Serchio

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Serchio
The river at Bagni di Lucca
The river at Bagni di Lucca
Origin Monte Sillano
Mouth Ligurian Sea
Basin countries Italy
Length 126 km
Source elevation c. 1,500 m
Avg. discharge 46 m³/s
Basin area 1,525 km²

At 126 kilometres The Serchio (in antiquity the Ausar) is the third longest river in the Italian region of Tuscany, coming after the Arno (242 km) and the Ombrone (161 km). By mean rate of flow it is the second largest, following the Arno but preceding the Ombrone.

The principal source forms on the slopes of Monte Sillano (1,864 metres) and is joined by a secondary branch, the Serchio di Gramolazzo, at Piazza al Serchio.

The river then crosses Garfagnana from north to south, from Sillano to a location beyond Castelnuovo di Garfagnana; from here it continues through the Media Valle touching the municipal borders of the Comune of Barga and crossing the territory of Borgo a Mozzano. In this section of the river, which is dammed in a number of places, it receives from the right the waters of the Edron, Tùrrite Secca, Tùrrite di Gallicano, Turrite Cava and the Pedogna; and from the left those of the Fiume, the Castiglione, the Sillico, and its most important tributary the Lima. This last, which is born at the the Passo dell'Abetone and collects the waters of the Modenese and Pistoiese high Apennines, forms a sub-basin in its own right and achieves a mean discharge of more than 20 cubic metres per second.

Having reached the plain of Lucca, where it is joined by the torrent Freddana, the Serchio turns westwards, crosses the “straits”of Filettole, and enters the Province of Pisa. Here it runs through the Communes of San Giuliano Terme and Vecchiano before entering the Ligurian Sea in the area of the Parco di San Rossore, a few kilometres to the north of Pisa.

The national road SS 12 (AbetoneBrennero) follows the course of the Serchio already to a Lucca's valley, after going up until Bagni di Lucca; from here until to the origins, from street to Capanne di Sillano and the step of Pradarena.

The localities that the river crosses are, in Garfagnana: Castelnuovo di Garfagnana, Barga, Bagni di Lucca; and in Lucchesia: Borgo a Mozzano and Lucca.

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