River Salwarpe
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| River Salwarpe | |
|---|---|
River Salwarpe in Vines Park, Droitwich | |
| Location | |
| Country | England |
| Counties | Worcestershire |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Mouth | |
• location | River Severn |
• coordinates | 52°14′20″N 2°14′00″W / 52.2388°N 2.2334°W |
| Length | 32.8 km (20.4 mi) |
| Basin size | 196 km2 (76 sq mi) |
| Discharge | |
| • location | Harford Hill |
| • average | 1.35 m3/s (48 cu ft/s) |
The River Salwarpe is a 20.4 miles (32.8 km) long river in Worcestershire, England. It is a left bank tributary of the River Severn, which it joins near Hawford.[1][2]
The Salwarpe is formed by the confluence of the Battlefield and Spadesbourne Brooks in Bromsgrove; it then passes Stoke Prior, Upton Warren, Wychbold, and Droitwich.[1] Downstream of Droitwich, it passes Salwarpe, and then meets the River Severn, near Hawford.[2]
Andrew Yarranton attempted unsuccessfully to make it navigable in the 1660s, but in the 21st century a stretch of the river in Droitwich was canalized to link the Barge and Junction sections of the Droitwich Canal.[3][4]
Tributaries include the Elmbridge, Hadley and Hen brooks.[1][2]
Hydrology
The flow of the Salwarpe has been measured in its lower reaches at Harford Hill since 1958. The long-term record shows that the catchment of 184 square kilometres (71 sq mi) to the gauging station yielded an average flow of 1.35 cubic metres per second (48 cu ft/s).[5] The highest river level recorded at the station occurred in January 1960 with a height of 2.69 metres (8 ft 10 in), giving a corresponding flow of 39 cubic metres per second (1,400 cu ft/s).[6]
The Salwarpe catchment upstream of the station has an average annual rainfall of 666 millimetres (26.2 in) and a maximum altitude of 294 metres (965 ft) at Beacon Hill, in Lickey Hills Country Park at its north-eastern edge. Land use is primarily agricultural arable and grassland.[7]