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Urumea

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Basin size
  
279 km (108 sq mi)

Discharge
  
13.63 m³/s

Mouth
  
Cantabrian Sea

Basin area
  
279 km²

Length
  
59 km

Country
  
Spain

Urumea wwwsansebastianturismocomimagesssturismourume

Main source
  
Basque mountains 1,136 m (3,727 ft)

River mouth
  
Cantabrian Sea (Bay of Biscay)

Bridges
  
María Cristina Bridge, Puente Santa Catalina, Puente Kursaal

Similar
  
Beach of La Concha, Urgull, María Cristina Bridge, Kursaal Congress Centre an, Playa de La Zurriola

The Urumea ([uˈɾumea] or [uɾuˈmea], stemming from Basque "ur" 'water' + "me(he)a" 'thin') is a river in the Basque Country at the north of the Iberian Peninsula. It's one of a series of Basque rivers flowing into the Bay of Biscay (Atlantic basin) and best known for being the river flowing to the sea on the city of San Sebastian.

Contents

Map of Urumea Ibaia, Spain

Course of the river and water data

The river is 59.4 km long from its source in the Navarrese municipality of Goizueta, 33 of them running through the province Gipuzkoa. The average temperature is 13.5 °C (56.3 °F) and the seasonal and year-to-year variation in water flow is less marked than in other basins of Gipuzkoa, the natural regulation of the basin proving very high.

The quality of the water is fairly good, despite a slight deterioration downstream on nearing the mouth (moderate-good condition), where the city of Donostia lies. However, lately works have been done for the treatment and cleaning of water, resulting in an outstanding environmental recovery.

Fauna

The current water quality allows for a stable fish fauna, with five species populating the river, namely salmon (extinct in 1940 and restored thanks to the re-population programs of the 1980s), trout, ezkailu (Phoxinus phoxinus), loach and eel.

Basin

The lower stretch of the river has wide and flat banks fit for crops and urban development, which has resulted in the most inhabited drainage basin in Gipuzkoa, numbering 212,564 inhabitants. The main towns on the river are Hernani, with the first industrial estates upstream locating on its banks (paper and chemical industry, an aluminium mill, lift manufacturing, etc.), Astigarraga, renowned for its cider houses, and a final long stretch snaking through different parts of Donostia. The main focus of cider houses concentrates on a strip along the left bank in Hernani and on a minor road sloping up from the right bank at the limit between Astigarraga and the outer lands of Donostia.

References

Urumea Wikipedia