The Jordan River flows into the Dead Sea from the north, and four smaller streams feed the lake from the east. Many small, intermittent streams also flow into the lake. No rivers flow out of the Dead Sea.
Temperatures at the Dead Sea are very hot in summer and mild in winter. Situated in a desert, the lake seldom receives more than 3 inches (7.6 centimeters) of rain a year. Evaporation carries off about the top 55 inches (140 centimeters) of the lake's waters annually. This evaporation often results in a thick mist that hovers over the lake.
Evaporation also helps to concentrate salt and other minerals in the lake. The Dead Sea is the world's saltiest natural lake. Its near-surface waters are more than eight times as saline as the ocean, and the lake's salt concentration increases with depth. The extreme salinity allows human bathers to float easily, but it prevents all living things except bacteria from inhabiting the lake. Several minerals, including salt, potash, bromides, and bitumen, or native asphalt, are commercially extracted from its shores.
The name Dead Sea can be traced back to at least the first century BC. In the Hebrew Bible the lake was variously called the Salt Sea, the Sea of the Plain, and the East Sea. The cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, whose destruction is described in the biblical book of Genesis, were located on its shores. The biblical manuscripts known as the Dead Sea Scrolls were found on the northwest shore, near the ruins known as Khirbat Qumran
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