(Redirected from Lake Hula)

Hula Valley, seen from the Golan Heights.
The 'Hulah Valley' or 'Hula Valley' (in
Hebrew: עמק החולה, ''`Emeq ha-Hūlāh'') is an
agricultural region in northern
Israel with abundant fresh water. It is an important bottleneck site for birds migrating along the
Syrian-African Rift Valley between
Africa,
Europe, and
Asia
'Lake Hulah' or 'Lake Hula' (the
Biblical 'Lake Merom') and its surrounding swamps were drained in the
1950s as an attempt to alter
the environment to suit agricultural needs. Though initially perceived as a great national achievement for Israel, with time it became evident that the benefits from transforming the "wasteland" of Lake Hula and its swamps were limited. In the past few years, following nearly 50 years of an unsuccessful struggle to utilize the drained valley's resources, the Israeli government has finally recognized that successful development can endure only if a balanced compromise between nature and development is reached. Thus, a small section of the former lake and swamp region was recently reflooded in an attempt to prevent further soil deterioration and to revive the nearly extinct ecosystem.
Topography
The Hula Valley lies within the northern part of the
Syrian-African Rift Valley at an elevation of about 70 metres above sea level.
On both sides of the valley are steep slopes -- the
Golan Heights to the east and the Upper
Galilee mountains to the west, rise to 400 to 900 metres above
sea level.
Basaltic hills of about 200 metres above sea level along the southern side of the valley intercept the
Jordan River, and are commonly referred to as the basalt "plug" (actually a temporary
geologic base level), as they restrict water drainage downstream into the
Sea of Galilee (Lake Kinneret).
The Hula Valley covers an area of 177 square kilometres (25 km by 6-8 km).
Climate
The climate of the Hula Valley today is
Mediterranean, with hot dry
summers and cool rainy
winters. However, the mountain-enclosed
topography of the Hula Valley leads to more extreme seasonal, as well as daily, temperature fluctuations.
Annual
rainfall varies greatly between different parts of the valley and ranges from about 400 millimetres in the south of the valley, to up to 800 millimetres in the north of the valley .
More than 1,500 millimetres of precipitation falls on the
Hermon mountain range (mostly in the form of snow), feeding underground springs, including the sources of the
Jordan River, all eventually flowing through the valley.
The wind regime is dominated by regional patterns in the winter, with occasional strong north-easterly wind storms (in
Arabic these storms are called
Sharkiyah).
Names
Lake Hula was referred to by many different names:
In the
14th century BCE, the Egyptians called the lake - Samchuna. The
Tanakh records it as Merom. In the
1st century CE, the Jewish historian
Flavius Josephus termed it Semechonitis. In
Aramaic the lake was called Hulata or Ulata. In the Talmud it is called Yam Sumchi - i.e. Sea of Sumchi. Currently the lake is called Buheirat el Huleh in
Arabic and Agam ha-Hula in
Hebrew.
The "Waters of Merom" has sometimes been used erroneously in scientific literature, although that term refers specifically to
springs on the western side of the valley.
History
Prior to its drainage in the 1950s, Lake Hula was 5.3 kilometres long and 4.4 kilometres wide, extending over 12-14 square kilometres. It was about one and a half metres deep in summer and three metres deep in winter.
The lake attracted human settlement from early
prehistoric times.
Paleolithic archaeological remains were found near the Bnot Yaakov ("Daughters of Jacob") bridge at the southern end of the valley. The first permanent settlements, Enan (Mallaha), dating from 9,000-10,000 years ago was discovered in the valley.
The Hula Valley was a main junction on the important trade route connecting the large commercial centre of
Damascus with the eastern
Mediterranean coast and
Egypt.
During the
Bronze Age, the cities of
Hazor and
Layish were built at key locations on this route approximately 4,000 years ago. At the end of the
13th century BCE, the Israelite tribe of
Dan destroyed the city of
Layish and built in its place a new city which they named Dan, and for about 400 years, the Israelites ruled over the Hula Valley until it was captured by the Assyrian armies of
Tiglath-Pileser III and its inhabitants were driven away. The Bible records the lake "Merom" as the site of a victory of
Joshua over the
Canaanites. (Josh. 11:5-7)
Throughout the
Hellenistic,
Roman,
Byzantine and early Arab periods (fourth century BCE to eighth centuries CE) rural settlement in the Hula Valley was uninterrupted. During the
Seleucid Empire, a town
Seleucia Samulias was founded on the lake.
Traditional crops were
rice (as early as the Hellenistic period),
cotton and
sugar cane (Brought by the
Arabs following their conquest in
636),
sorghum and
maize.
Water buffalo were introduced in the eighth century supplying
milk and serving as beasts of burden.
The first modern Jewish settlement in the Hula Valley,
Yesod Hamaala on the western shore of the lake, was established in
1883 during
the first aliyah. In total, by
1948 there were 12 Jewish and 23 Arab settlements in the Hula Valley. Following the establishment of Israel and the
1948 Arab-Israeli War, the Arab inhabitants fled the valley to neighbouring Arab countries.
Numerous
kibbutzim, including
Kfar Blum, are in the Hula Valley.
The Drainage of the Lake
The draining operations, carried out by the
Jewish National Fund (JNF), began in 1951 and were completed by 1958. It was achieved by two main engineering operations: The deepening and widening of the Jordan River downstream; and two newly-dug peripheral canals diverting the Jordan at the north of the valley.
As concern was voiced by scientists and naturalists who opposed the project because they viewed the swamps as an ecological treasure that must be preserved for future generations, a small (3.50 km²) area of papyrus swampland in the southwest of the valley was set aside and in 1963, became
Israel's first
nature reserve.
Lake Agmon
Lake Agmon, located in the southern part of the Hula Valley in the area that once served as the transition between Lake Hula and the surrounding swamps was created as part of the rehabilitation program of the valley. This new lake is shallower and much smaller than the original lake. It has an irregular shape, covering an area of one square kilometre with mostly less than one metre depth of water.
Several smaller islands were created in the middle of the lake, to provide protected nesting sites for birds.
See also
Species that became
extinct by the drainng of the lake:
★ ''
Acanthobrama hulensis''
★
Israel painted frog
Sources
★
Lake Hula and Lake Agmon, Jewish Virtual Library
★
Photos of Hulah Valley
★
Photos of Hulah Valley