rood", where "Rood" means "river". Its length is 989 kilometres (615 miles), with Iran covering most of the northern coast and Saudi Arabia most of the southern coast. The Persian Gulf is about 56 km (35 mi) wide at its narrowest, in the Strait of Hormuz. Overall, the waters are very shallow, with a maximum depth of 90 metres (295 feet) and an average depth of 50 metres (164 feet).

Countries with a coastline on the Persian Gulf are (clockwise, from north): Iran; Oman's Musandam exclave; the United Arab Emirates; Saudi Arabia; Qatar, on a peninsula off the Saudi coast; Bahrain, an island nation; Kuwait; and Iraq in the northwest. Various small islands also lie within the Persian Gulf, some of which are the subject of territorial disputes between the states in the region.

Exclusive economic zone

Exclusive economic zones in the Persian Gulf:[5][6]

Number Country Area (km2)
1   Iran 97,860
2   United Arab Emirates 52,455
3   Saudi Arabia 33,792
4   Qatar 31,819
5   Kuwait 11,786
6   Bahrain 8,826
7   Oman 3,678
8   Iraq 540
Total Persian Gulf 240,756

Coastlines

Countries by coastline length:

Number Country Length
1   Iran 1,536
2   Saudi Arabia 1,300
3   United Arab Emirates 900
4   Qatar 563
5   Kuwait 499
6   Bahrain 161
7   Oman 100
8   Iraq 58
Total Persian Gulf 5,117

Islands

The Persian Gulf is home to many islands such as Bahrain, an Arab state. Geographically, the biggest island in the Persian Gulf is Qeshm island, belonging to Iran and located in the Strait of Hormuz. Other significant islands in the Persian Gulf include Greater Tunb, Lesser Tunb and Kish administered by Iran, Bubiyan administered by Kuwait, Tarout administered by Saudi Arabia, and Dalma administered by UAE. In recent years, there has also been the addition of artificial islands for tourist attractions, such as The World Islands in Dubai and The Pearl-Qatar in Doha. Persian Gulf islands are often also historically significant, having been used in the past by colonial powers such as the Portuguese and the British in their trade or as acquisitions for their empires.[7]

Oceanography

The Persian Gulf is connected to the Indian Ocean through the Strait of Hormuz. Writing the water balance budget for the Persian Gulf, the inputs are river discharges from Iran and Iraq (estimated to be 2,000 cubic metres (71,000 cu ft) per second), as well as precipitation over the sea which is around 180 mm (7.1 in)/year in Qeshm Island. The evaporation of the sea is high, so that after considering river discharge and rain contributions, there is still a deficit of 416 cubic kilometres (100 cu mi) per year.[8] This difference is supplied by currents at the Strait of Hormuz. The water from the Persian Gulf has a higher salinity, and therefore exits from the bottom of the Strait, while ocean water with less salinity flows in through the top. Another study revealed the following numbers for water exchanges for the Persian Gulf: evaporation = –1.84 m (6.0 ft)/year, precipitation = 0.08 m (0.26 ft)/year, inflow from the Strait = 33.66 m (110.4 ft)/year, outflow from the Strait = -32.11 m (105.3 ft)/year, and the balance is 0 m (0 ft)/year.[9] Data from different 3D computational fluid mechanics models, typically with spatial resolution of 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) and depth each element equal to 1–10 metres (3.3–32.8 ft) are predominantly used in computer models.

Name

 
Map of the Persian Gulf. The Gulf of Oman leads to the Arabian Sea. Detail from larger map of the Middle East.

Before being given its present name, the Persian Gulf was called many different names. In Babylonian texts, it was known as "the sea above Akkad."[citation needed] The Assyrians called it the "Bitter Sea".[10] In 550 BC, the Achaemenid Empire established the first ancient empire in Persis (Pars, or modern Fars), in the southwestern region of the Iranian plateau.[11] Consequently, in the Greek sources, the body of water that bordered this province came to be known as the "Persian Gulf".[12] In the book of Nearchus known as Indikê (300 BC), the word "Persikon kolpos" is mentioned for multiple times meaning "Persian gulf".[13]

During the years 550 to 330 BC, coinciding with the sovereignty of the Achaemenid Persian Empire over the Middle East area, especially the whole part of the Persian Gulf and some parts of the Arabian Peninsula, the name of "Persian (Pars) Sea" is widely found in the compiled written texts.[1]

At the same period, there is the inscription and engraving of Darius the Great, which belongs to the fifth century BC: [1] King Darius says:[14]

I ordered to dig this (Canal of the Pharaohs) canal from the river that is called Nile (Pirâva) and flows in Egypt (Mudrâyâ), to the sea that begins in Persia (Pârsa). Therefore, when this canal had been dug as I had ordered, ships went from Egypt through this canal to Persia, as I had intended.

Considering the historical background of the name Persian Gulf, Arnold Wilson mentions in a book published in 1928 that "no water channel has been so significant as the Persian Gulf to the geologists, archaeologists, geographers, merchants, politicians, excursionists, and scholars whether in past or in present. This water channel which separates the Iran Plateau from the Arabia Plate, has enjoyed an Iranian Identity since at least 2200 years ago."[1][15]

In Sassanian times, the Persian Gulf was called Pūdīg, which comes from Avestan: Pūitika, lit.'cleansing', a name mentioned in Bundahishn.[16]

 
A historical map of the Persian Gulf in a Dubai museum with the word Persian removed[17][18]

Among historians, travellers and geographers of the Islamic era, many of them writing in Arabic from the 9th to the 17th century, Ibn Khordadbeh,[19] Ibn al-Faqih,[20] Ibn Rustah,[21] Sohrab,[22] Ramhormozi,[23] Abu Ishaq Ibrahim ibn Muhammad al-Farisi al Istakhri,[24] Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn al-Husayn ibn Ali al-Mas'udi,[25] Al-Mutahhar ibn Tahir al-Maqdisi (d. 966),[26] Ibn Hawqal,[27] Al-Muqaddasi,[28] Ibn Khaldun,[29] Mohammad ibn Najub Bekiran,[30] Abu Rayhan Biruni,[31] Muhammad al-Idrisi,[32] Yaqut al-Hamawi,[33] Zakariya al-Qazwini,[34] Abu'l-Fida,[35] Al-Dimashqi,[36] Hamdollah Mostowfi,[37] Ibn al-Wardi,[38] Al-Nuwayri,[39] Ibn Batutta,[40] Katip Çelebi and other sources[41] have used the terms "Bahr-i-Fars", "Daryaye-i-Fars", "Khalij al-'Ajami" and "Khalij-i Fars" (all of which translate into "Persian Gulf" or "Persian Sea").

Naming dispute

The body of water is historically and internationally known as the Persian Gulf.[42][43][44] Arab governments refer to it as the Arabian Gulf or The Gulf,[45] and other countries and organizations have begun using Arabian Gulf.[46] The name Gulf of Iran (Persian Gulf) is used by the International Hydrographic Organization.[47]

The dispute in naming has become especially prevalent since the 1960s.[48] Rivalry between Iran and some Arab states, along with the emergence of pan-Arabism and Arab nationalism, has seen the name "Arabian Gulf" become predominant in most Arab countries.[49][50] Names beyond these two have also been applied to or proposed for this body of water.

History

Ancient history

 
Map depicting extent of early civilizations around the Persian Gulf, including Lackhmids and Sassanids.
 
Map depicting the Achaemenid Persian empire in relation to the Persian Gulf.
 
A painting depicting the British Expeditionary Force off the coast of Ras Al Khaimah in 1809.

Earliest evidence of human presence on Persian Gulf islands dates back to Middle Paleolithic and consist of stone tools discovered at Qeshm Island.[51] The world's oldest known civilization (Sumer) developed along the Persian Gulf and southern Mesopotamia. The shallow basin that now underlies the Persian Gulf was an extensive region of river valley and wetlands during the transition between the end of the Last Glacial Maximum and the start of the Holocene, which, according to University of Birmingham archaeologist Jeffrey Rose, served as an environmental refuge for early humans during periodic hyperarid climate oscillations, laying the foundations for the legend of Dilmun.[52]

The oldest evidence in the world for seagoing vessels has been found at H3 in Kuwait, dating to the mid-sixth millennium BC, when the Gulf was part of an extensive trade network that involved the Ubaid settlements in Mesopotamia and communities along the entire Gulf coast.[53]

For most of the early history of the settlements in the Persian Gulf, the southern shores were ruled by a series of nomadic tribes. During the end of the fourth millennium BC, the southern part of the Persian Gulf was dominated by the Dilmun civilization. For a long time the most important settlement on the southern coast of the Persian Gulf was Gerrha. In the second century the Lakhum tribe, who lived in what is now Yemen, migrated north and founded the Lakhmid Kingdom along the southern coast. Occasional ancient battles took place along the Persian Gulf coastlines, between the Sassanid Persian empire and the Lakhmid Kingdom, the most prominent of which was the invasion led by Shapur II against the Lakhmids, leading to Lakhmids' defeat, and advancement into Arabia, along the southern shore lines.[54] During the seventh century the Sassanid Persian empire conquered the whole of the Persian Gulf, including southern and northern shores.

Between 625 BC and 226 AD, the northern side was dominated by a succession of Persian empires including the Median, Achaemenid, Seleucid and Parthian empires. Under the leadership of the Achaemenid king Darius the Great (Darius I), Persian ships found their way to the Persian Gulf.[55] Persian naval forces laid the foundation for a strong Persian maritime presence in Persian Gulf, that started with Darius I and existed until the arrival of the British East India Company, and the Royal Navy by mid-19th century AD. Persians were not only stationed on islands of the Persian Gulf, but also had ships often of 100 to 200 capacity patrolling empire's various rivers including Shatt-al-Arab, Tigris, and the Nile in the west, as well as Sind waterway, in India.[55]

The Achaemenid high naval command had established major naval bases located along Shatt al-Arab river, Bahrain, Oman, and Yemen. The Persian fleet would soon not only be used for peacekeeping purposes along the Shatt al-Arab but would also open the door to trade with India via Persian Gulf.[55][56]

Following the fall of Achaemenid Empire, and after the fall of the Parthian Empire, the Sassanid Empire ruled the northern half and at times the southern half of the Persian Gulf. The Persian Gulf, along with the Silk Road, were important trade routes in the Sassanid Empire. Many of the trading ports of the Persian empires were located in or around Persian Gulf. Siraf, an ancient Sassanid port that was located on the northern shore of the Persian gulf, located in what is now the Iranian province of Bushehr, is an example of such commercial port. Siraf, was also significant in that it had a flourishing commercial trade with China by the fourth century, having first established connection with the far east in 185 AD.[57]

Colonial era

Portuguese influence in the Persian Gulf lasted for 250 years;[58] however, since the beginning of the 16th century, Portuguese dominance[59] contended with the local powers and the Ottoman Empire. Following the arrival of the English and the Dutch, the Safavid Empire allied with the newcomers to contest Portuguese dominance of the seas in the 17th century.[60]

 
The Portuguese Castle on Hormuz Island (Gaspar Correia. "Lendas da Índia", c. 1556)

Portuguese expansion into the Indian Ocean in the early 16th century following Vasco da Gama's voyages of exploration saw them battle the Ottomans up the coast of the Persian Gulf. In 1521, a Portuguese force led by commander Antonio Correia invaded Bahrain to take control of the wealth created by its pearl industry. On April 29, 1602, Shāh Abbās, the Persian emperor of the Safavid Persian Empire, expelled the Portuguese from Bahrain,[61] and that date is commemorated as National Persian Gulf day in Iran.[62] With the support of the British fleet, in 1622 'Abbās took the island of Hormuz from the Portuguese; much of the trade was diverted to the town of Bandar 'Abbās, which he had taken from the Portuguese in 1615 and had named after himself. The Persian Gulf was therefore opened to a flourishing commerce with the Portuguese, Dutch, French, Spanish and the British merchants, who were granted particular privileges. The Ottoman Empire reasserted itself into Eastern Arabia in 1871.[63] Under military and political pressure from the governor of the Ottoman Vilayet of Baghdad, Midhat Pasha, the ruling Al Thani tribe submitted peacefully to Ottoman rule.[64] The Ottomans were forced to withdraw from the area with the start of World War I and the need for troops in various other frontiers.[65] In World War II, the Western Allies used Iran as a conduit to transport military and industrial supply to the USSR, through a pathway known historically as the "Persian Corridor". Britain utilized the Persian Gulf as the entry point for the supply chain in order to make use of the Trans-Iranian Railway.[66] The Persian Gulf therefore became a critical maritime path through which the Allies transported equipment to Soviet Union against the Nazi invasion.[67] The piracy in the Persian Gulf was prevalent until the 19th century. Many of the most notable historical instances of piracy were perpetrated by the Al Qasimi tribe. This led to the British mounting the Persian Gulf campaign of 1819.[68] The campaign led to the signing of the General Maritime Treaty of 1820 between the British and the Sheikhs of what was then known as the 'Pirate Coast'. From 1763 until 1971, the British Empire maintained varying degrees of political control over some of the Persian Gulf states, including the United Arab Emirates (originally called the Trucial States)[69] and at various times Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, and Qatar through the British Residency of the Persian Gulf.

Modern history

 
Operation Earnest Will: Tanker convoy No. 12 under US Navy escort in October 1987

The Persian Gulf was a battlefield of the 1980–1988 Iran–Iraq War, in which each side attacked the other's oil tankers. It is the namesake of the 1991 Gulf War, the largely air- and land-based conflict that followed Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. The United States' role in the Persian Gulf grew in the second half of the Twentieth Century.[70] On July 3, 1988, Iran Air Flight 655 was shot down by the U.S. military (which had mistaken the Airbus A300 operating the flight for an Iranian F-14 Tomcat) while it was flying over the Persian Gulf, killing all 290 people on board.[71] The United Kingdom maintains a profile in the region; in 2006 alone, over 1 million British nationals visited Dubai.[72][73] In 2018, the UK opened a permanent military base, HMS Jufair, in the Persian Gulf, the first since it withdrew from East of Suez in 1971 and is developing a support facility in Oman.[74][75][76]

Cities and population

Eight nations have coasts along the Persian Gulf: Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. The Persian gulf's strategic location has made it an ideal place for human development over time. Today, many major cities of the Middle East are located in this region.

Wildlife

The wildlife of the Persian Gulf is diverse, and entirely unique because of the Persian Gulf's geographic distribution and its isolation from the international waters only breached by the narrow Strait of Hormuz. The Persian Gulf has hosted some of the most magnificent marine fauna and flora, some of which are near extirpation or at serious environmental risk. From corals, to dugongs, Persian Gulf is a diverse cradle for many species who depend on each other for survival. However, the Persian Gulf is not as biologically diverse as the Red Sea.[77]

Overall, the wild life of the Persian Gulf is endangered from both global factors, and regional, local negligence. Most pollution is from ships; land generated pollution counts as the second most common source of pollution.[78]

Aquatic mammals

Along the mediterranean regions of the Arabian Sea, including the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, the Gulf of Kutch, the Gulf of Suez, the Gulf of Aqaba, the Gulf of Aden, and the Gulf of Oman, dolphins and finless porpoises are the most common marine mammals in the waters, while larger whales and orcas are rarer today.[79] Historically, whales had been abundant in the Persian Gulf before commercial hunts wiped them out.[80][81] Whales were reduced even further by illegal mass hunts by the Soviet Union and Japan in the 1960s and 1970s.[82] Along with Bryde's whales,[83][84][85][86] these once common residents can still can be seen in deeper marginal seas such as Gulf of Aden,[87] Israel coasts,[88] and in the Strait of Hormuz.[89] Other species such as the critically endangered Arabian humpback whale,[90] (also historically common in Gulf of Aden[91] and increasingly sighted in the Red Sea since 2006, including in the Gulf of Aqaba),[88] omura's whale,[92][93] minke whale, and orca also swim into the Persian Gulf, while many other large species such as blue whale,[94] sei,[95] and sperm whales were once migrants into the Gulf of Oman and off the coasts in deeper waters,[96] and still migrate into the Red Sea,[97] but mainly in deeper waters of outer seas. In 2017, waters of the Persian Gulf along Abu Dhabi were revealed to hold the world's largest population of Indo-Pacific humpbacked dolphins.[98][99][100]

One of the more unusual marine mammals living in the Persian Gulf is the dugong (Dugong dugon). Also called "sea cows", for their grazing habits and mild manner resembling livestock, dugongs have a life expectancy similar to that of humans and they can grow up to 3 metres (9.8 feet) in length. These gentle mammals feed on sea grass and are closer relatives of certain land mammals than are dolphins and whales.[101] Their simple grass diet is negatively affected by new developments along the Persian Gulf coastline, particularly the construction of artificial islands by Arab states and pollution from oil spills caused during the "Persian Gulf war" and various other natural and artificial causes. Uncontrolled hunting has also had a negative impact on the survival of dugongs.[101] After Australian waters, which are estimated to contain some 80,000 dugong inhabitants, the waters off Qatar, Bahrain, UAE, and Saudi Arabia make the Persian Gulf the second most important habitat for the species, hosting some 7,500 remaining dugongs. However, the current number of dugongs is dwindling and it is not clear how many are currently alive or what their reproductive trend is.[101][102] Unfortunately, ambitious and uncalculated construction schemes, political unrest, ever-present international conflict, the most lucrative world supply of oil, and the lack of cooperation between Arab states and Iran, have had a negative impact on the survival of many marine species, including dugongs.

Birds

The Persian Gulf is also home to many migratory and local birds. There is great variation in color, size, and type of the bird species that call the Persian Gulf home. Concerns regarding the endangerment of the kalbaensis subspecies of the collared kingfishers were raised by conservationists over real estate development by the United Arab Emirates and Oman.[103] Estimates from 2006 showed that only three viable nesting sites were available for this ancient bird, one located 80 miles (129 km) from Dubai, and two smaller sites in Oman.[103] Such real estate expansion could prove devastating to this subspecies. A UN plan to protect the mangroves as a biological reserve was ignored by the emirate of Sharjah, which allowed the dredging of a channel that bisects the wetland and construction of an adjacent concrete walkway.[103] Environmental watchdogs in Arabia are few, and those that do advocate the wildlife are often silenced or ignored by developers of real estate many of whom have governmental connections.[103]

Real estate development in the Persian Gulf by the United Arab Emirates and Oman also raised concerns that habitats of species such as the hawksbill turtle, greater flamingo, and booted warbler may be destroyed.[103][104] The dolphins that frequent the Persian Gulf in northern waters around Iran are also at risk. Recent statistics and observations show that dolphins are at danger of entrapment in purse seine fishing nets and exposure to chemical pollutants; perhaps the most alarming sign is the "mass suicides" committed by dolphins off Iran's Hormozgan province, which are not well understood, but are suspected to be linked with a deteriorating marine environment from water pollution from oil, sewage, and industrial run offs.[105][106]

Fish and reefs

The Persian Gulf is home to over 700 species of fish, most of which are native.[107] Of these 700 species, more than 80% are reef associated.[107] These reefs are primarily rocky, but there are also a few coral reefs. Compared to the Red Sea, the coral reefs in the Persian Gulf are relatively few and far between.[108][109][110] This is primarily connected to the influx of major rivers, especially the Shatt al-Arab (Euphrates and Tigris), which carry large amounts of sediment (most reef-building corals require strong light) and causes relatively large variations in temperature and salinity (corals in general are poorly suited to large variations).[108][109][110] Nevertheless, coral reefs have been found along sections of coast of all countries in the Persian Gulf.[110] Corals are vital ecosystems that support multitude of marine species, and whose health directly reflects the health of the Persian Gulf. Recent years have seen a drastic decline in the coral population in the Persian Gulf, partially owing to global warming but mostly to irresponsible dumping by Arab states like the UAE and Bahrain.[111] Construction garbage such as tires, cement, and chemical by products have found their way to the Persian Gulf in recent years. Aside from direct damage to the coral, the construction waste creates "traps" for marine life in which they are trapped and die.[111] The result has been a dwindling population of the coral, and as a result a decrease in number of species that rely on the corals for their survival.

Flora

A great example of this symbiosis are the mangroves in the Persian Gulf, which require tidal flow and a combination of fresh and salt water for growth, and act as nurseries for many crabs, small fish, and insects; these fish and insects are the source of food for many of the marine birds that feed on them.[103] Mangroves are a diverse group of shrubs and trees belonging to the genus Avicennia or Rhizophora that flourish in the salt water shallows of the Persian Gulf, and are the most important habitats for small crustaceans that dwell in them. They are as crucial an indicator of biological health on the surface of the water, as the corals are to biological health of the Persian Gulf in deeper waters. Mangroves' ability to survive the salt water through intricate molecular mechanisms, their unique reproductive cycle, and their ability to grow in the most oxygen-deprived waters have allowed them extensive growth in hostile areas of the Persian Gulf.[112][113] However, with the advent of artificial island development, most of their habitat is destroyed, or occupied by man-made structures. This has had a negative impact on the crustaceans that rely on the mangrove, and in turn on the species that feed on them.

Gallery

Oil and gas

 
Oil and gas pipelines and fields

The Persian Gulf and its coastal areas are the world's largest single source of petroleum,[114] and related industries dominate the region. Safaniya Oil Field, the world's largest offshore oilfield, is located in the Persian Gulf. Large gas finds have also been made, with Qatar and Iran sharing a giant field across the territorial median line (North Field in the Qatari sector; South Pars Field in the Iranian sector). Using this gas, Qatar has built up a substantial liquefied natural gas (LNG) and petrochemical industry.

In 2002, the Persian Gulf nations of Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE produced about 25% of the world's oil, held nearly two-thirds of the world's crude oil reserves, and about 35% of the world's natural gas reserves.[115][116] The oil-rich countries (excluding Iraq) that have a coastline on the Persian Gulf are referred to as the Persian Gulf States. Iraq's egress to the Persian gulf is narrow and easily blockaded consisting of the marshy river delta of the Shatt al-Arab, which carries the waters of the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers, where the east bank is held by Iran.

See also

References

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  28. ^ Ahsan al-Taqasim fi Ma’rifat al-Aqalim. Ed: De A.J. Goeje, (Leiden 1906), pg 17.
  29. ^ بحر فارس فی کتاب تاريخ ابن خلدون الجزء الأول ص ( 2 من 258 ) وكذلك يقولون في تبع الآخر وهو أسعد أبو كرب وكان على عهد يستأنف من ملوك الفرس الكيانية إنه ملك الموصل وأذربيجان ولقي الترك فهزمهم وأثخن ثم غزاهم ثانية وثالثة كذلك وإنه بعد ذلك أغزى ثلاثة من بنيه بلاد فارس وإلى بلاد الصغد ..... وذلك أن ملك التبابعة إنما كان بجزيرة العرب وقرارهم وكرسيهم صنعاء اليمن‏.‏ وجزيرة العرب يحيط بها البحر من ثلاث جهاتها‏:‏ فبحر الهند من الجنوب وبحر فــارس الهابط منه إلى البصرة من المشرق وبحر السويس الهابط منه إلى السويس من أعمال مصر من جهة المغرب كماتراه في مصور الجغرافيا‏.‏ فلا يجد السالكون من اليمن إلى المغرب طريقاً من غير السويس‏.‏ تاريخ ابن خلدون الجزء الأول ( 3 من 258 ) والبحر الثاني من هذا البحر الحبشي ويسمى الخليج الأخضر يخرج ما بين بلاد السند والأحقاف من اليمن ويمر إلى ناحية الشمال مغرباً قليلاً إلى أن ينتهي إلى الأبلة من سواحل البصرة في الجزء السادس من الإقليم الثاني على أربعمائة فرسخ وأربعين فرسخاً من مبدئه ويسمى بحر فـــارس‏.‏ وعليه من جهة الشرق سواحل السند ومكران وكرمان وفارس والأبلة عند نهايته ومن جهة الغرب سواحل البحرين واليمامة وعمان والشحر والأحقاف عند مبدئه‏.‏ وفيما بين بحر فارس والقلزم جزيرة العرب كأنها داخلة من البر في البحر يحيط بها البحر الحبشي من الجنوب وبحر القلزم من الغرب وبحر فارس من الشرق وتفضي إلى العراق فيما بين الشام والبصرة على ألف وخمسمائة ميل بينهما‏.‏ وهنالك الكوفة والقادسية وبغداد وإيوان كسرى والحيرة‏.‏ ووراء ذلك أمم الأعاجم من الترك والخزر وغيرهم‏.‏ وفي جزيرة العرب بلاد الحجاز في جهة الغرب منها وبلاد اليمامة والبحرين وعمان جهة الشرق منها وبلاد اليمن في قالوا‏:‏ وفي هذا المعمور بحر أخر منقطع من سائر البحار في ناحية الشمال بأرض الديلم يسمى بحر جرجان وطبرستان طوله ألف ميل في عرض ستمائة ميل في غربيه أذربيجان والديلم وفي شرقيه أرض الترك وخوارزم وفي جنوبيه طبرستان وفي شماليه أرض الخزر واللان‏.‏ هذه جملة البحار المشهورة التي ذكرها أهل الجغرافيا‏........ ....... وفي الجزء السادس من هذا الإقليم فيما بين البحرين الهابطين من هذا البحر الهندي إلى جهة الشمال وهما بحر قلزم وبحر فارس وفيما بينهما جزيرة العرب‏.‏ وتشتمل على بلاد اليمن وبلاد الشحر في شرقيها على ساحل هذا البحر الهندي وعلى بلاد الحجاز واليمامة‏.‏في كتاب أحسن التقاسيم في معرفة الأقاليم المقدسي البشاري هي فی
  30. ^ "Jahan Nama", quoted by Mohammad Javad Mashkoor in an article titled "Nam-i Khalij Fars" in the proceeding of the "Seminar on Khalij-e-Fars" (Tehran: 1964), Vol I. p. 44. Bekiran lived in the 11th century A.D.
  31. ^ "Al-Tafhim le-awa’el Sena al-Tanjim" ed.: Jalal al-Din Homai (Tehran: 1318 Hijri Sola Calendar), pg 167. Also in "Qanun Masudi" (Heydarabad, 1955), Vol. II. Pg 558. ابوريحان بيرونی ( 440 ق.) فی کتاب التفهيم: بحر پارس ـ دريای پارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی فی کتاب قانون المسعودی: دريای فارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی فی کتاب تحديد نهايات الامانی: بحر فارس
  32. ^ "Geographic d’Edirisi" traduite de l’Arabe en Francais par P. Amedee Jaulert (Recueil des voyages et des memoires publiees par la Societe de Geographie), (Paris: 1840), Vols. VI and VI. "Nuzhat al-Mushtaq fi Ikhtraq al-Afar", (Rome : 1878). Pg 9
  33. ^ "mu’jam al-Buldan",(Cairo: 1906), Vol. 2, pg 68. ياقوت حموی ( 626 ق.) فی کتاب المعجم البلدان: بحر فارس
  34. ^ "Athar al-Bilad" (Gutingen: 1848), pg 104. زکريای قزوينی ( 682 ق.) فی کتاب آثار البلاد: بحر فارس ـ زکريای قزوينی فی کتاب العجايب المخلوقات: بحر فارس
  35. ^ "Taqwim al-Buldan", Geographie d’Aboulfeda traduite de l’Arab par M. Reinaud, 2 Vols. (Paris: 1848), Vol 1, pg 23. ابوالفداء ( 732 ق.) فی کتاب التقويم البلدان: بحر فارس
  36. ^ Quoted also in Mohammad Javad Mashkoor in an article titled "Nam-i Khalij Fars" in the proceeding of the "Seminar on Khalij-e-Fars" (Tehran: 1964). Pg 46. انصاری الدمشقی ( 727 ق.) فی کتاب النخبة الدهر: بحر فارس
  37. ^ "Nuzhat al-Qolub", ed: Mohammad Dabir Sayaqi, (Tehran: 1336 Hijri Solar Year), pg 164. حمدالله مستوفی قزوينی ( 740 ق.) فی کتاب النزهة القلوب: بحر فارس
  38. ^ "Kharida al-Ajayeb", Quoted also in Mohammad Javad Mashkoor in an article titled "Nam-i Khalij Fars" in the proceeding of the "Seminar on Khalij-e-Fars" (Tehran: 1964). Pg 47. ابوحفص ابن الوردی ( 749 ق.) فی کتاب خريده العجايب: بحر فارس
  39. ^ Quoted also in Mohammad Javad Mashkoor in an article titled "Nam-i Khalij Fars" in the proceeding of the "Seminar on Khalij-e-Fars" (Tehran: 1964). Pg 46.شهاب الدين احمد نويری ( 733 ق.) فی کتاب نهاية الارب: خليج فارس
  40. ^ "The Travels of Ibn Babutta", translated from the abrdiged Arabic MMS of Cambridge by the Rev. Samuel Lee(Cambridgde: 1824), pg 56
  41. ^ ابن فقيه فی کتاب البلدان (تأليف 279 ق.): اطلق علیها الاسم  : بحر فارس ـ ابن رسته فی کتاب الاعلاق النفيسه (تأليف 290 ق.): تسمیها بالخليج الفارسی ـ سهراب (قرن ثالث هجری) فی کتاب العجايب الاقاليم السبعه: ت= بحر فارس ـ ابن خردادبه ( 300 ق.) فی کتاب المسالک الممالک: ت = بحر فارس ـ بزرگ بن شهريار فی کتاب العجايب الهند (تأليف 342 ق.): بحر فارس ـ اصطخری ( 346 ق.) فی الکتاب المسالک الممالک: بحر فارس ـ اصطخری فی کتاب الاقاليم: بحر فارس ـ مسعودی ( 346 ق.) فی کتاب المروج الذهب: بحر فارس ـ مسعودی فی کتاب التنبيه والاشراف: بحر الفارس ـ ابن مطهر فی کتاب البدء والتاريخ (تأليف 355 ق.): خليج الفارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی ( 440 ق.) فی کتاب التفهيم: بحر پارس ـ دريای پارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی فی کتاب قانون المسعودی: دريای فارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی فی کتاب تحديد نهايات الامانی: بحر فارس ـ ابن حوقل فی کتاب صورة الارض (تأليف 367 ق.): بحر فارس ـ مؤلف الحدود العالم من المشرق الی المغرب (تأليف 372 ق.): خليج فارس ـ دريای پارس ـ مقدسی فی کتاب احسن التقاسيم فی معرفة الاقاليم (تأليف 375 ق.): بحر فارس ـ محمد بن نجيب فی کتاب جهان نامه (تأليف قرن چهارم): بحر پارس ـ ابن بلخی فی کتاب فارسنامه (تأليف حدود 500 ق.): بحر فارس ـ طاهر مروزی فی کتاب الطبايع الحيوان (تأليف حدود 514 ق.): الخليج الفارس ـ شريف ادريسی ( 560 ق.) فی کتاب النزهة المشتاق: بحر فارس ـ ياقوت حموی ( 626 ق.) فی کتاب المعجم البلدان: بحر فارس ـ زکريای قزوينی ( 682 ق.) فی کتاب آثار البلاد: بحر فارس ـ زکريای قزوينی فی کتاب العجايب المخلوقات: بحر فارس ـ انصاری الدمشقی ( 727 ق.) فی کتاب النخبة الدهر: بحر فارس ـ ابوالفداء ( 732 ق.) فی کتاب التقويم البلدان: بحر فارس ـ شهاب الدين احمد نويری ( 733 ق.) فی کتاب نهاية الارب: خليج فارس ـ حمدالله مستوفی قزوينی ( 740 ق.) فی کتاب النزهة القلوب: بحر فارس ـ ابوحفص ابن الوردی ( 749 ق.) فی کتاب خريده العجايب: بحر فارس ـ ابن بطوطه ( 777 ق.) فی الکتاب مشهور الرحله ابن بطوطه : بحر فارس ـ قلقشندی (درگذشته 821 ق.) فی کتاب صبح الاعشی: بحر فارس ـ حاجی خليفه ( 1067 ق.) فی کتاب جهان نما (ترکی): بحر فارس ـ شمس الدين محمد سامی فی قاموس الاعلام (قرن سيزدهم هجری): خليج بصره ـ البستانی فی دايرة المعارف البستانی (طبع 1883 م.): الخليج العجمی و ایضا سجلت و وصفت الخلیج الفارسی فی کتب : 1ـ آثار البلاد و اخبار العباد ـ تالیف ابوعبدالله زكريا بن محمد بن محمود القزويني ـ طبع بيروت 1960. 2ـ احسن التقاسيم في معرفة الاقاليم ـ تالیف شمس الدين ابوعبدالله محمدبن احمدبن ابوبكر الشامي مقدسي، معروف به البشاري، ـ ليدن 1960 (يطلب من مكتبة المثني ببغداد). 4ـ الاعلاق النفيسه ـ تالیف ابوعلي احمد بن عمر، معروف به ابن رسته، طبع ليدن 1981 ميلادي. . 8ـ تاريخ التمدن الاسلامي ـ تأليف جرجي زيدان ـ طبع القاهره 1935 ـ جلد دوم. 9ـ التفهيم لاوائل صناعة التنجيم ـ ابوريحان بيروني خوارزمي ـ تصحيح جلال همايي 1318 شمسي. 10ـ حياة الحيوان الكبري ـ شيخ كمال الدين الدميري، قاهره 1311 هجري. 11ـ خريدة العجائب و فريدة الغرائب ـ تالیف ابو حفض زيدالدين عمر مظفر، معروف به ابن الوردي ـ چاپ قاهره 1303 هجري. 18ـ صبح الاعشي في صناعة الانشاء ـ ابي العباس احمدبن علي بن احمد القلقشندي . قاهره 1913 تا 1920 جلد سوم. 19ـ صورة الارض، تالیف ابوالقاسم محمدبن حوقل، ليدن 1938 ، جلد اول. 20ـ طبايع الحيوان ـ تالیف شرف الزمان طاهر مروزي ـ طبع لندن 1942 . 21ـ عجائب الاقاليم السبعة الي نهاية المعمارة ـ تالیف سهراب ـ وين 1929 . 22ـ العراق ـ تأليف سيد عبدالرزاق الحسني ـ صيدا 1956 . 23ـ علم الخرائط ـ تأليف دكتر محمد عبدالكريم صبحي، قاهره 1966 . 24ـ قاموس الاعلام ـ تالیف شمس الدين محمد سامي، استانبول 1306 هجري. 25ـ قانون مسعودي ـ تالیف ابوريحان بيروني الخوارزمي، حيدرآباد دكن 1955 . 26ـ قصة الحضارة ـ تأليف ويل دورانت ـ ترجمه به عربي از دكتر زكي نجيب محمود، قاهره 1965 . 27ـ لطايف اللغات ـ عبداللطيف بن عبدالله ـ نسخهٌ خطي. 28ـ مختصر البلدان ـ ابوبكر احمدبن محمد، معروف به ابن الفقيه (279 هجري)، ليدن 1885) يطلب من مكتبة المثني ببغداد). 29ـ مراصد الاطلاع ـ علي محمد البجاوي ـ طبع 1954 جزء اول. 30ـ المسالك و الممالك ـ ابواسحق ابراهيم الاصطخري، ليدن 1889 . 31ـ الموسوعة العربية الميسرة ـ تأليف صبحي عبدالكريم، ترجمه الی عربي من محمد شفيق غربال، قاهره 1965 . 32ـ تطور الخط العربي ـ تأليف ناجي زيدالدين ـ طبع بغداد 1968 . 33ـ معجم البلدان ـ شهاب الدين ابوعبدالله ياقوت بن عبدالله حموي رومي، قاهره 1906 . 34ـ المنجد (معجم)، ـ بيروت 1966 . 35ـ نخبة الدهر في عجائب البر و البحر ـ نوشتهٌ شمس الدين ابوعبدالله محمد بن ابي طالب الانصاري الدمشقي الصوفي ـ چاپ لايپزيك 1923 . 36ـ نزهة القلوب ـ حمدالله بن احمد بن ابي بكر مستوفي قزويني ـ 1928 ميلادي. 37ـ نزهة المشتاق ـ ابوعبدالله، محمدبن عبدالله معروف به شريف الادريسي، رم 1878 . 38ـ نهاية الارب في فنون الادب ـ تأليف شهاب الدين احمد عبدالوهاب النري ـ قاهره 1923
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External links

  • Qatar Digital Library – an online portal providing access to previously undigitised British Library archive materials relating to Gulf history and Arabic science
  • Persian Gulf, Encyclopædia Iranica
  • 32 historical map of Persian gulf, at flickr.com
  • Persian Gulf from 1920
  • Sharks in the Gulf
Videos
  • Documents on the Persian Gulf's name the eternal heritage ancient time by Dr.Mohammad Ajam

persian, gulf, this, article, about, body, water, other, uses, disambiguation, arabian, gulf, disambiguation, gulf, region, redirects, here, region, australia, gulf, country, persian, خلیج, فارس, romanized, xalij, fârs, gulf, fars, pronounced, xæliːdʒe, fɒːɾs,. This article is about the body of water For other uses see Persian Gulf disambiguation and Arabian Gulf disambiguation Gulf Region redirects here For the region in Australia see Gulf Country The Persian Gulf Persian خلیج فارس romanized xalij e fars lit Gulf of Fars pronounced xaeliːdʒe fɒːɾs sometimes called the Arabian Gulf Arabic ا ل خ ل ي ج ٱل ع ر ب ي romanized Al Khalij al ˁArabi is a mediterranean sea in Western Asia The body of water is an extension of the Indian Ocean located between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula 1 It is connected to the Gulf of Oman in the east by the Strait of Hormuz The Shatt al Arab river delta forms the northwest shoreline Persian GulfPersian Gulf from spaceLocationWestern AsiaCoordinates26 N 52 E 26 N 52 E 26 52 Coordinates 26 N 52 E 26 N 52 E 26 52TypeGulfPrimary inflowsGulf of OmanBasin countriesIran Iraq Kuwait Saudi Arabia Qatar Bahrain United Arab Emirates and Oman exclave of Musandam Max length989 km 615 mi Surface area251 000 km2 97 000 sq mi Average depth50 m 160 ft Max depth90 m 300 ft Persian Gulf at Night from ISS 2020 The Persian Gulf has many fishing grounds extensive reefs mostly rocky but also coral and abundant pearl oysters however its ecology has been damaged by industrialization and oil spills The Persian Gulf is in the Persian Gulf Basin which is of Cenozoic origin and related to the subduction of the Arabian Plate under the Zagros Mountains 2 The current flooding of the basin started 15 000 years ago due to rising sea levels of the Holocene glacial retreat 3 Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Exclusive economic zone 1 2 Coastlines 1 3 Islands 2 Oceanography 3 Name 3 1 Naming dispute 4 History 4 1 Ancient history 4 2 Colonial era 4 3 Modern history 5 Cities and population 6 Wildlife 6 1 Aquatic mammals 6 2 Birds 6 3 Fish and reefs 6 4 Flora 6 5 Gallery 7 Oil and gas 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksGeographySee also Eastern Arabia and Arab states of the Persian Gulf The International Hydrographic Organization defines the Persian Gulf s southern limit as The Northwestern limit of Gulf of Oman This limit is defined as A line joining Ras Limah 25 57 N on the coast of Arabia and Ras al Kuh 25 48 N on the coast of Iran Persia 4 This inland sea of some 251 000 square kilometres 96 912 sq mi is connected to the Gulf of Oman in the east by the Strait of Hormuz and its western end is marked by the major river delta of the Shatt al Arab which carries the waters of the Euphrates and the Tigris In Iran this is called Arvand Rood where Rood means river Its length is 989 kilometres 615 miles with Iran covering most of the northern coast and Saudi Arabia most of the southern coast The Persian Gulf is about 56 km 35 mi wide at its narrowest in the Strait of Hormuz Overall the waters are very shallow with a maximum depth of 90 metres 295 feet and an average depth of 50 metres 164 feet Countries with a coastline on the Persian Gulf are clockwise from north Iran Oman s Musandam exclave the United Arab Emirates Saudi Arabia Qatar on a peninsula off the Saudi coast Bahrain an island nation Kuwait and Iraq in the northwest Various small islands also lie within the Persian Gulf some of which are the subject of territorial disputes between the states in the region Exclusive economic zone Exclusive economic zones in the Persian Gulf 5 6 Number Country Area km2 1 Iran 97 8602 United Arab Emirates 52 4553 Saudi Arabia 33 7924 Qatar 31 8195 Kuwait 11 7866 Bahrain 8 8267 Oman 3 6788 Iraq 540Total Persian Gulf 240 756Coastlines Countries by coastline length Number Country Length1 Iran 1 5362 Saudi Arabia 1 3003 United Arab Emirates 9004 Qatar 5635 Kuwait 4996 Bahrain 1617 Oman 1008 Iraq 58Total Persian Gulf 5 117Islands See also List of islands in the Persian Gulf The Persian Gulf is home to many islands such as Bahrain an Arab state Geographically the biggest island in the Persian Gulf is Qeshm island belonging to Iran and located in the Strait of Hormuz Other significant islands in the Persian Gulf include Greater Tunb Lesser Tunb and Kish administered by Iran Bubiyan administered by Kuwait Tarout administered by Saudi Arabia and Dalma administered by UAE In recent years there has also been the addition of artificial islands for tourist attractions such as The World Islands in Dubai and The Pearl Qatar in Doha Persian Gulf islands are often also historically significant having been used in the past by colonial powers such as the Portuguese and the British in their trade or as acquisitions for their empires 7 OceanographyThe Persian Gulf is connected to the Indian Ocean through the Strait of Hormuz Writing the water balance budget for the Persian Gulf the inputs are river discharges from Iran and Iraq estimated to be 2 000 cubic metres 71 000 cu ft per second as well as precipitation over the sea which is around 180 mm 7 1 in year in Qeshm Island The evaporation of the sea is high so that after considering river discharge and rain contributions there is still a deficit of 416 cubic kilometres 100 cu mi per year 8 This difference is supplied by currents at the Strait of Hormuz The water from the Persian Gulf has a higher salinity and therefore exits from the bottom of the Strait while ocean water with less salinity flows in through the top Another study revealed the following numbers for water exchanges for the Persian Gulf evaporation 1 84 m 6 0 ft year precipitation 0 08 m 0 26 ft year inflow from the Strait 33 66 m 110 4 ft year outflow from the Strait 32 11 m 105 3 ft year and the balance is 0 m 0 ft year 9 Data from different 3D computational fluid mechanics models typically with spatial resolution of 3 kilometres 1 9 mi and depth each element equal to 1 10 metres 3 3 32 8 ft are predominantly used in computer models Name Map of the Persian Gulf The Gulf of Oman leads to the Arabian Sea Detail from larger map of the Middle East Before being given its present name the Persian Gulf was called many different names In Babylonian texts it was known as the sea above Akkad citation needed The Assyrians called it the Bitter Sea 10 In 550 BC the Achaemenid Empire established the first ancient empire in Persis Pars or modern Fars in the southwestern region of the Iranian plateau 11 Consequently in the Greek sources the body of water that bordered this province came to be known as the Persian Gulf 12 In the book of Nearchus known as Indike 300 BC the word Persikon kolpos is mentioned for multiple times meaning Persian gulf 13 During the years 550 to 330 BC coinciding with the sovereignty of the Achaemenid Persian Empire over the Middle East area especially the whole part of the Persian Gulf and some parts of the Arabian Peninsula the name of Persian Pars Sea is widely found in the compiled written texts 1 At the same period there is the inscription and engraving of Darius the Great which belongs to the fifth century BC 1 King Darius says 14 I ordered to dig this Canal of the Pharaohs canal from the river that is called Nile Pirava and flows in Egypt Mudraya to the sea that begins in Persia Parsa Therefore when this canal had been dug as I had ordered ships went from Egypt through this canal to Persia as I had intended Darius I Darius the Great s Suez Inscriptions Considering the historical background of the name Persian Gulf Arnold Wilson mentions in a book published in 1928 that no water channel has been so significant as the Persian Gulf to the geologists archaeologists geographers merchants politicians excursionists and scholars whether in past or in present This water channel which separates the Iran Plateau from the Arabia Plate has enjoyed an Iranian Identity since at least 2200 years ago 1 15 In Sassanian times the Persian Gulf was called Pudig which comes from Avestan Puitika lit cleansing a name mentioned in Bundahishn 16 A historical map of the Persian Gulf in a Dubai museum with the word Persian removed 17 18 Among historians travellers and geographers of the Islamic era many of them writing in Arabic from the 9th to the 17th century Ibn Khordadbeh 19 Ibn al Faqih 20 Ibn Rustah 21 Sohrab 22 Ramhormozi 23 Abu Ishaq Ibrahim ibn Muhammad al Farisi al Istakhri 24 Abu al Hasan Ali ibn al Husayn ibn Ali al Mas udi 25 Al Mutahhar ibn Tahir al Maqdisi d 966 26 Ibn Hawqal 27 Al Muqaddasi 28 Ibn Khaldun 29 Mohammad ibn Najub Bekiran 30 Abu Rayhan Biruni 31 Muhammad al Idrisi 32 Yaqut al Hamawi 33 Zakariya al Qazwini 34 Abu l Fida 35 Al Dimashqi 36 Hamdollah Mostowfi 37 Ibn al Wardi 38 Al Nuwayri 39 Ibn Batutta 40 Katip Celebi and other sources 41 have used the terms Bahr i Fars Daryaye i Fars Khalij al Ajami and Khalij i Fars all of which translate into Persian Gulf or Persian Sea Naming dispute Main article Persian Gulf naming dispute The body of water is historically and internationally known as the Persian Gulf 42 43 44 Arab governments refer to it as the Arabian Gulf or The Gulf 45 and other countries and organizations have begun using Arabian Gulf 46 The name Gulf of Iran Persian Gulf is used by the International Hydrographic Organization 47 The dispute in naming has become especially prevalent since the 1960s 48 Rivalry between Iran and some Arab states along with the emergence of pan Arabism and Arab nationalism has seen the name Arabian Gulf become predominant in most Arab countries 49 50 Names beyond these two have also been applied to or proposed for this body of water HistoryAncient history Map depicting extent of early civilizations around the Persian Gulf including Lackhmids and Sassanids Map depicting the Achaemenid Persian empire in relation to the Persian Gulf A painting depicting the British Expeditionary Force off the coast of Ras Al Khaimah in 1809 Earliest evidence of human presence on Persian Gulf islands dates back to Middle Paleolithic and consist of stone tools discovered at Qeshm Island 51 The world s oldest known civilization Sumer developed along the Persian Gulf and southern Mesopotamia The shallow basin that now underlies the Persian Gulf was an extensive region of river valley and wetlands during the transition between the end of the Last Glacial Maximum and the start of the Holocene which according to University of Birmingham archaeologist Jeffrey Rose served as an environmental refuge for early humans during periodic hyperarid climate oscillations laying the foundations for the legend of Dilmun 52 The oldest evidence in the world for seagoing vessels has been found at H3 in Kuwait dating to the mid sixth millennium BC when the Gulf was part of an extensive trade network that involved the Ubaid settlements in Mesopotamia and communities along the entire Gulf coast 53 For most of the early history of the settlements in the Persian Gulf the southern shores were ruled by a series of nomadic tribes During the end of the fourth millennium BC the southern part of the Persian Gulf was dominated by the Dilmun civilization For a long time the most important settlement on the southern coast of the Persian Gulf was Gerrha In the second century the Lakhum tribe who lived in what is now Yemen migrated north and founded the Lakhmid Kingdom along the southern coast Occasional ancient battles took place along the Persian Gulf coastlines between the Sassanid Persian empire and the Lakhmid Kingdom the most prominent of which was the invasion led by Shapur II against the Lakhmids leading to Lakhmids defeat and advancement into Arabia along the southern shore lines 54 During the seventh century the Sassanid Persian empire conquered the whole of the Persian Gulf including southern and northern shores Between 625 BC and 226 AD the northern side was dominated by a succession of Persian empires including the Median Achaemenid Seleucid and Parthian empires Under the leadership of the Achaemenid king Darius the Great Darius I Persian ships found their way to the Persian Gulf 55 Persian naval forces laid the foundation for a strong Persian maritime presence in Persian Gulf that started with Darius I and existed until the arrival of the British East India Company and the Royal Navy by mid 19th century AD Persians were not only stationed on islands of the Persian Gulf but also had ships often of 100 to 200 capacity patrolling empire s various rivers including Shatt al Arab Tigris and the Nile in the west as well as Sind waterway in India 55 The Achaemenid high naval command had established major naval bases located along Shatt al Arab river Bahrain Oman and Yemen The Persian fleet would soon not only be used for peacekeeping purposes along the Shatt al Arab but would also open the door to trade with India via Persian Gulf 55 56 Following the fall of Achaemenid Empire and after the fall of the Parthian Empire the Sassanid Empire ruled the northern half and at times the southern half of the Persian Gulf The Persian Gulf along with the Silk Road were important trade routes in the Sassanid Empire Many of the trading ports of the Persian empires were located in or around Persian Gulf Siraf an ancient Sassanid port that was located on the northern shore of the Persian gulf located in what is now the Iranian province of Bushehr is an example of such commercial port Siraf was also significant in that it had a flourishing commercial trade with China by the fourth century having first established connection with the far east in 185 AD 57 Colonial era See also Portuguese rule and British residency of the Persian GulfPortuguese influence in the Persian Gulf lasted for 250 years 58 however since the beginning of the 16th century Portuguese dominance 59 contended with the local powers and the Ottoman Empire Following the arrival of the English and the Dutch the Safavid Empire allied with the newcomers to contest Portuguese dominance of the seas in the 17th century 60 The Portuguese Castle on Hormuz Island Gaspar Correia Lendas da India c 1556 Portuguese expansion into the Indian Ocean in the early 16th century following Vasco da Gama s voyages of exploration saw them battle the Ottomans up the coast of the Persian Gulf In 1521 a Portuguese force led by commander Antonio Correia invaded Bahrain to take control of the wealth created by its pearl industry On April 29 1602 Shah Abbas the Persian emperor of the Safavid Persian Empire expelled the Portuguese from Bahrain 61 and that date is commemorated as National Persian Gulf day in Iran 62 With the support of the British fleet in 1622 Abbas took the island of Hormuz from the Portuguese much of the trade was diverted to the town of Bandar Abbas which he had taken from the Portuguese in 1615 and had named after himself The Persian Gulf was therefore opened to a flourishing commerce with the Portuguese Dutch French Spanish and the British merchants who were granted particular privileges The Ottoman Empire reasserted itself into Eastern Arabia in 1871 63 Under military and political pressure from the governor of the Ottoman Vilayet of Baghdad Midhat Pasha the ruling Al Thani tribe submitted peacefully to Ottoman rule 64 The Ottomans were forced to withdraw from the area with the start of World War I and the need for troops in various other frontiers 65 In World War II the Western Allies used Iran as a conduit to transport military and industrial supply to the USSR through a pathway known historically as the Persian Corridor Britain utilized the Persian Gulf as the entry point for the supply chain in order to make use of the Trans Iranian Railway 66 The Persian Gulf therefore became a critical maritime path through which the Allies transported equipment to Soviet Union against the Nazi invasion 67 The piracy in the Persian Gulf was prevalent until the 19th century Many of the most notable historical instances of piracy were perpetrated by the Al Qasimi tribe This led to the British mounting the Persian Gulf campaign of 1819 68 The campaign led to the signing of the General Maritime Treaty of 1820 between the British and the Sheikhs of what was then known as the Pirate Coast From 1763 until 1971 the British Empire maintained varying degrees of political control over some of the Persian Gulf states including the United Arab Emirates originally called the Trucial States 69 and at various times Bahrain Kuwait Oman and Qatar through the British Residency of the Persian Gulf Modern history Operation Earnest Will Tanker convoy No 12 under US Navy escort in October 1987 The Persian Gulf was a battlefield of the 1980 1988 Iran Iraq War in which each side attacked the other s oil tankers It is the namesake of the 1991 Gulf War the largely air and land based conflict that followed Iraq s invasion of Kuwait The United States role in the Persian Gulf grew in the second half of the Twentieth Century 70 On July 3 1988 Iran Air Flight 655 was shot down by the U S military which had mistaken the Airbus A300 operating the flight for an Iranian F 14 Tomcat while it was flying over the Persian Gulf killing all 290 people on board 71 The United Kingdom maintains a profile in the region in 2006 alone over 1 million British nationals visited Dubai 72 73 In 2018 the UK opened a permanent military base HMS Jufair in the Persian Gulf the first since it withdrew from East of Suez in 1971 and is developing a support facility in Oman 74 75 76 Cities and populationEight nations have coasts along the Persian Gulf Bahrain Iran Iraq Kuwait Oman Qatar Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates The Persian gulf s strategic location has made it an ideal place for human development over time Today many major cities of the Middle East are located in this region Kish island Iran Kuwait City Kuwait Abu Dhabi UAE Dubai UAE Bandar Abbas Iran Khasab Musandam Oman Khobar Saudi Arabia Doha Qatar Manama Bahrain Al Faw IraqWildlifeSee also Gulf of Oman desert and semi desert The wildlife of the Persian Gulf is diverse and entirely unique because of the Persian Gulf s geographic distribution and its isolation from the international waters only breached by the narrow Strait of Hormuz The Persian Gulf has hosted some of the most magnificent marine fauna and flora some of which are near extirpation or at serious environmental risk From corals to dugongs Persian Gulf is a diverse cradle for many species who depend on each other for survival However the Persian Gulf is not as biologically diverse as the Red Sea 77 Overall the wild life of the Persian Gulf is endangered from both global factors and regional local negligence Most pollution is from ships land generated pollution counts as the second most common source of pollution 78 Aquatic mammals This article contains weasel words vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information Such statements should be clarified or removed July 2015 Along the mediterranean regions of the Arabian Sea including the Persian Gulf the Red Sea the Gulf of Kutch the Gulf of Suez the Gulf of Aqaba the Gulf of Aden and the Gulf of Oman dolphins and finless porpoises are the most common marine mammals in the waters while larger whales and orcas are rarer today 79 Historically whales had been abundant in the Persian Gulf before commercial hunts wiped them out 80 81 Whales were reduced even further by illegal mass hunts by the Soviet Union and Japan in the 1960s and 1970s 82 Along with Bryde s whales 83 84 85 86 these once common residents can still can be seen in deeper marginal seas such as Gulf of Aden 87 Israel coasts 88 and in the Strait of Hormuz 89 Other species such as the critically endangered Arabian humpback whale 90 also historically common in Gulf of Aden 91 and increasingly sighted in the Red Sea since 2006 including in the Gulf of Aqaba 88 omura s whale 92 93 minke whale and orca also swim into the Persian Gulf while many other large species such as blue whale 94 sei 95 and sperm whales were once migrants into the Gulf of Oman and off the coasts in deeper waters 96 and still migrate into the Red Sea 97 but mainly in deeper waters of outer seas In 2017 waters of the Persian Gulf along Abu Dhabi were revealed to hold the world s largest population of Indo Pacific humpbacked dolphins 98 99 100 One of the more unusual marine mammals living in the Persian Gulf is the dugong Dugong dugon Also called sea cows for their grazing habits and mild manner resembling livestock dugongs have a life expectancy similar to that of humans and they can grow up to 3 metres 9 8 feet in length These gentle mammals feed on sea grass and are closer relatives of certain land mammals than are dolphins and whales 101 Their simple grass diet is negatively affected by new developments along the Persian Gulf coastline particularly the construction of artificial islands by Arab states and pollution from oil spills caused during the Persian Gulf war and various other natural and artificial causes Uncontrolled hunting has also had a negative impact on the survival of dugongs 101 After Australian waters which are estimated to contain some 80 000 dugong inhabitants the waters off Qatar Bahrain UAE and Saudi Arabia make the Persian Gulf the second most important habitat for the species hosting some 7 500 remaining dugongs However the current number of dugongs is dwindling and it is not clear how many are currently alive or what their reproductive trend is 101 102 Unfortunately ambitious and uncalculated construction schemes political unrest ever present international conflict the most lucrative world supply of oil and the lack of cooperation between Arab states and Iran have had a negative impact on the survival of many marine species including dugongs Birds The Persian Gulf is also home to many migratory and local birds There is great variation in color size and type of the bird species that call the Persian Gulf home Concerns regarding the endangerment of the kalbaensis subspecies of the collared kingfishers were raised by conservationists over real estate development by the United Arab Emirates and Oman 103 Estimates from 2006 showed that only three viable nesting sites were available for this ancient bird one located 80 miles 129 km from Dubai and two smaller sites in Oman 103 Such real estate expansion could prove devastating to this subspecies A UN plan to protect the mangroves as a biological reserve was ignored by the emirate of Sharjah which allowed the dredging of a channel that bisects the wetland and construction of an adjacent concrete walkway 103 Environmental watchdogs in Arabia are few and those that do advocate the wildlife are often silenced or ignored by developers of real estate many of whom have governmental connections 103 Real estate development in the Persian Gulf by the United Arab Emirates and Oman also raised concerns that habitats of species such as the hawksbill turtle greater flamingo and booted warbler may be destroyed 103 104 The dolphins that frequent the Persian Gulf in northern waters around Iran are also at risk Recent statistics and observations show that dolphins are at danger of entrapment in purse seine fishing nets and exposure to chemical pollutants perhaps the most alarming sign is the mass suicides committed by dolphins off Iran s Hormozgan province which are not well understood but are suspected to be linked with a deteriorating marine environment from water pollution from oil sewage and industrial run offs 105 106 Fish and reefs The Persian Gulf is home to over 700 species of fish most of which are native 107 Of these 700 species more than 80 are reef associated 107 These reefs are primarily rocky but there are also a few coral reefs Compared to the Red Sea the coral reefs in the Persian Gulf are relatively few and far between 108 109 110 This is primarily connected to the influx of major rivers especially the Shatt al Arab Euphrates and Tigris which carry large amounts of sediment most reef building corals require strong light and causes relatively large variations in temperature and salinity corals in general are poorly suited to large variations 108 109 110 Nevertheless coral reefs have been found along sections of coast of all countries in the Persian Gulf 110 Corals are vital ecosystems that support multitude of marine species and whose health directly reflects the health of the Persian Gulf Recent years have seen a drastic decline in the coral population in the Persian Gulf partially owing to global warming but mostly to irresponsible dumping by Arab states like the UAE and Bahrain 111 Construction garbage such as tires cement and chemical by products have found their way to the Persian Gulf in recent years Aside from direct damage to the coral the construction waste creates traps for marine life in which they are trapped and die 111 The result has been a dwindling population of the coral and as a result a decrease in number of species that rely on the corals for their survival Flora A great example of this symbiosis are the mangroves in the Persian Gulf which require tidal flow and a combination of fresh and salt water for growth and act as nurseries for many crabs small fish and insects these fish and insects are the source of food for many of the marine birds that feed on them 103 Mangroves are a diverse group of shrubs and trees belonging to the genus Avicennia or Rhizophora that flourish in the salt water shallows of the Persian Gulf and are the most important habitats for small crustaceans that dwell in them They are as crucial an indicator of biological health on the surface of the water as the corals are to biological health of the Persian Gulf in deeper waters Mangroves ability to survive the salt water through intricate molecular mechanisms their unique reproductive cycle and their ability to grow in the most oxygen deprived waters have allowed them extensive growth in hostile areas of the Persian Gulf 112 113 However with the advent of artificial island development most of their habitat is destroyed or occupied by man made structures This has had a negative impact on the crustaceans that rely on the mangrove and in turn on the species that feed on them Gallery Dugong mother and her offspring in shallow water Indo Pacific bottlenose dolphins off the southern shore of Iran around Hengam Island Spinner dolphins leaping in the Persian Gulf Critically endangered Arabian humpback whales being the most isolated and the only resident population in the world off Dhofar Oman Palm and sunset in Minoo IslandOil and gasSee also Strait of Hormuz Oil and gas pipelines and fields The Persian Gulf and its coastal areas are the world s largest single source of petroleum 114 and related industries dominate the region Safaniya Oil Field the world s largest offshore oilfield is located in the Persian Gulf Large gas finds have also been made with Qatar and Iran sharing a giant field across the territorial median line North Field in the Qatari sector South Pars Field in the Iranian sector Using this gas Qatar has built up a substantial liquefied natural gas LNG and petrochemical industry In 2002 the Persian Gulf nations of Bahrain Iran Iraq Kuwait Qatar Saudi Arabia and the UAE produced about 25 of the world s oil held nearly two thirds of the world s crude oil reserves and about 35 of the world s natural gas reserves 115 116 The oil rich countries excluding Iraq that have a coastline on the Persian Gulf are referred to as the Persian Gulf States Iraq s egress to the Persian gulf is narrow and easily blockaded consisting of the marshy river delta of the Shatt al Arab which carries the waters of the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers where the east bank is held by Iran See also Oceans portalEastern Arabia Eastern Arabian cuisine Cradle of civilization Deluge prehistoric Musandam Peninsula History of the United Arab Emirates The pearling industry and the Portuguese empire 16th 18th century Saeed bin Butti Perpetual Maritime Truce Trucial States Sultan bin Saqr Al Qasimi Perpetual Maritime Truce of 1853 Persian Gulf campaign of 1809 Persian Gulf campaign of 1819 General Maritime Treaty of 1820 Geography of Iran Geography of Saudi Arabia Geography of Oman Geography of United Arab Emirates Geography of Qatar Geography of Bahrain Geography of Kuwait Geography of IraqReferences a b c d United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names Working Paper No 61 Archived 2012 10 03 at the Wayback Machine 23rd Session Vienna 28 March 4 April 2006 accessed October 9 2010 A Brief Tectonic History of the Arabian basin Retrieved from the website http www sepmstrata org page aspx pageid 133 Archived 2018 09 17 at the Wayback Machine A hot survivor The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Archived from the original on 2016 04 13 Retrieved 2016 04 14 Limits of Oceans and Seas 3rd edition PDF International Hydrographic Organization 1953 Archived from the original PDF on 8 October 2011 Retrieved 28 December 2020 EEZ www seaaroundus org Retrieved 2021 02 25 Catches by Taxon in the waters of Oman Musandam www seaaroundus org Retrieved 2021 02 25 Ramerini Marco Portuguese in the Arabia and the Persian Gulf Archived from the original on 2015 09 11 Retrieved 2010 11 27 Pous Stephane Lazure Pascal Carton Xavier 2015 A model of the general circulation in the Persian Gulf and in the Strait of Hormuz Intraseasonal to interannual variability Continental Shelf Research 94 55 70 Bibcode 2015CSR 94 55P doi 10 1016 j csr 2014 12 008 Xue Pengfei Eltahir Elfatih A B 2015 01 29 Estimation of the Heat and Water Budgets of the Persian Arabian Gulf Using a Regional Climate Model Journal of Climate 28 13 5041 5062 Bibcode 2015JCli 28 5041X CiteSeerX 10 1 1 714 254 doi 10 1175 JCLI D 14 00189 1 ISSN 0894 8755 S2CID 14873658 Bagg Ariel M 1 March 2020 The unconquerable country the Babylonian marshes in the Neo Assyrian sources Water History 12 1 57 73 doi 10 1007 s12685 020 00245 5 S2CID 216032694 Touraj Daryaee 2003 The Persian Gulf Trade in Late Antiquity Journal of World History 14 1 Archived from the original on August 5 2013 Documents on the Persian Gulf s name the eternal heritage ancient time by Dr Mohammad Ajam Nearchus 2013 The Voyage of Nearchus from the Indus to the Euphrates The Voyage of Nearchus 1 1 DZ Livius www livius org Retrieved 2019 03 28 Tehran Times article 29 April 2020 Foundation Encyclopaedia Iranica Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica iranicaonline org Retrieved 2023 03 08 K Darbandi Oct 27 2007 Gulf renamed in aversion to Persian Asia Times Archived from the original on 2010 11 27 Retrieved 2010 11 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Mahan Abedin Dec 9 2004 All at sea over the Gulf Asia Times Archived from the original on 2016 05 21 Retrieved 2010 11 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Al Massalek wa al Mamalek Leiden edition 1889 Pg 233 The abrdiged Al Buldan Leiden 1885 pg 8 Ibn Rustah Kitab al A lak an Nafisa ed M J De Goeje Bibliotheca Geographorum Arabicorum BGA Leiden E J Brill 1891 1892 Pg 81 Ajayeb al Aqalim al Saba ila Nehayate al Mara Vienne 1929 pg 59 He was a Persian geographer who lived in the 9th century A D Nakhoda Bozorg ibn Shahriyar Ramhormozi was another Persian geographer of the classical Islamic era Ajayeb al Hind ed M Davis Leiden 1886 pg 41 Massalek al Mamalek ed De M J Goeje Leiden 1927 pg 28 Muruj adh dhahab wa ma adin al jawhar The Meadows of Gold and Mines of Gems English Translation by Aloys Sprenger Vol I London 1841 p 259 al Bad wa l Tarikh Paris 1907 Tom IV pg 58 The Oriental Geography of Ebn Hawkal Translated by Sir Williams Ouseley London 1800 p 62 Surat al Arḍ Leiden 1938 Vol I pg 42 Ahsan al Taqasim fi Ma rifat al Aqalim Ed De A J Goeje Leiden 1906 pg 17 بحر فارس فی کتاب تاريخ ابن خلدون الجزء الأول ص 2 من 258 وكذلك يقولون في تبع الآخر وهو أسعد أبو كرب وكان على عهد يستأنف من ملوك الفرس الكيانية إنه ملك الموصل وأذربيجان ولقي الترك فهزمهم وأثخن ثم غزاهم ثانية وثالثة كذلك وإنه بعد ذلك أغزى ثلاثة من بنيه بلاد فارس وإلى بلاد الصغد وذلك أن ملك التبابعة إنما كان بجزيرة العرب وقرارهم وكرسيهم صنعاء اليمن وجزيرة العرب يحيط بها البحر من ثلاث جهاتها فبحر الهند من الجنوب وبحر فــارس الهابط منه إلى البصرة من المشرق وبحر السويس الهابط منه إلى السويس من أعمال مصر من جهة المغرب كماتراه في مصور الجغرافيا فلا يجد السالكون من اليمن إلى المغرب طريقا من غير السويس تاريخ ابن خلدون الجزء الأول 3 من 258 والبحر الثاني من هذا البحر الحبشي ويسمى الخليج الأخضر يخرج ما بين بلاد السند والأحقاف من اليمن ويمر إلى ناحية الشمال مغربا قليلا إلى أن ينتهي إلى الأبلة من سواحل البصرة في الجزء السادس من الإقليم الثاني على أربعمائة فرسخ وأربعين فرسخا من مبدئه ويسمى بحر فـــارس وعليه من جهة الشرق سواحل السند ومكران وكرمان وفارس والأبلة عند نهايته ومن جهة الغرب سواحل البحرين واليمامة وعمان والشحر والأحقاف عند مبدئه وفيما بين بحر فارس والقلزم جزيرة العرب كأنها داخلة من البر في البحر يحيط بها البحر الحبشي من الجنوب وبحر القلزم من الغرب وبحر فارس من الشرق وتفضي إلى العراق فيما بين الشام والبصرة على ألف وخمسمائة ميل بينهما وهنالك الكوفة والقادسية وبغداد وإيوان كسرى والحيرة ووراء ذلك أمم الأعاجم من الترك والخزر وغيرهم وفي جزيرة العرب بلاد الحجاز في جهة الغرب منها وبلاد اليمامة والبحرين وعمان جهة الشرق منها وبلاد اليمن في قالوا وفي هذا المعمور بحر أخر منقطع من سائر البحار في ناحية الشمال بأرض الديلم يسمى بحر جرجان وطبرستان طوله ألف ميل في عرض ستمائة ميل في غربيه أذربيجان والديلم وفي شرقيه أرض الترك وخوارزم وفي جنوبيه طبرستان وفي شماليه أرض الخزر واللان هذه جملة البحار المشهورة التي ذكرها أهل الجغرافيا وفي الجزء السادس من هذا الإقليم فيما بين البحرين الهابطين من هذا البحر الهندي إلى جهة الشمال وهما بحر قلزم وبحر فارس وفيما بينهما جزيرة العرب وتشتمل على بلاد اليمن وبلاد الشحر في شرقيها على ساحل هذا البحر الهندي وعلى بلاد الحجاز واليمامة في كتاب أحسن التقاسيم في معرفة الأقاليم المقدسي البشاري هي فی Jahan Nama quoted by Mohammad Javad Mashkoor in an article titled Nam i Khalij Fars in the proceeding of the Seminar on Khalij e Fars Tehran 1964 Vol I p 44 Bekiran lived in the 11th century A D Al Tafhim le awa el Sena al Tanjim ed Jalal al Din Homai Tehran 1318 Hijri Sola Calendar pg 167 Also in Qanun Masudi Heydarabad 1955 Vol II Pg 558 ابوريحان بيرونی 440 ق فی کتاب التفهيم بحر پارس ـ دريای پارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی فی کتاب قانون المسعودی دريای فارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی فی کتاب تحديد نهايات الامانی بحر فارس Geographic d Edirisi traduite de l Arabe en Francais par P Amedee Jaulert Recueil des voyages et des memoires publiees par la Societe de Geographie Paris 1840 Vols VI and VI Nuzhat al Mushtaq fi Ikhtraq al Afar Rome 1878 Pg 9 mu jam al Buldan Cairo 1906 Vol 2 pg 68 ياقوت حموی 626 ق فی کتاب المعجم البلدان بحر فارس Athar al Bilad Gutingen 1848 pg 104 زکريای قزوينی 682 ق فی کتاب آثار البلاد بحر فارس ـ زکريای قزوينی فی کتاب العجايب المخلوقات بحر فارس Taqwim al Buldan Geographie d Aboulfeda traduite de l Arab par M Reinaud 2 Vols Paris 1848 Vol 1 pg 23 ابوالفداء 732 ق فی کتاب التقويم البلدان بحر فارس Quoted also in Mohammad Javad Mashkoor in an article titled Nam i Khalij Fars in the proceeding of the Seminar on Khalij e Fars Tehran 1964 Pg 46 انصاری الدمشقی 727 ق فی کتاب النخبة الدهر بحر فارس Nuzhat al Qolub ed Mohammad Dabir Sayaqi Tehran 1336 Hijri Solar Year pg 164 حمدالله مستوفی قزوينی 740 ق فی کتاب النزهة القلوب بحر فارس Kharida al Ajayeb Quoted also in Mohammad Javad Mashkoor in an article titled Nam i Khalij Fars in the proceeding of the Seminar on Khalij e Fars Tehran 1964 Pg 47 ابوحفص ابن الوردی 749 ق فی کتاب خريده العجايب بحر فارس Quoted also in Mohammad Javad Mashkoor in an article titled Nam i Khalij Fars in the proceeding of the Seminar on Khalij e Fars Tehran 1964 Pg 46 شهاب الدين احمد نويری 733 ق فی کتاب نهاية الارب خليج فارس The Travels of Ibn Babutta translated from the abrdiged Arabic MMS of Cambridge by the Rev Samuel Lee Cambridgde 1824 pg 56 ابن فقيه فی کتاب البلدان تأليف 279 ق اطلق علیها الاسم بحر فارس ـ ابن رسته فی کتاب الاعلاق النفيسه تأليف 290 ق تسمیها بالخليج الفارسی ـ سهراب قرن ثالث هجری فی کتاب العجايب الاقاليم السبعه ت بحر فارس ـ ابن خردادبه 300 ق فی کتاب المسالک الممالک ت بحر فارس ـ بزرگ بن شهريار فی کتاب العجايب الهند تأليف 342 ق بحر فارس ـ اصطخری 346 ق فی الکتاب المسالک الممالک بحر فارس ـ اصطخری فی کتاب الاقاليم بحر فارس ـ مسعودی 346 ق فی کتاب المروج الذهب بحر فارس ـ مسعودی فی کتاب التنبيه والاشراف بحر الفارس ـ ابن مطهر فی کتاب البدء والتاريخ تأليف 355 ق خليج الفارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی 440 ق فی کتاب التفهيم بحر پارس ـ دريای پارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی فی کتاب قانون المسعودی دريای فارس ـ ابوريحان بيرونی فی کتاب تحديد نهايات الامانی بحر فارس ـ ابن حوقل فی کتاب صورة الارض تأليف 367 ق بحر فارس ـ مؤلف الحدود العالم من المشرق الی المغرب تأليف 372 ق خليج فارس ـ دريای پارس ـ مقدسی فی کتاب احسن التقاسيم فی معرفة الاقاليم تأليف 375 ق بحر فارس ـ محمد بن نجيب فی کتاب جهان نامه تأليف قرن چهارم بحر پارس ـ ابن بلخی فی کتاب فارسنامه تأليف حدود 500 ق بحر فارس ـ طاهر مروزی فی کتاب الطبايع الحيوان تأليف حدود 514 ق الخليج الفارس ـ شريف ادريسی 560 ق فی کتاب النزهة المشتاق بحر فارس ـ ياقوت حموی 626 ق فی کتاب المعجم البلدان بحر فارس ـ زکريای قزوينی 682 ق فی کتاب آثار البلاد بحر فارس ـ زکريای قزوينی فی کتاب العجايب المخلوقات بحر فارس ـ انصاری الدمشقی 727 ق فی کتاب النخبة الدهر بحر فارس ـ ابوالفداء 732 ق فی کتاب التقويم البلدان بحر فارس ـ شهاب الدين احمد نويری 733 ق فی کتاب نهاية الارب خليج فارس ـ حمدالله مستوفی قزوينی 740 ق فی کتاب النزهة القلوب بحر فارس ـ ابوحفص ابن الوردی 749 ق فی کتاب خريده العجايب بحر فارس ـ ابن بطوطه 777 ق فی الکتاب مشهور الرحله ابن بطوطه بحر فارس ـ قلقشندی درگذشته 821 ق فی کتاب صبح الاعشی بحر فارس ـ حاجی خليفه 1067 ق فی کتاب جهان نما ترکی بحر فارس ـ شمس الدين محمد سامی فی قاموس الاعلام قرن سيزدهم هجری خليج بصره ـ البستانی فی دايرة المعارف البستانی طبع 1883 م الخليج العجمی و ایضا سجلت و وصفت الخلیج الفارسی فی کتب 1ـ آثار البلاد و اخبار العباد ـ تالیف ابوعبدالله زكريا بن محمد بن محمود القزويني ـ طبع بيروت 1960 2ـ احسن التقاسيم في معرفة الاقاليم ـ تالیف شمس الدين ابوعبدالله محمدبن احمدبن ابوبكر الشامي مقدسي معروف به البشاري ـ ليدن 1960 يطلب من مكتبة المثني ببغداد 4ـ الاعلاق النفيسه ـ تالیف ابوعلي احمد بن عمر معروف به ابن رسته طبع ليدن 1981 ميلادي 8ـ تاريخ التمدن الاسلامي ـ تأليف جرجي زيدان ـ طبع القاهره 1935 ـ جلد دوم 9ـ التفهيم لاوائل صناعة التنجيم ـ ابوريحان بيروني خوارزمي ـ تصحيح جلال همايي 1318 شمسي 10ـ حياة الحيوان الكبري ـ شيخ كمال الدين الدميري قاهره 1311 هجري 11ـ خريدة العجائب و فريدة الغرائب ـ تالیف ابو حفض زيدالدين عمر مظفر معروف به ابن الوردي ـ چاپ قاهره 1303 هجري 18ـ صبح الاعشي في صناعة الانشاء ـ ابي العباس احمدبن علي بن احمد القلقشندي قاهره 1913 تا 1920 جلد سوم 19ـ صورة الارض تالیف ابوالقاسم محمدبن حوقل ليدن 1938 جلد اول 20ـ طبايع الحيوان ـ تالیف شرف الزمان طاهر مروزي ـ طبع لندن 1942 21ـ عجائب الاقاليم السبعة الي نهاية المعمارة ـ تالیف سهراب ـ وين 1929 22ـ العراق ـ تأليف سيد عبدالرزاق الحسني ـ صيدا 1956 23ـ علم الخرائط ـ تأليف دكتر محمد عبدالكريم صبحي قاهره 1966 24ـ قاموس الاعلام ـ تالیف شمس الدين محمد سامي استانبول 1306 هجري 25ـ قانون مسعودي ـ تالیف ابوريحان بيروني الخوارزمي حيدرآباد دكن 1955 26ـ قصة الحضارة ـ تأليف ويل دورانت ـ ترجمه به عربي از دكتر زكي نجيب محمود قاهره 1965 27ـ لطايف اللغات ـ عبداللطيف بن عبدالله ـ نسخه خطي 28ـ مختصر البلدان ـ ابوبكر احمدبن محمد معروف به ابن الفقيه 279 هجري ليدن 1885 يطلب من مكتبة المثني ببغداد 29ـ مراصد الاطلاع ـ علي محمد البجاوي ـ طبع 1954 جزء اول 30ـ المسالك و الممالك ـ ابواسحق ابراهيم الاصطخري ليدن 1889 31ـ الموسوعة العربية الميسرة ـ تأليف صبحي عبدالكريم ترجمه الی عربي من محمد شفيق غربال قاهره 1965 32ـ تطور الخط العربي ـ تأليف ناجي زيدالدين ـ طبع بغداد 1968 33ـ معجم البلدان ـ شهاب الدين ابوعبدالله ياقوت بن عبدالله حموي رومي قاهره 1906 34ـ المنجد معجم ـ بيروت 1966 35ـ نخبة الدهر في عجائب البر و البحر ـ نوشته شمس الدين ابوعبدالله محمد بن ابي طالب الانصاري الدمشقي الصوفي ـ چاپ لايپزيك 1923 36ـ نزهة القلوب ـ حمدالله بن احمد بن ابي بكر مستوفي قزويني ـ 1928 ميلادي 37ـ نزهة المشتاق ـ ابوعبدالله محمدبن عبدالله معروف به شريف الادريسي رم 1878 38ـ نهاية الارب في فنون الادب ـ تأليف شهاب الدين احمد عبدالوهاب النري ـ قاهره 1923 Central Intelligence Agency CIA The World Fact Book Retrieved 2010 12 04 nationsonline org Political Map of Iran Archived from the original on 2010 11 27 Retrieved 2010 12 04 United Nations United Nations Cartographic Section Middle East Map Archived from the 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2016 03 05 Retrieved 2016 02 26 Hoath R 2009 A Field Guide to the Mammals of Egypt pp 112 The American University in Cairo Press Retrieved on February 26 2016 Dr Perrin F W Koch C C 2007 Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals pp 611 Academic Press Retrieved on December 17 2014 Yemen Archived from the original on 2016 03 07 Retrieved 2016 02 26 WAM 2017 Abu Dhabi has world s largest population of humpback dolphins Archived 2017 09 21 at the Wayback Machine Emirates 24 7 Retrieved on September 21 2017 Gulf News 2017 Abu Dhabi proves a haven for humpback dolphins Archived 2017 09 20 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on September 21 2017 Sanker A 2017 Abu Dhabi leads world in humpback dolphin numbers Archived 2017 09 21 at the Wayback Machine Khaleej Times Retrieved on September 21 2017 a b c Case Study American edu Archived from the original on June 24 2009 Retrieved 2009 07 10 Persian Gulf Mermaids Face Environmental Threats Maurice Picow 2010 03 04 Archived from the original on 2011 01 14 Retrieved 2010 11 19 a b c d e f Jim Krane July 3 2006 Development in Persian Gulf Threatens Wildlife Discovery Channel Archived from the original on 2006 09 23 Retrieved 2008 06 30 Tim Thomas amp Ian Robinson 2001 Turtles Rehabilitated After Persian Gulf Oil Spills Archived from the original on 2012 09 10 Retrieved 2010 11 23 Mandana Javidinejad 2007 Dolphins of Persian Gulf are in danger Payvand News Agency Archived from the original on 2011 06 29 Retrieved December 25 2010 Vahid Sepehri October 3 2007 Iran Spill Dolphin Deaths Spark Alarm At Persian Gulf Pollution Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Archived from the original on 2011 01 14 Retrieved December 25 2010 a b Jen fishbase org 2003 06 30 Fish Species in Persian Gulf Archived from the original on 2010 07 02 Retrieved 2010 11 24 a b Debelius H 1993 Indian Ocean Tropical Fish Guide Aquaprint Verlag GmbH p 5 ISBN 3 927991 01 5 a b Emery K O 1956 Sediments and Water of Persian Gulf AAPG Bulletin 40 doi 10 1306 5CEAE595 16BB 11D7 8645000102C1865D a b c Pohl Al Muqdadi Ali Fawzi Ehrlich and Merkel 2014 Discovery of a living coral reef in the coastal waters of Iraq Sci Rep 4 4250 Bibcode 2014NatSR 4E4250P doi 10 1038 srep04250 PMC 3945051 PMID 24603901 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b Dumping by Construction Crews Killing Bahrain Coral Maurice Picow 2010 06 16 Archived from the original on 2010 10 31 Retrieved 2010 11 19 SunySB Mangals Archived from the original on 2010 12 06 Retrieved 2010 11 23 Yamada Akiyo Saitoh Takeo Mimura Tetsuro Ozeki Yoshihiro Fall 1980 Expression of mangrove allene oxide cyclase enhances salt tolerance in Escherichia coli yeast and tobacco cells Plant and Cell Physiology 43 8 903 910 doi 10 1093 pcp pcf108 PMID 12198193 Northrup Cynthia Clark 2013 Encyclopedia of World Trade From Ancient Times to the Present London UK Routledge via Credo Reference Persian Gulf Online Persian Gulf Oil and Gas Exports Fact Sheet U S Department of Energy Archived from the original on July 14 2009 Retrieved March 4 2011 U S Energy Information Administration EIA Persian Gulf Oil and Gas Export Fact Sheet EIA DOE Energy Information Administration Department of Energy Archived from the original on January 2 2011 External links Look up persian gulf in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Persian Gulf Wikimedia Commons has media related to Persian Gulf Qatar Digital Library an online portal providing access to previously undigitised British Library archive materials relating to Gulf history and Arabic science Persian Gulf Encyclopaedia Iranica The Portuguese in the Arabian peninsula and in the Persian Gulf 32 historical map of Persian gulf at flickr com Persian Gulf from 1920 Sharks in the GulfVideosDocuments on the Persian Gulf s name the eternal heritage ancient time by Dr Mohammad Ajam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Persian Gulf amp oldid 1153643295, 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