- On 2024.06.05
Band-e-Amir National Park
Band-e-Amir National Park (Dari: پارک
ملی بند امیر; Pashto: د امیر بند ملي پارک) is a national park in Afghanistan.
It was established on 22 May 2009 as Afghanistan first national park to promote
and protect the natural beauty of a series of intensely blue lakes created by
natural dams high in the Hindu Kush. Band-e-Amir is a chain of six lakes in the
mountainous desert of central Afghanistan. The lakes formed from mineral-rich
water that seeped out of faults and cracks in the rocky landscape. Over time,
the water deposited layers of hardened mineral (travertine) that built up into
walls that now contain the water. According to the Wildlife Conservation
Society (WCS), who helped the Afghan government set up the park, Band-e-Amir is
one of the few travertine systems in the world.
They were created by the carbon dioxide rich water oozing out of the faults and fractures to deposit calcium carbonate precipitate in the form of travertine walls that today store the water of these lakes. Band-e-Amir is one of the few rare natural lakes in the world which are created by travertine systems. The site of Band-e-Amir has been described as Afghanistan Grand Canyon National Park, and draws more than 100,000 local and foreign tourists annually.