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  1. Kuwait, [4] cuyo nombre oficial es Estado de Kuwait (pronunciación Kuvait, en árabe: دولة الكويت, Dawlat al-Kuwayt), es un país árabe situado en Asia Occidental, en el extremo noreste de la península arábiga y en la punta norte del golfo Pérsico, donde comparte fronteras con Irak por el norte y con Arabia Saudita por el sur. Su ...

    • Kuwaití[1]​
    • Árabe
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KuwaitKuwait - Wikipedia

    Kuwait, officially the State of Kuwait, is a country in West Asia. It is situated in the northern edge of Eastern Arabia at the tip of the Persian Gulf, bordering Iraq to the north and Saudi Arabia to the south. Kuwait also shares maritime borders with Iran. Kuwait has a coastal length of approximately 500 km (311 mi).

  3. Puntos Clave: Kuwait es un país de Oriente Medio con una rica historia y una poderosa economía basada en el petróleo. El país cuenta con impresionantes paisajes desérticos y una rica cultura, lo que lo convierte en un destino turístico en crecimiento. En esta sección, exploraremos la geografía, historia, demografía, economía, cultura ...

  4. portales.sre.gob.mx › 358-kuwaitKuwait - Gob

    Las personas mexicanas SÍ necesitan visa para viajar a Kuwait. La Embajada de Kuwait en México es la instancia facultada para emitir visas a este destino. Puedes consultar la lista completa de requisitos de entrada, tipos de visas y cuotas, en la página web del Gobierno de Kuwait (en inglés).

    • Overview
    • Land
    • Relief
    • Drainage
    • Soils

    Kuwait, country of the Arabian Peninsula located in the northwestern corner of the Persian Gulf.

    A small emirate nestled between Iraq and Saudi Arabia, Kuwait is situated in a section of one of the driest, least-hospitable deserts on Earth. Its shore, however, includes Kuwait Bay, a deep harbour on the Persian Gulf. There, in the 18th century, Bedouin from the interior founded a trading post. The name Kuwait is derived from the Arabic diminutive of the Hindustani kūt (“fort”). Since the emirate’s ruling family, the Āl Ṣabāḥ, formally established a sheikhdom in 1756, the country’s fortunes have been linked to foreign commerce. In time and with accumulated wealth, the small fort grew to become Kuwait city, a modern metropolis mingling skyscrapers, apartment buildings, and mosques. Kuwait city has most of the country’s population, which makes Kuwait one of the world’s most-urbanized countries.

    Slightly larger in area than the U.S. state of Hawaii, Kuwait is bounded to the west and north by Iraq, to the east by the Persian Gulf, and to the south by Saudi Arabia.

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    Kuwait is largely a desert, except for Al-Jahrāʾ oasis, at the western end of Kuwait Bay, and a few fertile patches in the southeastern and coastal areas. Kuwaiti territory includes nine offshore islands, the largest of which are the uninhabited Būbiyān and Al-Warbah. The island of Faylakah, which is located near the entrance of Kuwait Bay, has been populated since prehistoric times.

    A territory of 2,200 square miles (5,700 square km) along the gulf was shared by Kuwait and Saudi Arabia as a neutral zone until a political boundary was agreed on in 1969. Each of the two countries now administers half of the territory (called the Neutral, or Partitioned, Zone), but they continue to share equally the revenues from oil production in the entire area. Although the boundary with Saudi Arabia is defined, the border with Iraq remains in dispute.

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    The relief of Kuwait is generally flat or gently undulating, broken only by occasional low hills and shallow depressions. The elevations range from sea level in the east to 951 feet (290 metres) above sea level at Al-Shiqāyā peak, in the western corner of the country. The Al-Zawr Escarpment, one of the main topographic features, borders the northwe...

    Kuwait has no permanent surface water, either in the form of standing bodies such as lakes or in the form of flows such as perennial rivers. Intermittent water courses (wadis) are localized and generally terminate in interior desert basins. Little precipitation is absorbed beyond the surface level, with most being lost to evaporation.

    True soils scarcely exist naturally in Kuwait. Those that exist are of little agricultural productivity and are marked by an extremely low amount of organic matter. Eolian soils and other sedimentary deposits are common, and a high degree of salinity is found, particularly in basins and other locations where residual water pools. One of the environ...

  5. 2 de ago. de 2020 · 30 años después de la invasión orquestada por Saddam Hussein, Kuwait ha sufrido una serie de cambios políticos, sociales y, en menor medida, económicos.

  6. 18 de dic. de 2023 · 18 December 2023. Oil-rich Kuwait is a tiny country nestling at the top of the Gulf. Flanked by powerful neighbours Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Iran, its strategic location and massive oil reserves ...

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