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Encyclopedia > Abbay River

The Abay River is a river in Ethiopia. Locally it is also known as the Gihon after the river flowing out of the Garden of Eden in the Bible. The river is considered holy by many in Ethiopia. The river forms the first portion of the Blue Nile, and the majority of the water in the Nile originates in the Abay.


The river rises at Lake Tana and loops through northeast Ethiopia before heading into Sudan where it becomes the Blue Nile. After rising at Lake Tana the river flows for some thirty kilometers before plunging over the Tis Issat Water Falls, that are today covered by a hydroelectric dam. The river then travels through a series of deep valleys and canyons. Some of the earliest human remains have been found in this area.




  Results from FactBites:
 
Abay River - Biocrawler (152 words)
The Abay River is a river in Ethiopia.
The river forms the first portion of the Blue Nile, and the majority of the water in the Nile originates in the Abay.
After rising at Lake Tana the river flows for some thirty kilometers before plunging over the Tis Issat Water Falls, that are today covered by a hydroelectric dam.
Ethiopia -- Entotto to the River Baro (23716 words)
The Kaffa highlands are populated by Sidamo, and the region to the north of the Abbay is settled by Abyssinians (Amhara).59
The latter extends from the Awash River to the Baro River in the west and from Abbay to Kaffa in the south.
The first occupy the territory between the Kassam and Awash Rivers; the second are found to the south of the Abbay River and to the west of the upper Awash.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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