The town of Gafsa sits on a hill above the oasis. The Gafsa Oases host 23 species of date palm, as well as 11 other species of fruit tree. The understory trees are mainly local varieties of olive. At the time of a
U.S. Department of Agriculture bulletin on
Date Varieties and Date Culture in Tunis published in 1906, “Tributary to the oasis of Gafsa itself are one or two other oases of small importance. Gafsa oasis contains from 50,000 to 65,000 date palms…The water supply is more than ample for the present extent of the oasis. The date is here hardly a more important crop than the olive, of which there are many thousands of trees. Oil varieties predominate. At the beginning of the Christian era Gafsa (then known as Capsa) was included in the great olive zone that extended from the east coast of Tunis across into Algeria, and of which only scattered fragments remain…The pomegranates of Gafsa are considered the best grown.“ According to a United Nations report: “The traditional social water management system has been largely replaced by the association of farmers for water management (
Groupement d’Intéret Collectif: GIC for water), the cooperative of agricultural services, Omda (responsible for the smallest administrative unit), the agricultural engineering services, and local farmer unions.” == History ==