Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Report on the Mineral Industry of Egypt, 1928
The area of Egypt is approximately square kilometres, of which square kilometres comprise the cultivated area of the Delta and Valley of the River Nile.
The remainder, no less than square kilometres, is desert, for the most part waterless and devoid of vegetation.
This desert area has no economic importance at the present day other than its mineral resources.
The known mineral deposits are few in comparison with the vastness of the desert area, but much of this is as yet practically unprospected and there is the probability of further discoveries being made.
These known deposits are mostly situated at great distances both from one another and from the River Nile, a fact which has retarded exploration and development. Considerable progress has, however, been made during recent years, notably on the coast of the Red Sea and Gulf of Suez. The sea affords the necessary facilities of access and transport, the lack of which so greatly detracts from the value of deposits situated in the interior.
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