Seybouse

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Oued Seybousse
The Seybouse in Guelma Province, Algeria
The Seybouse in Guelma Province, Algeria
Origin Medjez Amar, Algeria
Mouth Mediterranean Sea near Annaba, Algeria
Basin countries Guelma Province and Annaba Province, Algeria
Length 225 km (140 mi)
Avg. discharge 11,5 m³/s (406 ft/s) at Guelma and Annaba
Basin area 6,471 km² (2,498 mi²)

Seybouse is a oued (river) in northeastern Algeria, near the border with Tunisia. In Roman times, it was called the Ubus. The river runs for a distance of about 120 miles. It starts in Medjez Amar, in the north-west of Guelma Province, and its mouth is at Seybouse (called Joannonville under French rule), just to the south-east of the city of Annaba (called Bône under French rule), the site of Hippo Regius where Saint Augustine lived in AD 391-430. The Seybousse is used for irrigation of agricultural areas, but it is becoming polluted because of industrial activities.

[edit] Caracteristics

(As of 1998, Source :ANRH)
Element Amount
Flow 11,5 m³/s
Temperature 21,41 °C
Acidity 8,21 PH
Oxygen saturation 36,61 %
DBO1 18,33
DCO² 124,3
Nitrates (NO3) 5,58
PO4-3 2,29
Ammonium 9,18


[edit] References

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