| Themes > Science > Paleontology / Paleozoology > Fossils And Fossilisation > Hakel Museum |
|
Fishing
generally conjures up water, while fishing in the village of Haqel
conjures up only one thing: rocks. Water fishing A
Brief on Haqel
Birth
of the Museum In
the heart of Haqel, Rizkallah Nohra, a local, has founded, with a modest
capital, the first museum of fossilized fish in Lebanon. The whole
adventure began in 1970 when Nohra, a seven year-old boy back then,
started to gather some stones with peculiar designs and engravings, from a
piece of land owned by his family in Haqel.
This hobby became more of a passion as years went by. But Nohra did
not realize that a treasure was hidden in his hometown until some
historians, scientists and geologists visited the village and assessed the
scientific value of these 100 million year-old fossils. This evidence
encouraged Nohra to pursue digging even more using very rudimentary and
conventional tools in order to enrich his fossil collection of fish,
plants, shells, snakes, and crustaceans. However,
Nohra always had a dream which he wanted to come true; to create an
international standard museum. Unfortunately, such project didn’t’ see
the light yet due to his small resources and lack of support from the
government. Undeterred by
such obstacles, Nohra started to restore, on his own, a typical old
Lebanese village house where he could gather and display all the fossils
he had collected over the past twenty years. 1991 witnessed the opening of
the first natural history museum for marine fossils. The museum was later
qualified by geologists and scientists as one of the most important in the
world for its collection of the most
rare specimen of all kinds of fish fossils. Origins
and Discovery The
first serious study of the existence of fossilized fish in Lebanon,
especially in Haqel, was done by a French Scientist in the 19th
century. Many speculations and suggestions have subsequently arisen as to
the existence of the fish in the mountain rather than in a cave or mine.
One explanation is that millions of years ago, the Mediterranean Sea
covered most of the Lebanese territory, denoted in the existence of
fossilized shells in the mountains and highlands such as Dahr El Baydar.
The second explanation would be the eruption of the most violent
earthquake in world history, which crossed the lands of Anadol all the way
to Madagascar Island, and given rise to the Bekaa Valley as well as the
Eastern and Western mountain chains. Today,
Haqel is a renowned tourist attraction and research center for experts in
the field. Penciled in the world’s science books, the museum currently
displays a range of 350 to 400 types of fish, out of which only 20% are
famous discovered fossils that bear special Latin appellations. Specimens
of these fossils are offered at very affordable prices that fluctuate
according to size and type. As for the rare and unique pieces, they are
carefully taken care of and permanently exposed at the museum, not for
sale. Haqel has provided
hundreds of museums and colleges, as well as thousands of amateur fossil
collectors in the world with fossilized fish. Nohra still foresees the day
when he will see the establishment of his dream museum which will enable
him to accommodate the huge number of existing fossils which increase day
after day. On
the occasion of the historical visit to Lebanon of His Holiness Pope Jean
Paul II, two of the most scientifically valuable fossils of two rare fish:
the Aipichthys and the Cyclobatis, were offered to His Holiness in boxes
made of wood from Lebanon. Haqel:
(small paragraph on the origin of the name) The origin of the name Haqel is Aramaic meaning “field” in English and referred to as Hâqel in Syriac. The origin of the root “Khalq” is paralleled in Arabic with “Halq” meaning piece or share. A piece of land was later referred to as “Haqel”. The village is reached via Jbeil Road, going through Amchit, Hbelin, and Obaidat. |
|
|