The
Dead Sea (
Arabic:
البحر الميت
al-Baḥr al-Mayyit (help·info),
[4] Hebrew:
יָם הַמֶּלַח,
Yām HaMélaḥ, "Sea of Salt", also
Hebrew:
יָם הַמָּוֶת,
Yām HaMā́weṯ, "The Sea of Death"), also called the
Salt Sea, is a
salt lake bordering
Jordan to the east and
Israel and the
West Bank to the west. Its surface and shores are 423 metres (1,388 ft) below
sea level,
[3] Earth's
lowest elevation on land. The Dead Sea is 377 m (1,237 ft) deep, the deepest
hypersaline lake in the world. With 33.7%
salinity, it is also one of the
world's saltiest bodies of water, though
Lake Assal (Djibouti),
Garabogazköl and some hypersaline lakes of the
McMurdo Dry Valleys in
Antarctica (such as
Don Juan Pond) have reported higher salinities. It is 8.6 times saltier than the ocean.
[5]
This salinity makes for a harsh environment in which animals cannot
flourish, hence its name. The Dead Sea is 55 kilometres (34 mi) long and
18 kilometres (11 mi) wide at its widest point.
[1] It lies in the
Jordan Rift Valley, and its main
tributary is the
Jordan River.
The Dead Sea has attracted visitors from around the
Mediterranean basin for thousands of years. Biblically, it was a place of refuge for
King David. It was one of the world's first health resorts (for
Herod the Great), and it has been the supplier of a wide variety of products, from balms for
Egyptian mummification to
potash for
fertilizers. People also use the salt and the minerals from the Dead Sea to create
cosmetics and herbal
sachets. In 2009, 1.2 million foreign tourists visited on the Israeli side.
[citation needed]
The Dead Sea
seawater has a
density of 1.240 kg/L, which makes swimming similar to floating.
[6][7]
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