Aragonese Hydrography for pleasure and profit


 Today is another blank map day.  No towns, no intriguing little wayside taverns, just the road and a river valley.   The Guadalope seems an almost oasis amidst the bleached plateaus.



The Guadalope  is an enemy of spell checkers and search engines, which want to take you somewhere else entirely.  It’s wiki site is translated into twenty languages, all of whom say very little.  It is a tributary of the Ebro.  It is 160km long.  It rises in the Sierra de Gudar.  That’s it.



Oh, alright then.  I see you want more.  Its watershed is 3890km2.  Six reservoirs help regulate the flow rate.  It begins 2000m above sea level and its average flow in 4.82 m3/s.  There is a Medieval bridge over it at Miravete.  We won’t go there.



Living in Spain includes it in its page on Aragon Hydrography.  




That really is it.











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