This article is about the river valley. For the Neolithic site, see Wadi Shuʿeib (archaeological site).
Wadi Shueib (Arabic: وادي شُعَيب), Arabic for the Valley of Jethro and properly Wadi Shuʿeib but with many variant romanisations, is a wadi in Jordan.[1]
The alluvial fan of the wadi where it enters the southern part of the eastern Jordan Valley is known as Wadi Nimrin, which leads into the Jordan River. The site of Tell Nimrin is located at the southern end of Wadi Nimrin.[2][3]
^Talozi (2007), p. 80.
^Alexander Ahrens, "From the Southern Jordan Valley Plains to the Transjordanian Plateau: Current Archaeological Fieldwork in the Wadi Shuʿaib, Jordan", The Ancient Near East Today, October 2019 Vol. VII, No. 10
^Gafny, S. et al. (2010), Map of the Lower Jordan River, retrieved 14 April 2020
majority town in the central Jordanian governorate of Balqa. It lies in WadiShueib between Salt and Amman, at a distance of 6 and 13 kilometers respectively...
Ghrubba, Yesodot, Teluliot Batashi, Tel Lachish, Tel Ali, Abu Zurayq, WadiShueib, Dhra′, Khirbet ed-Dharih, Nizzanim, and En Esur. Very few burials have...
(14 Apr) SS1 11:33 WadiShueib 1 8.65 km Leg cancelled SS2 12:16 Mount Nebo 1 11.09 km SS3 13:03 Ma'in 1 17.00 km SS4 15:30 WadiShueib 2 8.65 km SS5 16:13...
Kafrain 1 16.49 km M. Hirvonen 11:02.5 89.6 km/h J. Latvala SS18 08:10 WadiShueib 1 9.18 km S. Loeb 7:10.1 76.8 km/h M. Hirvonen SS19 09:13 Jordan River...