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Wadi al-Hasa, known from the Hebrew Bible as the valley and brook of Zered, is a wadi in western Jordan.
The wadi is very big and long and ends in the Dead Sea at the town of Al-Safi.
The wadi area is intensely used by farmers who use the water for irrigation, mostly for vegetables like tomatoes and melons.
Zared (also Zered) is a name used in the Torah for a brook an...
Wādī al-Ḥītān ('Valley of the Whales') is a paleontological site in the Faiyum Governorate of Egypt, some 150 kilometres (93 mi) south-west of Cairo. It was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in July 2005 for its hundreds of fossils of some of the earliest forms of whale, the archaeoceti (a now extinct sub-order of whales). The site reveals evidence for the expla...
Wadi Al Karak is in a beautiful valley near the Dead Sea with waterfalls, spectacular cliffs and a fairyland of greenery where the water pours from springs.
Wadi Bani Khalid is a wadi about 203 km from Muscat, Oman. It is the best-known wadi of the Sharqiyah region. Its stream maintains a constant flow of water throughout the year. Large pools of water and boulders are scattered along the course of the wadi. As a geographical area, Wadi Bani Khalid covers a large swathe of low land and mountains.
Caves form some of the in...
Wadi El Rayan is a unique nature protectorate in Faiyum Governorate, Egypt, under the supervision of the Ministry of Environmental Affairs (EEAA).
Wadi el Rayan is mentioned in Coptic sources as Pilihēy (Coptic: ⲡⲓⲗⲓϩⲏⲩ, lit. 'possessing profit, useful'), a salt lake west of Kalamoun where Samuel the Confessor liked to rest.
The valley of Wadi El-Rayan is an ar...
Wadi Feiran or Wadi Faran is the southern Sinai Peninsula's largest and widest wadi. It is an intermittent stream and rises from the mountains around Saint Catherine's Monastery, at 2500 m above sea level.
It is one of the alleged sites of Rephidim, a station of the Exodus where Moses struck a rock caused it to spring water, allowing his people the Hebrews to drink.
W...
Wadi Ghuweir is located in the southern part of Jordan. Wadi Ghuweir means something like descending valley, so it describes the beginning of the valley, where the water flows down.
The Wadi Himara Palm Trees and Waterfall Trail is located along the Dead Sea. Jordan's tallest waterfall can only be reached by climbing up with ropes from the lower part, or by descending by ropes from the upper part.
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