Wadi Nahela Wādī Ghēl | |
---|---|
Native name | وادي نحيله (Arabic) |
Location | |
Country | United Arab Emirates |
Emirate | Ras Al Khaimah |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | At an equidistant point located between the Jabal Ash Sharaf 639 m (2,096 ft) and Aqbat Al Kibs 1,209 m (3,967 ft), in the Emirate of Ras Al Khaimah. |
• elevation | 903 m (2,963 ft) |
Mouth | In the Sе̄ḩ Al Bīr area,[1] which is part of the large Jiri plain floodplain, on the administrative boundary between Al Fahlain,[2] and the historic city of Khatt.[3] |
• coordinates | 25°39′16.34″N 55°59′58.13″E / 25.6545389°N 55.9994806°E |
• elevation | 21 m (69 ft) |
Length | 15.3 km (9.5 mi) |
Basin size | 38.84 km2 (15.00 sq mi) |
Basin features | |
River system | Wadi Nahela / Wādī Ghēl / Wadi Ghil |
Tributaries | |
• left | Wadi Diwerah and Wadi Al Mawarid |
• right | Wadi Baqal |
The Wadi Nahela (Arabic: وادي نحيله, romanized: Wādī Nḥīlh), also known as Wādī Ghēl, Wadi Ghil, Wadi Nahail, Wadi Nahala, Wadi Nehaila or Wadi Nuhaila,[4] is a dry valley or river with intermittent flow, which flows almost exclusively during the rainy season, located at the northeast of the United Arab Emirates, in the Emirate of Ras Al Khaimah.
It forms its own drainage basin, which has an approximate area of 38.84 km2 (15.00 sq mi),[5] and is limited to the north and northeast by the Wadi Naqab hydrographic basin; to the east with the Wadi Kiriba;[6] to the southeast with the Wadi Al Tawiyeen basin;[7] to the southwest with minor wadis that pour their waters into the great alluvial plain of Jiri plain,[8][9] near the town of Khatt; and to the west with the same plain, into which it flows.[10]
Almost all this hydrographic basin is in the Emirate of Ras Al Khaimah. Only a small portion of 0.77 km2 (0.30 sq mi) south of the basin belongs to the Emirate of Fujairah.
The highest point is located at the eastern end, at the top of Jabal Harf (1,420 m (4,660 ft)),[4][5] on whose western slope the Wadi Baqal originates,[11][12] and other important tributaries and sub-tributaries of the Wadi Nahela.
The most prominent towns in the Wadi Nahela watershed are Baqal[11][13] and Tala, although there are other small villages and farms scattered around, most of them without permanent inhabitants.[14]