Ziz River
The Ziz River (Arabic: وادي زيز[1] wadī zīz or نهر زيز nahr zīz) is a river in the south of Morocco and Algeria. It has its source in the High Atlas mountains of Morocco and flows 282 kilometers (175 mi) into the Sahara Desert in Algeria. Although water flow is intermittent along the Ziz riverbed, its watercourse has long been used to facilitate human transit through the mountainous region.
Ziz River | |
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Ziz River | |
Location | |
Country | Morocco, Algeria |
Cities along the Ziz river include Er Rachidia, Erfoud and Sijilmassa. There is a dam with hydroelectric generating capacity on the Ziz near Er Rachidia. [2]
Water rights
Along the Ziz there is typically a common water rights rule, wherein each village and villager is entitled to a fair use and extraction of Ziz waters. Characteristically water is diverted in flatter areas to form a canal that irrigates palm groves and other crops as well as supplies domestic use.
See also
- Sijilmasa, a historically important city founded on the banks of the Ziz river
References
- "مطعم يُحوّل حياة سكان "وادي زيز" إلى جحيم". Hespress (in Arabic). Retrieved 2020-05-05.
- "Ziz River". Encyclopædia Britannica on line. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Sources
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ziz River. |
- Agrawal, Arun; Clark C. Gibson (2001). Communities and the Environment: Ethnicity, Gender. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-2914-X. Retrieved May 17, 2009.