የዳሎል ኤርታሌ መታሰቢያ ቴምብር

Dallol-Erta Ale

Stamp Info
Stamp ID: 0656
Size:
30X40 mm
Quantity:
100,000
Date of Issue:
August 26, 2014
Denominations:
Birr 0.25, 0.30, 0.35, 0.45, 0.65, 4.00
Process of Printing:
Lithography in four colors
Printed by:
OSD(Austria)

Stamp Introduction

Each First day covers Envelopes are available as Addis Ababa. General post office philatelic section and all post offices Branches. The stamps are on sale in post offices starting From August 26/2014 orders stamps, FDCs (in advance Payment) the Ethiopian Postal Service Enterprise philatelic team P.O.BOX 1112 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia።

The Great Rift Valley

The Great Rift Valley is one of an amazing land features on earth formed by subterranean forces ripped the earth’s crust and stretching from Lebanon to Mozambique. The Ethiopian sector of the East African Rift system extends for more than 1000 km in a North east-South west to North -South direction from the Afar depression, at Red Sea-Gulf of Aden junction, southwards to the Turkana depression. In central Ethiopia the Great Rift Valley splits the Ethiopian highlands into northern and southern halves, and the Ethiopian Rift Valley lakes occupy the floor of the rift valley between the two highlands.

The Ethiopian Great Rift Valley is marked by the lakes of Zeway, Shala, Abyata, Langano, Awassa, Chamo and Abaya. These lakes are habitats for many aquatic animals and plants including the endemics. The lakes are favored for bird watching and are sanctuaries for aquatic birds, hippopotamus, crocodiles and fish species like Nile perch, catfish, tilapia and tiger fish.

National parks are also part of this Rift valley system constituting well conserved bio diversity, large population of mammals and therapeutic hot springs. Here, one cannot only enjoy nature but also the interaction between nature and authentic local culture.

Erta-Ale Active volcano

Erta Ale is a continuously active basaltic shield volcano in the Afar Regional state. In local Afar language, Erta-Ale means ‘smoking mountain’. Its height is 613 meters (2,011 ft.) and since it is located within a depression, that’s below sea level, Erta-Ale is one of world’s lowest volcanoes. And it is one of only a handful of continuously active volcanos in the world.

The volcano contains a 0.7 x 1.6 km elliptical summit crater with several steep-sided pit craters, one of them containing a lava lake. Another larger 1.8 x 3.1 km wide depression, elongated parallel to the trend of the Erta-Ale range is located to the South east of the summit and is bounded by curvilinear fault scarps on the South east side. Fresh-looking basaltic lava flows from these fissures have poured into the caldera and locally overflowed its rim.

Erta-Ale is one of the main attractions of the Danakil, and had become a popular destination in recent years as it is one of the only five known volcano’s with lava lakes globally: Erta Ale often has two active lava lakes.

Dankil Depression

The Dankil Depression, in Afar regional state, is a rift valley that parallels the Red Sea in northern Ethiopia. It is a minor structure related to the rift between Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. As the the floor of the Danakil Depression subsides. After millions of years of subsidence, the deepest part of the depression is about 410 feet below sea level. It is one of the lowest points on Earth.

Dankil is one of the world’s most spectacular landscapes: a vast area of uplifted thick salt deposits affected by intense fumarolic activity, probably caused by an active volcanic system beneath several kilometers of evaporation salt deposits. The amazing colors seen at the site, white yellow, green and red ochre are due to the strong presence of Sulphur, iron oxide, salt and other minerals. This creates a felling of presence at some where extra terrestrial.

Dallol is also part of the depression, one of the hottest places year-round anywhere on Earth. The climate varies from around 25 °C (77 °F) during the rainy season (September – March) to 48 °C (118 °F) during the dry season (March – September). Dallol currently holds the official record for record high average temperature for an inhabited location on Earth, where an average annual temperature of 35°C (96°F) was recorded between the years 1960 and 1966.

Source: Ministry of culture and tourism office.