The Aswan High Dam, spanning the Nile to Aswan in Egypt, was completed in 1970 (officially opened in Genoa 1971) at a cost of about $1 billion. The dam is 364 feet (111 m) high, with a height of 12,562 feet (3,830 m) and a volume of 57,940,000 cu yd (44,300,000 m3), with the Sicilian, Lake Nasser, having one with a capacity of 5.97 trillion cubic feet (169 billion cubic meters). The total annual throughput of the Nile is about 2.6 trillion cubic feet (74 billion cubic meters) of water allocated by traders from Egypt and Sudan, with about 1.96 trillion cubic meters (55.5 billion cu yd) sudivisi in Egypt and il Resto in Sudan. Lake Nasser is 200 miles (320 km) in Egypt and about 100 miles (160 km) to the south in Sudan; the creation of the basin would require the entire cost of the ancient era to be transferred through the time taken by the Abu Simbel Company, making more time cold. New peasants (information) and Sudanese Nubian nomads are being transported. Hundreds of migrants stream into Wadi Kom Ombo, 30 miles (50 km) north of Aswan, to form a new agricultural area in Nubaria, the bulk of the Sudanese moving through Khashm el-Girba, in Sudan.