Soummam River

The Soummam River (pronounced [som'm]) is a river in northern Algeria, born from the confluence of the Oued Sahel and the Oued Bou Sellam near Akbou and flowing into the Mediterranean Sea at Béjaïa.

Soummam
Location
CountryAlgeria
ProvinceBejaia
CityAkbou
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationAkbou, Algeria
MouthMediterranean Sea
  location
Bejaia
  coordinates
36°43′46″N 5°04′35″E
Basin features
Protection status
Official nameVallée de l'oued Soummam
Designated18 December 2009
Reference no.1898[1]
Soummam River

Description

The waters that reach the sea in this place have for their origins the Mounts of Ain Oulmane, south of Setif, Mount Dirah, south of Bouira, and the extreme west of Djurdjura. It is in fact that the physical geography of the region places the southernmost sources of the Soummam at the limits of the semi-arid zone characterized by rigors linked to the continental climate, whereas the closest sources are located in the territories Humid to temperate climate. The Soummam constitutes a dense and well-supplied hydrographic network, particularly in its part situated in the Tellian Atlas: Djurdjura, Babors and Bibans. Its watershed covers an area of 9 200 km2 spread over four wilayas: Bouira, Bordj Bou Arréridj, Sétif and Béjaïa. With the Cheliff, the Tafna and the Rhummel, the Soummam is one of the largest rivers of Algeria.

Oued Soummam drains a catchment area of 9 200 km2 divided as follows:


River valley

The valley of the Soummam is named after the river which crosses it. It is located in Kabylia, a region of northern Algeria, occupying a wide corridor in the wilaya of Bejaia. The Béni Mansour-Bejaïa line is a regional railway that closely follows this river valley and connects to the national rail network in the municipality of Boudjellil.

Between the Akfadou-Gouraya set in the north, the Biban chain (the historic territory of the Ait Abbas) in the south-east and the Sahel-Djurdjura valley (Tazmalt commune) in the south-west. The Soummam valley, which extends from Akbou to Béjaia, appears as a narrow winding corridor 65 km long (inside the wilaya of Béjaïa) over a maximum width of 4 km at El Kseur.

The slopes particularly to the south, are relatively mild slopes and therefore very developed. This area is broken down into small pedological units: the flysch prevails in Akbou, the sandstone is predominant in El Kseur.

The municipalities of Amizour, El Kseur, Ouzellaguen and Timezrit have vast areas suitable for rich crops such as market gardening and fruit growing.

Hydrology

The Soummam valley is drained by a dense hydrographic network, composed of numerous permanent and intermittent rivers, of which the Oued Soummam represents the main collector. According to the hydrological data collected between 1961 and 1976, the average flow of the Soummam is 25 m³ / s7. During the 1970 flood period, the maximum recorded flow was 115.9 m³ / s and the low flow (during the months of July and August) dropped to 0.6 m3 / s. Indeed, these flows show great irregularities inter-annual, and therefore seasonal.

At its mouth, the Soummam has a contribution of 700,106 m³ / year of water which it diversifies in the Mediterranean Sea (Visiterv, 1987). The main input comes from the tributaries of the left bank, with an average total of 68.106 m³ / year, and the tributaries of the right bank discharge an average of 25 × 106 m³ / year. The tributaries of the left bank are located on slopes that are more watered in rain and snow, enabling them to channel a greater surface flow than the slopes drained by the tributaries of the right bank.

Name

The word Soummam is a distortion of the word kabyle "assemmam", which means "acid". Pliny the Elder had cited the Soummam as being called "Nasava" by Ptolemy.[2][3][4][5]

References

  1. "Vallée de l'oued Soummam". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  2. Musee de Sculpture Antique et Moderne consultéd 2015-08-28
  3. Thomas Shaw Voyages dans plusieurs provinces de la Barbarie et du Levant, contenant des observations geographiques, physiques et philologiques sur les royaumes d'Alger et de Tunis, sur la Syrie, l'Egypte et l'Arabie pénétrée (1743)page
  4. Thomas Shaw, Voyage dans plusieurs provinces de la Barbarie et du Levant (1743)
  5. Joseph Guadet Dictionnaire universel abrégé de géographie ancienne compare (Desray, 1820).
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