Mitzpe Ramon

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Coordinates: 30°36′36″N, 34°48′″E

Mitzpe Ramon

Hebrew מִצְפֵּה רָמוֹן
Name meaning Ramon Lookout
Founded in 1950s
Government Local council
District South
Population 5,500 (2007)
Jurisdiction 86,000 dunams (86 km²)
Head of municipality Flora Shoshan

Mitzpe Ramon (Hebrew: מִצְפֵּה רָמוֹן‎, lit. Ramon Lookout) is a town in the Negev desert of southern Israel. It is situated on the northern ridge at an elevation of 2,400 feet (800m.) overlooking an enormous erosion cirque known as the Ramon Crater. This crater, or makhtesh, as it is called in Hebrew (a term also used by geologists around the world) is 28 miles long and five miles wide. It is a formation unique to Israel and the Sinai, some say.[who?] Others[who?] argue that there exist other similar phenomena in Turkestan and elsewhere in Central Asia's deserts. Makhtesh Ramon is the largest such crater in the world.[1]

In 2007, Mitzpe Ramon had a population of 5,500. The mayor is Flora Shoshan, sister of former Israeli defense minister Amir Peretz. Her husband, Sami Shoshan, was the previous mayor[2]

[edit] History

Mitzpe Ramon was originally founded in 1951 as a camp for the workers building the road to Eilat. The town's first permanent residents, immigrants from North Africa and Romania, settled there in the 1960s, and it became the southernmost of the Negev's development towns. Mitzpe Ramon remains small and struggling, with one of the highest unemployment rates in the country. One of the original opportunities for founding a town in this location was to take advantage of traffic on Route 40 traveling to and returning from Eilat in the south, a few nearby military bases and some chalk quarries. Several large military bases (with over 10,000 soldiers altogether) surround the town, including the large Ramon Airbase. The Wise Astronomy Observatory is located 5 km to the east.

The development of Mitzpe Ramon was adversely affected by the opening of Route 90 in the late 1960s. After the inauguration of this highway, traffic to and from Eilat bypassed Mitzpe Ramon almost entirely. However, growing interest in ecotourism, jeep trekking and hiking, and the upgrading of Route 40, which is considered a more scenic route to Eilat, have improved matters since the mid-1990s.

A hotel opened in Mitzpe Ramon in the late-1990s which has an indoor swimming pool. There is a Visitors Centre overlooking the Ramon Crater and the fit can walk down into the crater for a 4 to 5 hour treck without any shade. There is a llama and alpaca farm and other attractions.

Due to the desert climate, Mitzpe Ramon experiences very hot summers and cold winters.

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