Water and Salt

The Jordan River and the Dead Sea lie in the Middle East, forming part of the border between Israel and Jordan. For thousands of years, the Jordan River has been more than just a river, it’s been a source of life, a crossroads of cultures and a sacred symbol for Jews, Christians and Muslims. Yet today, this vital waterway is drying up. More than 90% of its natural flow has been diverted by Israel, Jordan and Syria for agricultural and domestic use.

The Dead Sea, once fed by the Jordan’s waters, is vanishing at an alarming rate, shrinking by nearly four feet (1.2 meters) per year and losing over 30% of its surface area in just fifty years. As the water recedes, another crisis is emerging: sinkholes. Thousands of these sudden, deep collapses have opened up along the shorelines, swallowing roads and palm groves. They form when underground salt layers, once held in place by the Dead Sea’s water, dissolve from freshwater intrusion, leaving behind unstable cavities. These sinkholes are a striking and dangerous sign of the region’s accelerating ecological collapse.

This long-term, ongoing project explores the ecological collapse of the Dead Sea and the broader theme of the global freshwater crisis.

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URBAN NATURE

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VICTORY STEPS