Qamishli International Airport
0 sources
Qamishli International Airport
Summary
Qamishli International Airport is an international airport[1]. It draws 17 Wikipedia views per month (international_airport category, ranking #492 of 1,156).[2]
Key Facts
- Qamishli International Airport is located in Qamishli[3].
- Qamishli International Airport is in the country of Syria[4].
- Qamishli International Airport's image is recorded as Qamishli International Airport, 2010.jpg[5].
- Qamishli International Airport's instance of is recorded as international airport[6].
- Qamishli International Airport's operator is recorded as General Authority of Civil Aviation[7].
- Qamishli is named after Qamishli International Airport[8].
- Qamishli International Airport's IATA airport code is recorded as KAC[9].
- Qamishli International Airport's ICAO airport code is recorded as OSKL[10].
- Qamishli International Airport's Commons category is recorded as Qamishli International Airport[11].
- Qamishli International Airport's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 11812091[12].
- Qamishli International Airport's located in time zone is recorded as Asia/Damascus[13].
- Qamishli International Airport's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 37.020555555556, 'lon': 41.191388888889}[14].
- Qamishli International Airport's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02884br[15].
- Qamishli International Airport's place served by transport hub is recorded as Qamishli[16].
- Qamishli International Airport's GeoNames ID is recorded as 6300130[17].
- Qamishli International Airport's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'ar', 'text': 'مطار القامشلي الدولي'}[18].
- Qamishli International Airport's elevation above sea level is recorded as {'unit': 'Q3710', 'amount': '+1480'}[19].
- Qamishli International Airport's aerodrome reference point is recorded as {'lat': 37.0206, 'lon': 41.1914}[20].
Why It Matters
Qamishli International Airport draws 17 Wikipedia views per month (international_airport category, ranking #492 of 1,156).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]