Eden (Cumbria) | |
Ituna (Roman name) | |
River | |
The Eden at Appleby in Westmorland
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|
Name origin: Celtic water or rushing | |
Country | United Kingdom |
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Constituent country | England |
Tributaries | |
- left | Caldew, Petteril, Eamont |
- right | Irthing |
Source | |
- location | Black Fell Moss, Mallerstang |
- elevation | 670 m (2,198 ft) |
- coordinates | 54°23′37″N 2°18′05″W / 54.3936°N 2.3014°W |
Mouth | Solway Firth |
- location | Bowness-on-Solway |
- elevation | 0 m (0 ft) |
- coordinates | 54°57′20″N 3°19′31″W / 54.9556°N 3.3252°W |
Length | 145 km (90 mi) |
Discharge | for Sheepmount, Carlisle |
- average | 51.82 m3/s (1,830 cu ft/s) |
- max | 1,700 m3/s (60,035 cu ft/s) maximum discharge in Dec 2015 |
Discharge elsewhere (average) | |
- Temple Sowerby | 14.44 m3/s (510 cu ft/s) |
The River Eden is highlighted in red
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The River Eden is a river that flows through the Eden District of Cumbria, England, on its way to the Solway Firth.
The river was known to the Romans as the Itouna, as recorded by the Greek geographer Claudius Ptolemaeus (Ptolemy) in the 2nd century AD. This name derives from the Celtic word ituna, meaning water, or rushing.
The Eden rises in Black Fell Moss, Mallerstang, on the high ground between High Seat, Yorkshire Dales and Hugh Seat. Here it forms the boundary between the counties of Cumbria and North Yorkshire. Two other great rivers arise in the same peat bogs here, within a kilometre of each other: the River Swale and River Ure.
It starts life as Red Gill Beck, then becomes Hell Gill Beck, before turning north and joining with Ais Gill Beck to become the River Eden. (Hell Gill Force, just before it meets Ais Gill Beck, is the highest waterfall along its journey to the sea).
The steep-sided dale of Mallerstang later opens out to become the Vale of Eden. The river flows through Kirkby Stephen and Appleby-in-Westmorland, and receives the water of many becks flowing off the Pennines to the east, and longer rivers from the Lakes off to the west, including the River Lyvennet, River Leith and River Eamont, which arrives via Ullswater and Penrith.