Eshkol National Park

Eshkol National Park
גן לאומי אשכול
Blooming flowers & palm trees in the park
Map showing the location of Eshkol National Park
Location in Israel
Location Southern District, Israel
Coordinates 31°18′29.05″N 34°29′22.19″E / 31.3080694°N 34.4894972°E / 31.3080694; 34.4894972Coordinates: 31°18′29.05″N 34°29′22.19″E / 31.3080694°N 34.4894972°E / 31.3080694; 34.4894972
Eshkol National Park

Eshkol National Park (Hebrew: גן לאומי אשכול) is a national park located in Northern Negev, Israel, near Gaza.[1]

History

Ein Habesor spring

The 875-acre park offers lawns and shaded picnic areas and boasts at its centre the largest spring in the Nahal Besor/Wadi Ghazzeh basin, known in Hebrew as Ein HaBesor and in Arabic as Ein Shellal. The spring taps the near-surface aquifer, which is fed by the runoff of winter rains.[2]

East of the springs,[3] the mound of Khirbet Shellal dominates the landscape. At Shellal ANZAC troops discovered during the World War I Second Battle of Gaza an elaborate floor mosaic depicting a variety of animals,[4] part of the ruins of a Byzantine church. The mosaic is now displayed in the Australian War Memorial in Canberra.[2] Shellal is located some 3 km northeast, and across the valley of Nahal Besor/Wadi Ghazzeh, from the more famous biblical archaeological site of Tell el-Farah (South).

See also

References

  1. "Besor brook (Nahal Habesor) in the Eshkol National Park". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  2. 1 2 "The inauguration of the Anzac Trail in the Negev – May 2012". Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  3. Jewish National Fund, The Besor Park and Route
  4. Sketch of the mosaic at Fig. 11
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