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This is a view of a portion of the Dam complex across the Nahal Tanninim (also Taninim; Crocodile Stream). It is located about 2.6 mi. north northeast of Caesarea. The Dam was built to block up the Tanninim Stream so that a 1,500-acre lake formed behind it. The elevated water level of the lake (about 9 feet) was the major source of water for the Low Level Aqueduct.
Later, in the Byzantine and Ottoman Periods, water-operated flour mills were constructed in the area.
The stream was named "Tanninim" — Hebrew for crocodiles (תנינים/תנין) — because these reptiles inhabited the nearby Kebara swamps until the beginning of the 20th century.
This photo was taken in the 1970s, prior to the development of this place as a Nature Reserve.