Carry your bags and go far away


(Archaeological site of Axum)

The ruins of the ancient city of Axum are located near the northern border of Ethiopia. It was the center of the kingdom during Ancient Ethiopian times, when the Kingdom of Axum was the most powerful state between the Eastern Roman and Persian empires.

A large number of remains have been found in the area dating from the 1st to 13th centuries AD, including obelisks, large stone columns, royal cemeteries and ancient castles. Although the city of Axum lost political importance in the 10th century, the coronation of Ethiopian Kings was still held here. In 1980, UNESCO listed it as a cultural heritage and included it in the World Heritage List.

(Awash Valley)

It is one of the most important paleontological research sites on the African continent and is a major site for the study of human origins. The earliest evidence of human presence was found in the Awash Valley, where an upper jaw bone was found in a wash on a steep hillside, along with stone tools, the size and shape of the teeth, and the shape of the palatine bone were remarkably similar to Habilis found at East Turkana and Olduvai.

Ancient human fossils found at the site date back to 4 million years ago, providing solid evidence for the study of human evolutionary history and changing people's traditional understanding.

(Abbe Nuur)

Lake Abbe is a border lake between Ethiopia and the Republic of Djibouti. In the eastern Afar Plain. It is a fault lake with an elevation of 234 meters and a length and width of about 25 kilometers. The water is salty.

(Awash National Park)

Awash National Park is the oldest and most fully developed wildlife reserve in Ethiopia.

(Salavatn)

Lakes of south-central Ethiopia. In the rift zone, between Lake Abbiata and Lake Awasa. It is a fault lake. The lake is 1,567 meters above sea level. It is 26 kilometers long, 19 kilometers wide and covers an area of 450 square kilometers. The water depth is 266 meters. The water is salty. There are many creeks that feed, swell and receive water from Lake Abbiata.

(Omo trough)

Omo Valley, near Lake Tuakana, is one of the world's most famous prehistoric sites. A large number of humanoid fossils have been unearthed here, as well as a large number of teeth, mandibles, and various other skeletal remains. In addition, many stoneware tools from the Stoneware age have been excavated here. Evidence carried on these stone tools points to Omo Valley as one of the oldest known prehistoric campsites inhabited by humans to date.

(Semion National Park)

Semien National Park is located in the western Simen Mountains, in the Bogende province of northwest Ethiopia, 120 km northeast of Gonder. The park covers an area of 22,000 hectares and is between 1900 and 4430 meters above sea level. A vast undulating platform with lush vegetation, bordered by the northern edge of Ethiopia's Amhara Plateau.

The flowers and animals in the park, because of the special terrain and altitude range, relatively maintain the original state, has special value. It is also a refuge for many endangered animals, such as the liontail baboon, the tin fox, and the northern goat. The park combines African alpine forests, heather forests, alpine vegetation, tropical mountain grasslands and mountain upland swamps.

(simien mountains national park)

Located on a plateau in northern Ethiopia, about 500 kilometers from the capital Addis Ababa, it covers 225 square kilometers and has an average altitude of 4,000 meters.

At 4,620 meters, it is the fourth highest mountain in Africa. Mountain peaks towering, grotesque rocks, rugged mountain road difficult, only walking or riding mule can go up the mountain, the ideal place for mountaineering enthusiasts.

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