The Dead Sea is still shrinking fast, with water levels continuing to drop at the rate of about 1 meter per year, indicate reports.
The Dead Sea is still shrinking fast, with water levels continuing to drop at the rate of about 1 meter per year, indicate reports.
Praised far and wide for the reputed healing powers of its minerals and waters, the Dead Sea has been luring visitors for thousands of years.But these days, tourists see a very different lake from the one that others would have witnessed a few decades ago.
According to a report in National Geographic News, the sea sits in the lowest place on earth, and for years, the water level was 1280 feet below sea level. However, in the last 40 years, it's dropped more than 80 feet.
Today, the Dead Sea continues to drop at the rate of about 1 meter per year.
This dramatic shortage is particularly evident at Israel's Ein Gedi Spa, on the southern shores of the Dead Sea.
"The beach was here, and now (it's) far away. You can see it's more than one kilometer from here. In 30 years, the beach (will have) disappeared," said Alon Shachal, Ein Gedi Spa Manager.
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"After the '60's, we started to see a dramatic decrease in the surface area of the Dead Sea. And according to the different studies, in 50 years from now, at the same rate, which is 1 meter per year of drop in the surface level of the Dead Sea, means that this sea will not be the same. It will be more of a very small lake; not the same area that we have today," said Iyad Aburdeieneh, Project Coordinator, Friends of the Earth Middle East Bethlehem.
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"Ninety-five per cent of its waters have been diverted by Israel, by Syria, by Jordan, so that what's left in the Jordan River - a river holy to half of humanity - is little more than agriculture runoff, fish farm waste and, mostly, untreated sewage waters," he said.
Source-ANI
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