The
Western Desert covers an area of some 700,000 km2, thereby
accounting for around two-thirds of Egypt's total land area. This immense
desert to the west of the Nile spans the area from the Mediterranean Sea
southwards to the Sudanese border. The desert's Jilf al Kabir Plateau, at a
mean altitude of some 1000m, constitutes an exception to the uninterrupted
territory of basement rocks covered by layers of horizontally bedded sediments
forming a massive plain or low plateau. The Great Sand Sea lies within the
desert's plain and extends from the Siwa Oasis to Jilf al kabir. Escarpments
(ridges) and deep depressions (basins) exist in several parts of the Western
Desert, and no rivers or streams drain into or out of the area.
The
other major Oases form a topographic chain of basins extending from the Faiyum
Oasis (sometimes called the Fayyum Depression) which lies 60 kilometers
(37 mi) southwest of Cairo, south to the Bahariya, Farafrah, and Dakhlah oases
before reaching the country's largest oasis, Kharjah. A brackish lake, birket
Qarun, at the northern reaches of Al Fayyum Oasis, drained into the Nile in
ancient times. For centuries sweetwater artesian Wells in the Fayyum Oasis have
permitted extensive cultivation in an irrigated area that extends over 1,800
square kilometers (695 sq mi).