Seybouse River
Seybouse | |
---|---|
Native name | وادي سيبوس |
Location | |
Country | Algeria |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | Medjez Amar, Tell Atlas Algeria |
Mouth | |
• location | Mediterranean Sea, near Annaba, Algeria |
• elevation | 0 m (0 ft) |
Length | 225 km (140 mi) |
Basin size | 6,471 km2 (2,498 sq mi) |
Discharge | |
• average | 11.5 m3/s (410 cu ft/s) at Guelma and Annaba |
Seybouse (Arabic: وادي سيبوس Oued Seybouse) is a river in northeastern Algeria, near the border with Tunisia. In Roman times, it was called the Ubus.
Course[]
The river runs for about 225 kilometres (140 mi), flowing through Guelma and Annaba Provinces. It starts in Medjez Amar, in the Tell Atlas north-west of Guelma Province. Its flows into the Mediterranean Sea at Seybouse (called Joannonville under French rule) to the south-east of the city of Annaba.[1] Its mouth is just north of Sidi Salem, the site of Hippo Regius where Saint Augustine lived in AD 391–430.
The Seybouse is used for irrigation of agricultural areas, but it is becoming polluted because of industrial activities.[2]
Characteristics[]
Element | Amount |
---|---|
Flow | 11.5 m³/s |
Temperature | 21.41 °C |
pH | 8.21 |
Oxygen saturation | 36.61% |
DBO1 | 18.33 |
DCO2 | 124.3 |
Nitrates (NO3) | 5.58 |
PO4−3 | 2.29 |
Ammonium | 9.18 |
References[]
External links[]
Coordinates: 36°52′01″N 7°46′18″E / 36.86694°N 7.77167°E
Categories:
- Rivers of Algeria
- Geography of Guelma Province
- Geography of Annaba Province
- Constantinois geography stubs
- Africa river stubs
- Algeria geography stubs