Draft:El Al Stream
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Last edited by Qwerfjkl (bot) (talk | contribs) 38 days ago. (Update) |
.Nahal El El is the southernmost strong stream in the Golan Heights. The canyon section of the stream, between the settlements of Eli-Ad and Avni Eitan, has been designated as the "Eli Al" nature reserve, which covers an area of approximately 2,107 dunams. The upper part of the stream is called in Arabic: Wadi Dufila (the stream of the Haunted) and the lower part Wadi a-Shabab (the stream of the youths).
In its shallow eastern part, the waters of the El Al Stream are captured in the Bnei Yisrael Reservoir near Hispin, one of the largest reservoirs in the Golan. The stream flows through the reserve in a channel that deepens as it descends, creating several waterfalls, including the "White Waterfall" and the "Black Waterfall", and several natural and artificial pools, including the natural "Giv'at Al-Farah" and the artificial "Ein Noked" and "Ein Kef" pools that receive their water from a spring on the sides of the stream. The El Al Stream merges with Wadi Samakh to form the Samakh Stream, which flows into the Sea of Galilee. A 25-kilometer-long aqueduct once carried the stream's water to the city of Susita during the Hellenistic period.
Near the stream, at the western end of the reserve, is an ancient site (from the Early Bronze Age - about 3000 BC) called the "Bradville Complex."
References
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