Mareb River

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Mareb River
File:Kassala,Gash river.jpg
The dry river at Kassala
Other name Gash or al-Qash
Origin 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) south-west Asmara
Mouth dissipate in the sands of the eastern Sudanese plains
Basin countries Eritrea, Ethiopia, Sudan
Length 440 km (270 mi)
Avg. discharge 21.6 m3/s (760 cu ft/s)
Basin area 31,000 km2 (12,000 sq mi)
Left tributaries Sarana River, Balasa River, 'Engweya River, Gala River
Right tributaries Obel River

The Mareb River (or Gash River), is a river flowing out of central Eritrea. Its chief importance is defining part of the boundary between Eritrea and Ethiopia, between the point where the Mai Ambassa enters the river at Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. to the confluence of the Balasa with the Mareb at Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..[1]

Course

According to the Statistical Abstract of Ethiopia for 1967/68, the Mereb River is 440 kilometres (270 mi) long. The Ethiopian Ministry of Water Resources reports its Ethiopian catchment area as 5,700 square kilometres (2,200 sq mi), with an annual runoff of 0.26 billion cubic meters.[2] Other sources talking about a catchmant of 21,000 square kilometres (8,100 sq mi) to 44,000 square kilometres (17,000 sq mi) over all, and a discharge of 21.6 cubic metres per second (760 cu ft/s) in average over the year, and 870 cubic metres per second (31,000 cu ft/s) in peaks.[3] Its headwaters rise south-west of Asmara in central Eritrea. It flows south, bordering Ethiopia, then west through western Eritrea to reach the Sudanese plains near Kassala. Unlike the Setit or Takazze rivers, which flow out of Ethiopia and also forms a natural border with Eritrea, the waters of the Mareb do usually not reach the Nile[4] but dissipate in the sands of the eastern Sudanese plains.

The Mareb is dry for much of the year, but like the Takazze is subject to sudden floods during the rainy season; only the left bank of the upper course of the Mareb is in Ethiopian territory. Its main tributaries are the Obel River on the right bank (in Eritrea) and the Sarana, Balasa, Mai Shawesh, and 'Engweya Rivers on the left (in Ethiopia).

History

The Mareb was important historically as the boundary between two separately governed regions in the area: the land of the Bahr negash (Tigrinya "kingdom of the sea", also known as Medri Bahri or "land of/by the sea") to the north of the river, and the Tigray to the south. The territories under the Bahr negash extended as far north as the Red Sea coast, and as far south (and west) as Shire[5] and the capital was at Debarwa in modern Eritrea, about 20 miles (30 km) south of Asmara.

Wildlife

The river's Eritrean floodplain was the location of a 2001 sighting of a sizable elephant herd, the first such sighting in Eritrea since 1955.[6]

See also

References

  1. Eritrea - Ethiopia Boundary Commission Decision Regarding Delimitation of the Border..., pp. 97, 102
  2. "Water Sector Development Program (Vol.2)" Ministry of Water Resources (accessed 21 January 2009)
  3. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT KASSALA
  4. Adequacy of satellite derived rainfall data for stream flow modeling
  5. Daniel Kendie, The Five Dimensions of the Eritrean Conflict 1941 – 2004: Deciphering the Geo-Political Puzzle (United States of America: Signature Book Printing, 2005), pp. 17-8.
  6. BBC Wildlife magazine, July 2003, retrieved at [1] on 28 Sept 2007

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