River Salwarpe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CountryEngland
location
River Severn
coordinates
52°14′20″N 2°14′00″W / 52.2388°N 2.2334°W / 52.2388; -2.2334
River Salwarpe
River Salwarpe in Vines Park, Droitwich
River Salwarpe is located in Worcestershire
River Salwarpe
Location within Worcestershire
Location
CountryEngland
CountiesWorcestershire
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
  location
River Severn
  coordinates
52°14′20″N 2°14′00″W / 52.2388°N 2.2334°W / 52.2388; -2.2334
Length32.8 km (20.4 mi)
Basin size196 km2 (76 sq mi)
Discharge 
  locationHarford Hill
  average1.35 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]

Water quality

See also

References

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