Sil (river)
Sil (Río Sil) | |
River | |
The Sil Canyon as seen from the river | |
Country | Spain |
---|---|
Autonomous Community | Castilla y Leon, Galicia |
Tributaries | |
- left | Boeza, Cabrera, Bibei, Navea, Mao |
- right | Caboalles, Cúa, Selmo, Soldón, Lor, Cabe |
City | Ponferrada |
Source | Villablino |
- location | León, Castilla y León, Spain |
- coordinates | 43°01′54″N 6°09′19″W / 43.031615°N 6.155348°W |
Source confluence | Os Peares |
- location | Ourense, Galicia, Spain |
- coordinates | 42°27′14″N 7°43′48″W / 42.453844°N 7.729912°W |
Mouth | Miño Estuary |
- location | Atlantic Ocean, Spain & Portugal |
- elevation | 0 m (0 ft) |
Length | 228 km (142 mi) |
Reservoirs | Las Rozas, Bárcena, Peñarrubia, Pumares, Santiago, San Martiño, Sequeiros, Santo Estevo, San Pedro ou Pombeiros |
The Sil is a river in León (Castile and León) and Galicia, Spain, a tributary of the Miño. Its total length is 225 km. The source of the Sil is in the Cantabrian Mountains in the Leonese town of Villablino. It flows through the provinces of León and Ourense. The largest city on the Sil is Ponferrada (León). The Sil flows into the Miño upstream from Ourense.
River mouth
The river joins the Miño river in Los Peares, in the province of Orense.
Generally, the hierarchy between rivers is performed by taking into account which junction has more volume and length. In this case, as with the Esla and Pisuerga with the Duero, the Sil has flows more than the Miño at the junction. There's a saying that goes, "The Miño has the fame, but the Sil gives it water" (in Spanish, El Miño lleva la fama y el Sil le da el agua). The Sil river also surpasses the Miño in length by about 20 kilometers.
Path of the river
The Sil runs through the León districts of Bahia, Laciana, El Bierzo and La Cabrera, and Orense Valdeorras, among other locations across Villablino, Ponferrada, O Barco de Valdeorras, La Rua, Quiroga and Ribas do Sil.
Tributaries
- Left bank: Valseco, Boeza, Oza, Cabrera, Bibei, Navea and Mao.
- Right bank: Caboalles, Valdeprado, Barredos, Cúa, Burbia, Selmo, Soldón, Lor and Cabe.
Gold deposits
The river has been a rich source of alluvial gold, and was most extensively exploited during the Roman period, following the conquest of north-west Spain by Augustus in 25 BC. The upper reaches of the river possessed large placer deposits, and the region around Las Medulas yielded large amounts of gold. It was extracted using hydraulic mining, involving the building of numerous aqueducts to expose and wash the alluvial formations.