Alpheius River
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The Alfeiós or Alpheios ( el, Αλφειός, grc, Ἀλφειός, Latin Alpheus) is the main stream of the Alpheios Valley drainage system, a dendritic type, originating on the north slopes of Mount Taygetus, located in the center of the Peloponnesus of Greece, and flowing to the northwest to the vicinity of
Olympia The name Olympia may refer to: Arts and entertainment Film * ''Olympia'' (1938 film), by Leni Riefenstahl, documenting the Berlin-hosted Olympic Games * ''Olympia'' (1998 film), about a Mexican soap opera star who pursues a career as an athlet ...
, where it turns to the west and, after being impounded by the Flokas Dam, a hydroelectric facility, empties into the Gulf of Kyparissia of the
Ionian Sea The Ionian Sea ( el, Ιόνιο Πέλαγος, ''Iónio Pélagos'' ; it, Mar Ionio ; al, Deti Jon ) is an elongated bay of the Mediterranean Sea. It is connected to the Adriatic Sea to the north, and is bounded by Southern Italy, including C ...
south of Pyrgos. The entrance into the gulf through agricultural land and across an unpopulated, sandy beach partially blocked by a spit is hydrologically unspectacular, with the water too shallow to be navigable by any but the smallest craft. The concept of a single source has little meaning for most of the rivers of Greece, which begin as a confluence of multiple springs in the mountain valleys. There is almost never just one, although most may be unreported or neglected. Thus it is appropriate to speak "a source" or "the sources" but never "the source." Nevertheless competing villages sometimes claim to own "the source." Moreover, the sources are not geologically stable, but change frequently in history. In
karst Karst is a topography formed from the dissolution of soluble rocks such as limestone, dolomite, and gypsum. It is characterized by underground drainage systems with sinkholes and caves. It has also been documented for more weathering-resistant ro ...
terrain, such as the Peloponnesus, the population is acutely aware that rivers may run underground for some distance. Thus the "source" of the Alpheios has always been a subject of debate and literary fantasies, some wild by modern geologic standards. Most recently attempts have been made to connect the Alpheios through underground channels to the "40 rivers" region of the high plateau of central Arcadia (around Tegea and Mantineia, etc.). The Alpheios of today bears little resemblance to the historical Alpheios. Much of it has been widened by damming; large sections have been straightened by embankments; flood control works have been constructed; water for municipal use and irrigation is diverted all along the course; some sections are used for gravel mining; and waste water, fertilizer, and pesticides pollute it from one end to the other. It has been necessary to establish regular monitoring by the government and create substrucure to make important decisions concerning the fate of the river. Despite the recent alterations of man and the apparently random dendritic pattern in parts of the valley, a geologic pattern emerges that is too regular to be entirely random. The valley is a regular trough, or basin, from the coast to the interior. The dendrism is mainly right-bank. On the left is the long ridge of Mount Lykaion, relatively uneroded, suggesting that different types of rock occur on either side. After a divide the ridge continues as Mount Taygetus, and the valley as the Eurotas River valley, which extends south to the Gulf of Lakonia. The entire southwest Peloponnesus is split from Arcadia by this great trough, considered two basins, which must have been in place in some form before any extensive dendrism. Scarps along the trough suggest that the two basins are rift valleys, depressions, or
graben In geology, a graben () is a depressed block of the crust of a planet or moon, bordered by parallel normal faults. Etymology ''Graben'' is a loan word from German, meaning 'ditch' or 'trench'. The word was first used in the geologic contex ...
, caused by the ridges on each side moving away from each other. The whole, finger-like arrangement of the ridges in the south Peloponnesus is currently explained as a stretching, or extension, of the Peloponnesus in a NE-SW direction, pulling the troughs apart. The division between the ridges occurs because they were primordially compressed together in the Hellenic orogeny, becoming different modern zones of rock. Subsequent to the compressional regime back-arc extension of the Hellenic arc, the outer ring of islands, opened the Aegean Sea and initiated the extensional regime that is opening the Peloponnesus. Fortuitously the right bank of the Alpheios Valley became a defensive zone for the protection of central Arcadia. During the so-called Dorian invasion starting about 1000 BC iron-age highlanders ( Dorians) from central Greece overran the bronze-age coastal regions of the Peloponnesus, expelling or subjugating the Mycenaean population there, but could not ascend the right-bank mountains to take central Arcadia. The population there maintained its culture (
Arcado-Cypriot Arcadocypriot, or southern Achaeans (tribe), Achaean, was an ancient Greek dialects, ancient Greek dialect spoken in Arcadia (ancient region), Arcadia in the central Peloponnese and in Cyprus. Its resemblance to Mycenaean Greek, as it is known f ...
) and political independence. The Dorians kept the valley, which accounts for the predominance of Doric architecture at Olympia.


Hydrologic characteristics


Classification of the Alfeios

In their 2003 master plan for the management of Greek water resources, the then Hellenic Ministry of Development, one of the many Greek governmental agencies that have been responsible for the monitoring and care of Greek rivers, noted that of the 765 recorded rivers in Greece, 45 were permanently flowing, of which the Alpheios is one. Although the Greek government had been monitoring some rivers since the 1970s, classification and monitoring of rivers was not mandated by the European Union until the Water Framework Directive (WFD) of 2000. The EU was interested in identifying quality problems with the waters of Europe and rescuing degraded waters. The Hellenic Center for Marine Research (HCMR) therefore added the study of water quality in Greece to its previously existing AQEM program. Select river sites were monitored for three seasons of 2000-2001, spring, summer, and winter, the results appearing in an online report of 2005.


Classification by catchment area

Several figures have been reported for the catchment area of the Alfeios. A 2004 study by the Civil Engineering Department of the University of Patras reported , and a 2020 study by a consortium of academic departments including the HCMR reported . The value has been reported by the Greek Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate Change. A research group of the National Technical University of Athens found the same area, within (but not equal to) the rectangle and . By HCMR standards, this makes the Alfeios a large river (over 1000 sq. km. basin). The uppermost part of the Alfeios basin, at Karytaina, upstream from its confluence with the Lousios, is . The maximum elevation is with a mean elevation of . The mean slope is about 14 deg. The catchment is about 25% of the map area of the Peloponnesus. The major part of the basin is mountainous, with 52.5% of the catchment map being over 600 m. The rest is hilly and flat along the coast (10.5%). The political distribution is 60% Arcadia, 30% Elis, and 10%
Achaea Achaea () or Achaia (), sometimes transliterated from Greek as Akhaia (, ''Akhaïa'' ), is one of the regional units of Greece. It is part of the region of Western Greece and is situated in the northwestern part of the Peloponnese peninsula. The ...
. Arcadia accounts for most of the mountainous and hilly terrain. Achaea shares some of the mountainous terrain to the north, while Elis contains the lowlands and some of the hilly terrain.


Classification by zone

The 2006 HCMR article defines three river zones of Greece, a "zone" being a region of a similar geophysical terrain, which influences the chemical composition and physical morphology of the rivers in it. Zones 1, 2, and 3, are based on the geologic isopic ("same
facies In geology, a facies ( , ; same pronunciation and spelling in the plural) is a body of rock with specified characteristics, which can be any observable attribute of rocks (such as their overall appearance, composition, or condition of formatio ...
") zones, or tectono-stratigraphic units of Greece, which are ridges of distinct rock trending NW to SE. It is theorized that these ridges are their own types of rock because they represent separate microcontinents that migrated across Tethys Sea from
Gondwana Gondwana () was a large landmass, often referred to as a supercontinent, that formed during the late Neoproterozoic (about 550 million years ago) and began to break up during the Jurassic period (about 180 million years ago). The final stages ...
and docked against Eurasia during the compressional regime of the Hellenic orogeny, a branch of the Alpine orogeny, when parts of the African plate were being pushed against the Eurasian plate and being subducted under it. The isotopic zones are a product of the Continental drift theory and its modern development, plate tectonics, which prevailed after 1958. The earliest ideas of the Hellenic orogeny are a product of the previous
Geosyncline theory A geosyncline (originally called a geosynclinal) is an obsolete geological concept to explain orogens, which was developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, before the theory of plate tectonics was envisaged. Şengör (1982), p. 11 A ge ...
, in which the mountains of the Earth were believed to have been raised by compression of large depressions, or geosynclines, caused by shrinkage, and infilled with sediment. It was hypothesized that the mountains of Greece, called the Hellenides, arose from a Hellenic geosyncline in two phases, a volcanic breakthrough in the center, resulting in the "inner Hellenides," and a subsequent orogeny at the west periphery from the wrinkling of sediment running off the central mountains. The peripheral range was the "outer Hellenides." As both theories featured a compressional regime, the Hellenides terminology was kept, but it had to be matched to the isopic zones. The Alpheios falls within river zone 3, the Outer Hellenides, an arc-like range continuing the Dinarides of the Balkans into western Greece, comprising most of the Peloponnesus, and including the southernmost arc of Aegean islands, with Crete, around to the coast of Anatolia ( Hellenic arc). The isopic zones included, west to east, are The Ionian, the Tripolitsa, the Pindos, and the Parnassos. To the east are the inner Hellenides, partly volcanic, with the dividing line down the center of Greece. They end at the
Chalcidic Chalkidiki (; el, Χαλκιδική , also spelled Halkidiki, is a peninsula and regional unit of Greece, part of the region of Central Macedonia, in the geographic region of Macedonia in Northern Greece. The autonomous Mount Athos region co ...
Peninsula, beyond which are the Rhodope and Serbomacedonian massifs.


River morphology


The question of the source

Mathematical hydrology requires definite numbers: rivers have lengths, cross-sections, measurable linear and volumetric (discharge) rates of flow. The length of a river requires a source. If the Alpheios is a permanently flowing river, then there must be a place of higher elevation where the flow begins, and that is by definition the source. Water comes from a multiplicity of sources. A definite river, however, must have a definite source. The distance along the river from mouth to source is the length. Lengths, however, like catchments, are not geodetic. They do not take the curvature of the Earth into consideration nor the elevations of the terrain. For example, seen from above, a waterfall is only a few feet of river length, yet the stream may fall hundreds of uncounted feet. Map work for measuring the general morphology of rivers relies on the
conformal map In mathematics, a conformal map is a function that locally preserves angles, but not necessarily lengths. More formally, let U and V be open subsets of \mathbb^n. A function f:U\to V is called conformal (or angle-preserving) at a point u_0\in ...
, pieced together from satellite photographs and topographic maps. The length of a river by any system of measurement is not a constant either of measurement or of nature. The measurer working his way along the river encounters many points requiring a decision. For example, the Alpheios divides itself around midstream islands at many points. The river distance through the island zone depends on the stream chosen or the average decided upon. If the river has been impounded or widened by the works of man, the estimator must decide which course through the impoundment applies. The length also depends on the method of estimation. Representation of the river by small straight-line segments depends entirely on the segmentation decisions made. Nature itself does not provide reliable and exact lengths. Rivers change course in history (let alone geologic history) to such a degree that they are typically different from century to century, as the geology of erosion teaches they must be. The publication sources therefore give riverine lengths and locations that are different from each other, unless one source copies another. The length can be assumed to have been measured at least one or more years before publication, many years if one source relies on another. Some lengths are , , , . Encyclopedia Britannica uses 110 km with a stock phrase "the largest of the Peloponnesus," paraphrased by most of the sources, without definition or evidence. These lengths, representing the general trend, aim at a single location, about due south of Megalopoli, where the topographic maps show the beginning of a single stream. Megalopoli is situated on a divide between the Alfeios and its tributary, the Elisson, at about . The start of the single stream is at about . The dendritic terrain of the upper Alfeios ascends to central Arcadia by steps. The plateau of Megalopoli is intermediate between the lowlands and the capital of Arcadia, modern
Tripoli Tripoli or Tripolis may refer to: Cities and other geographic units Greece *Tripoli, Greece, the capital of Arcadia, Greece *Tripolis (region of Arcadia), a district in ancient Arcadia, Greece * Tripolis (Larisaia), an ancient Greek city in t ...
at . Between the two are the Tsemperou and
Mainalo Mainalo ( el, Μαίναλο, grc, Μαίναλος or Μαίναλον, Mainalos or Mainalon; la, Maenalus) is the tallest mountain in the Menalon highlands of the Peloponnese, and is located in Arcadia, Greece. In antiquity, the mountain wa ...
mountains, which are well over . Unsupported speculation throughout the ages wishes to connect the Alfeios of Megalopoli to Tripoli. If the Alfeios is defined as a continuously flowing stream, then it must begin at Megalopoli. Intermittent dendritic streams come from higher, but there is no evidence that they follow any tunnel through the Mainalo Mountains to trickle out as springs at this or that lower location. The main lower locations promulgated by some are Davia, Dorizas, and Asea. Megalopolis is the only city of a smaller rift valley elliptical in shape trending NNW–SSE, long, area , implying an average width of . Average altitude is . Megalopolis sits on the high point of the central valley, while the Alfeios, sourced in the SE, skirts the hill to the south, the west, and exits to the NW dropping through a steep and impassible gorge. A former defense against enemies on foot, the gorge is popular for its recreational rafting over rapids, justifying the ancient etymology of "whitewater." The uppermost river is blighted by the open-pit mining of
lignite Lignite, often referred to as brown coal, is a soft, brown, combustible, sedimentary rock formed from naturally compressed peat. It has a carbon content around 25–35%, and is considered the lowest rank of coal due to its relatively low heat ...
. In 1969 the Megalopoli power company opened a lignite-burning facility to the NW of the city on the right bank of the Alfeios, finishing two plants in 1970 and one in 1975. To obtain the lignite, they began strip-mining the region to the west of the city, working the mine southward, then eastward. Stripping essentially removed many meters of the hill. Areas so flattened were then planted with grass. Today the original strip mine is grassy, but the south is open over a rough rectangle N–S by E–W, or . Despite the original sanguine engineering reports of how little land would be consumed, which are still being published, the open area is about 2.5% of the total valley area, with no end to expansion in sight. The main pollutants are the gases. White plumes from the plant facilities have become a feature of the Arcadia landscape. During unfavorable meteorological conditions an opaque smog hangs over the valley. The course of the Alfeios around the mined area is the natural one around the base of the hill. Mining began on the slopes and worked its way down the hill. The river was not diverted or rerouted, as there is no other possible course. Rather, until recently, the river was respected as a border to the mine. Currently the mine has pushed across the river on the SW side of the hill. When the river is full, it occupies parts of the mine, giving it the appearance of a lake on the maps. The lake is, however, only an intermittent puddle. The source of the river is on the SE of the mine in the district still called Anthochori ("flowery place"), once a pleasant village, and still advertised as that in the media. It does not exist, except for a few outlying farm buildings. The villagers in 2006 coming under pressure to sell and move away yielded in 2008 after painful negotiations. The village was demolished. The last building down, a church atop a standing column, became the subject of some prize-winning photography internationally. The single, continuous stream is marked on the current internet topographical maps at , of elevation. The point falls within a forested morass about long by wide, beginning slightly to the west on the north side of a field with a characteristic semicircular north end. The morass is bisected by the old railway to Anthochori. This sink is supplied with water from several intermittent streams forming the apex of a dendritic pattern. They fall into a basin below the contour lines. The crossing points are marked by V-gullies located 1 to 2 km from the morass: one due south, two west, one NE, and one N from Megalopoli through the mine. These streams are in the small tributary category, some mere thicketed ditches, others with pebble beds and forested banks cutting across the rolling upland. Water levels vary from zero to meandering flows or trickles. They are visible at roads crossing over them; for example, crossing Rt. 7 at or . As to whether this uppermost "tree" of streams is to be considered the Alfeios, no strict definition applies. Local names do not appear on the maps; instead any or all are likely to be labeled Alfeios. The stepped-off length of the river up to the morass, about , does not fit any of the lengths or source locations given by the publications. These lengths must include the continuous stream plus one intermittent stream, the dictum of one source preventing the choice of more than one. Every stream has been proposed by someone. Flow in the intermittent streams is guided by two tilts of the valley floor: a drop from N to S draining the Mainalo Mountains and a drop from E to W drainig Taygetus. The generally preferred candidate for the title of upper Alfeios drops through the elevation line at as it crosses under Rt. 7 and turns to the SW to enter the morass about 1 km away. From the road the river appears as a deep V-shaped ditch lined densely with trees over which a plank walkway has been placed. Above the 400 m line the stream drops in a long flow across the base of the Mainalo Mountains from the valley leading up to Tripoli on the high plateau. It generally follows the direction of Rt. E65, the lowland version of Rt. 7, which winds through the mountains. They all start from the same place, Kato Asea. The stream is visible there from the Agorianis-Koronias Road at . It is still a deep, thicketed ditch cutting through the farmland. The elevation is . The drop from there to 400 is innocuous for the straight-line distance, approximating the stream fairly well. Over that distance various tributary ditches descend from the mountains, which should not be confused with the main stream. The 13.52 km to kato Asea does much to fill the gap between the morass and the legacy distances, but there is a further fiction involved. The main village, Asea or ano Asea ("upper Asea" as opposed to "lower Asea") is located at , up on a severely dendritic ridge from which there is no clear connection to the stream below. In ancient times it must have had its own springs, or it could not have survived, but the streams coming from the mountain are more of a tributary nature. The stream below comes from further up the valley. The head of the valley is labelled kato Dorizos on some maps. Ano Dorizos like ano Asea is up on a ridge and has no identifiable connection to the streams below, which are in a highly dendritic pattern of dry and wet ditches. The land around Dorizos displays a network of shallow ditches, hardly different from the fields they traverse. Rt. 7 goes over a pass to Tripoli, while Rt. E65 goes under it through tunnels. Long before the tunnel point the dendritic ditches have disappeared into the mountainside. There is nothing like a source in the entire upper valley, but if there were, it is clear that it wouldn't be located in the villages of Asea or Dorizos perched on the mountain ridges. Those names are simply convenient hooks on which to hang a source imagined to be there by offsite geographers looking for a mystic connection to Tripoli. The failure to find a source in the valley causes some to abandon the upper Alfeios in favor of its tributary, the Elisson, flowing out of the mountains NE of Megalopoli with a much stronger flow. It is more of a mountain stream, as can be seen from the bridge at . It begins shortly upstream at Falanthos, next to Davia, which is closer to Tripoli than Dorizos. Those who hold this view refer to the Elisson as the Alfeios, as though it were the true upper Alfeios.


Stages of the river

At Thoknia it receives its right tributary Elissonas, and continues north towards Karytaina. Below Karytaina the Lousios flows into the Alfeios, and the Alfeios continues northwest, passing north of Andritsaina. Near Tripotamia the rivers Ladon and Erymanthos flow into the Alfeios. The Alfeios then flows west along
Olympia The name Olympia may refer to: Arts and entertainment Film * ''Olympia'' (1938 film), by Leni Riefenstahl, documenting the Berlin-hosted Olympic Games * ''Olympia'' (1998 film), about a Mexican soap opera star who pursues a career as an athlet ...
and empties into the
Ionian Sea The Ionian Sea ( el, Ιόνιο Πέλαγος, ''Iónio Pélagos'' ; it, Mar Ionio ; al, Deti Jon ) is an elongated bay of the Mediterranean Sea. It is connected to the Adriatic Sea to the north, and is bounded by Southern Italy, including C ...
south of Pyrgos.


The Alpheios in antiquity

The ancient highway linking
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and Kalamata ran along this river for most of the length east of Olympia.


Literary fantasies of the Alpheios

In Greek mythology, the
Peneus In Greek mythology, Peneus (; Ancient Greek: Πηνειός) was a Thessalian river god, one of the three thousand Rivers (Potamoi), a child of Oceanus and Tethys. Family The nymph Creusa bore him one son, Hypseus, who was King of the Lapit ...
and Alpheus were two rivers re-routed by Heracles in his fifth labour in order to clean the filth from the Augean Stables in a single day, a task which had been presumed to be impossible. A poem by
Roger Caillois Roger Caillois (; 3 March 1913 – 21 December 1978) was a French intellectual whose idiosyncratic work brought together literary criticism, sociology, ludology and philosophy by focusing on diverse subjects such as games and play as well as the ...
, called ''Le fleuve Alphée'' (the Alpheus River), is mainly about this river. In the '' Aeneid'', Virgil describes the ''Alpheus'' as flowing under the sea to resurface at Ortygia on Sicily, or "so runs the tale". The river disappears several times into the limestone Arcadian mountains and reemerges after flowing some distance underground. This is the origin of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge's reference to the river, by the name Alph, in his poem Kubla Khan, although he transferred the location of the river to Kublai Khan's Mongolia; "Where Alph, the sacred river, ran"


References


Reference bibliography

* This publication by the Hellenic Statistical Authority (ELSTAT) summarizes population, cultural, and geophysical statistics for the various regions of Greece. * * * This source is a professional study of pollution at Megalopolis due to the coal-burning power plants and open-pit mining. * * * This source publishes mathematical correlations of rainfall in the studied catchment with several geophysical factors.


External links


Alfeios (in Greek)Arcadians.gr (in Greek)
{{Authority control Landforms of Arcadia, Peloponnese Landforms of Elis Esotericism Rivers of Greece Geography of ancient Elis Rivers of Western Greece Rivers of Peloponnese (region)