Lake Jabboul
Today the Sabkhat al-Jabbul exists within a closed basin, but during the Pleistocene the basin filled, overflowed and formed a tributary of the Euphrates. The lake traditionally flooded in the spring, shrinking back during the summer and autumn. However, starting in 1988, irrigation projects on adjacent lands started discharging significant amounts of partially saline water into the basin, stabilizing the water table and creating a lake of 100 km (39 sq mi).
Resource use
Primary uses of the area include waterfowl hunting, livestock grazing on the surrounding steppe and salt extraction. Al-Jubbul is the major source of salt in Syria, other sources include Lake Jayrud, Rif Dimashq Governorate, to the northeast of Damascus and Lake Khatuniyah (Khatunia), Al-Hasakah Governorate, to the northeast of Al-Hasakah, near the village of Al Hawi and the Iraqi border.
Use of salt
Rock salt from Sabkhat al-Jabbul was used in the "salt rooms" at Sednaya Prison. The rooms were used as mortuaries to preserve dead bodies of inames in the absence of refrigerated morgues.
Notes
- ^ "Sabkhat al-Jabbul Nature Reserve". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
- ^ Name used in the Syria article Encyclopædia Britannica 2005 edition, volume 28, page 363
- ^ "SY006: Sabkhat al-Jabbul" BirdLife IBA Factsheet
- ^ Carter, Terry (editor) (2004) "National Parks and Reserves: Syria" Syria & Lebanon (2nd edition) Lonely Planet Publications, Footscray, Victoria, Australia, page 59
- ^ "'My heart died': Ex-prisoners haunted by Syria's 'salt rooms'". Al Jazeera English. 15 September 2022. Retrieved 10 December 2024.
Further reading
- Evans, Michael I. (editor) (1994) Important Bird Areas in the Middle East (BirdLife Conservation Series No.2.) BirdLife International, Cambridge, England, ISBN 0-946888-28-0
External links
- "Jabbul Salty Lake سبخة جبول" photograph from Panoramio
- "Jabbul Salty Lake" photographs from Syria Looks