:''For the Jebel Akhdar region of Oman, see
Jebel Akhdar (Oman)''.

View from Jebel Akhdar in Libya near Benghazi is Libya's wettest region. Annual rainfall averages at between 400 and 600 millimeters.
'Al'Jabel Al'Akhdar' (
Arabic: 'الجبل الأخضر' meaning ''The Green Mountain'') is a heavily forested, fertile upland area in eastern
Libya. It is located in the modern
municipality of
Al Jabal al Akhdar.
The region is one of the very few forested areas of Libya, one of the least
forested countries on Earth.
Jebel Akhdar consists of a mountainous
plateau (rising in some places to an altitude of 500 m/1,600 ft) cut by several valleys. It lies north of
Benghazi and south of
Derna. It is the wettest part of Libya, receiving some 600 mm/24 inches of
precipitation annually. This rainfall means that the area has large forests, and enjoys rich fruit, potato, and cereal agriculture, something of a rarety in the arid country.
The ancient
Greek colony of
Cyrene was located in a lush valley in the Jebel Akhdar.
The Libyan leader
Omar Mukhtar used this heavily forested mountainous region to resist the
Italian military occupation of Libya for more than twenty years, where he organized and devised strategies for the Libyan
resistance against the Italian
colonization.
External links
★
Lonely Planet page on Jebel Akhdar and Cyrene