[1][2] It gives its name to the Bronze Age ruins located at its mouth with the Dead Sea.
[3] Here the river flows adjacent to the archaeological site, of Numeira.
The river is significantly eroding the archaeological site, destroying perhaps as much as ½ the original settlement due to changes in the water course.
[4] In 1943 Nelson Glueck mentioned Seil en-Numeirah (seil meaning stream), a stream that flows into the southern end of the Dead Sea.
This article related to a river in Jordan is a stub.