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Saudi Arabia occupies four-fifths of the Arabian peninsula. It is bordered to the northwest by Jordan, to the north by Iraq
and Kuwait, to the east by the Gulf of Oman, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Oman, and to the south by Yemen. To the west
lies the Red Sea. Along the Red Sea coast is a narrow coastal strip (Tihama) which becomes relatively hotter and more humid
towards the south and has areas of extensive tidal flats and lava fields. Behind this coastal plain is a series of plateaux
reaching up to 2,000m (6,560ft). The southern part of this range, Asir, has some peaks of over 3,000m (9,840ft). North of
these mountains, in the far north, is An Nafud, a sand sea, and further south the landscape rises to Najd, a semi-desert area
scattered with oases. Still further south the land falls away, levelling out to unremitting desert, the uninhabited ‘Empty
Quarter’ or Rub al Khali. Along the Gulf coast is a low fertile plain giving way to limestone ridges inland.
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