Lek (river)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lek
River
The Lek River near Nieuwegein.
Country Netherlands
Regions Utrecht, South Holland
Source Nederrijn
 - location Wijk bij Duurstede, Utrecht
Mouth Nieuwe Maas
 - location Kinderdijk, South Holland
Length 62 km (39 mi)
Location of Lek in dark blue.

The Lek (Dutch pronunciation: [lɛk]) is a river in the western Netherlands of some 60 km in length. It is the continuation of the Nederrijn after the Kromme Rijn branches off at the town of Wijk bij Duurstede. The main westbound waterway is hereafter called the Lek River. The Nederrijn is, itself, a distributary branch of river Rhine.

The name "Lek" is derived either from the Middle Dutch words "lake" and "leek", meaning "watercourse".[1]

Portions of the river form the boundary between the provinces of Utrecht and Gelderland, and between Utrecht and South Holland.

In Roman times, the Nederrijn flowed into the Kromme Rijn and these streams were the main outflow of the river Rhine. When the Kromme Rijn began to silt up in the Middle Ages, the Lek became the primary branch. A short distance past Wijk bij Duurstede, the river intersects with the Amsterdam-Rhine Canal, which continues south towards the Waal. A branch of this canal, the Lekkanaal (Lek Canal) is connected to the river at the town of Nieuwegein.

Other major towns on its banks are Culemborg, Vianen, Schoonhoven, Nieuw-Lekkerland and Lekkerkerk. The bed of the river lies slightly higher than the surrounding lands and dikes are therefore essential to contain the Lek. At the village of Kinderdijk the Lek meets the Noord River and the combined stream is thereafter known as the Nieuwe Maas as it flows down towards the North Sea.

Satellite image of the eastern part of the Rhine-Meuse delta showing river Lek (e) the Kromme Rijn stream is too small to show up on this picture.

References

  1. Plaatsengids.nl Lekkerkerk

External links

Coordinates: 51°53′25″N 4°37′54″E / 51.89034°N 4.63156°E / 51.89034; 4.63156

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.