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Rhumel River

Coordinates: 36°52′17″N 6°04′59″E / 36.8713°N 6.0830°E / 36.8713; 6.0830
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The Rhumel and the Roman bridge

The Rhumel River (Tamazight: ⴰⵎⵒⵙⴰⴳⴰ, also Rhummel, Rummel, El-Kebîrl; Arabic: وادي الرمال), in antiquity, the river was called Ampsaga.[1][2] is the largest river in the Constantine region of Algeria. In ancient times, the river was called Ampsaga.[3][4][5]

Geography

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The source of the Rhumel river is in the Ferdjioua (Mila) mountains. From there it meanders through the Constantine plateau, then narrows considerably north of Aïn Smara where it forms an almost complete oxbow before infiltrating, in a SW/NE orientation, the Djebel El Hadjar limestone tables and the Aïn El Bey plateau.

The Rhumel gorges and the El Kantara bridge

From here, it flows into a narrow ravine near Boussouf, goes through several curves, and becomes very narrow again at a place called "the Roman arches". This leads to the entrance to the Kheneg gorges, whose huge eastern pillar, called "Tiddis mountain", is the site of Tiddis, a significant Berber and Roman city that was explored by the archaeologist André Berthier.[6] Not far away is the village of Messaoud Boudjriou (previously Aïn-Kerma) and its old antimony mine.

The Rhumel gorges

The lower Rhumel (or Oued-el-Kebir) passes through deep gorges in the Numidian mountains and empties into the sea east of the Gulf of Jijel.

Rhumel canyon, north side, Constantine, Algeria

Tributaries

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The main tributary of the Rhumel is the Oued-Boumerzoug which rises in the region of Aïn M'lila. Its waters are widely used for irrigation, and the important spa of Ain Fesguia is located towards the head of the valley. This tributary supplies drinking water to the city of Constantine, which is highly prone to flooding being situated at the confluence of the Boumerzoug and the Rhumel.[7]

Another tributary is the Oued Dekri, near the town of Chelghoum Laïd 50 km southwest of Constantine.

References

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  1. ^ Février, P.-A.; E. B (1985-11-01). "Ampsaga/Amsaga" (in French). pp. 606–608. ISSN 1015-7344. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  2. ^ "L'histoire de la Maurétanie". www.cosmovisions.com. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  3. ^ "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), AMPSAGA". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  4. ^ "L'histoire de la Maurétanie". www.cosmovisions.com. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  5. ^ "dictionnaire illustré latin français". micmap.org. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  6. ^ Dussaud, René (1952). "André Berthier. — Tiddis, antique Castellum Tidditanorum". Syria. Archéologie, Art et histoire. 29 (3): 362–363.
  7. ^ Bourenane, Hamid; Bouhadad, Youcef; Guettouche, Mohamed Said (2019-12-01). "Flood hazard mapping in urban area using the hydrogeomorphological approach: case study of the Boumerzoug and Rhumel alluvial plains (Constantine city, NE Algeria)". Journal of African Earth Sciences. 160: 103602. doi:10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2019.103602. ISSN 1464-343X. S2CID 202911117.

Further reading

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36°52′17″N 6°04′59″E / 36.8713°N 6.0830°E / 36.8713; 6.0830