Batman River
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The Batman River is a major tributary of the Tigris, joining it near the source of Tigris called Dicle River in southeast Turkey. The region along the Batman River is known for its oil fields.


Course

The river originates in the
Anti-Taurus Mountains The Anti-Taurus Mountains (from el, Αντίταυρος) are a mountain range in southern and eastern Turkey, curving northeast from the Taurus Mountains. At , Mount Erciyes ( Turkish: Erciyes Dağı) is the highest peak not just in the ran ...
(at the Sason and Genç mountains) and flows approximately from north to south, passing near the city of
Batman Batman is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created by artist Bob Kane and writer Bill Finger, and debuted in Detective Comics 27, the 27th issue of the comic book ''Detective Comics'' on ...
and forming a natural border between the Batman Province and Diyarbakır Province. The historic Malabadi Bridge (built in 1146–1147) crosses the river near the town of
Silvan Silvan may refer to: * Saint Silvan, Christian martyr * Silvan (illusionist), Italian magician * Silvan Byggemarked, Danish chain store that sells building materials * Silvan Elves, woodland elves of J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium * ...
.Batman. Coğrafya
, kultur.gov.tr, 21 February 2007 (in Turkish)
The river is widest at about right after exiting the dam, but then narrows to about and forms numerous splits along its way to the Tigris. Its riverbed is irregular in many places, promoting flooding. A tributary of Batman, the Iluh River, originates in the Raman Mountain on the south of the Batman city and flows north-west through the city into the Batman River. Despite being a small river, absent on most maps, Iluh plays an important role for the province because its spring floods affect the provincial capital. The floods of Iluh and Batman rivers occur between March and May and sometimes in October or November. Major floods occurred in 1969 (April, 60 buildings damaged), 1972 (April and May, 210 buildings damaged), 1991 (November, 500 buildings flooded), 1995 (March, nearly 1000 buildings submerged and 450 damaged) and 2006 (October, 11 people died and 20 injured).Balaban, Meltem Şeno
Risk society and planning: the case of flood disaster management in turkish cities
PhD Thesis. Graduate School of Natural and Applied sciences, Middle East Technical University 2009, pp. 147–149, 157


Name

In Antiquity, the Batman River was known as ''Kalat''. This name meant "bride" to the Syriac people who populated the area; it was thus translated into Greek as ''Nymphios'' (Νυμφίος, Latinized ''Nymphius'') and ''Nymphaios'' (Νυμφαῖος, Latinized ''Nymphaeus''). Among Arabs it was known as ''Satidama'', meaning "the bloody" reflecting the battles fought near it. In international literature, the name Batman came into use since the 19th century, whereas in the 18th century and before it was mostly referred to as Nymphius, among other names. The origin of the name "Batman" is unclear: it might be a shortening of the name of the tall Bati Raman mountain located nearby or refer to the unit of weight used in the Ottoman Empire.


History

The river served as a natural border between the Byzantine Empire and Sassanid Persia and saw major battles in 583 and 591 AD. The main citadel on the river was Martyropolis, modern Silvan.Nymphius (Batman)
/ref> The
Batman Dam Batman Dam is one of the 22 dams of the Southeastern Anatolia Project of Turkey, built on the Batman River, north of Batman, in southeastern of Turkey. It was constructed between 1986 and 1999. There is a hydroelectric power Hydroelectricit ...
( tr, Batman Baraji, B. de Batman on the map) was built in 1999 in the upstream (), together with the associated reservoir and hydroelectric power plant.Batman Dam
. General Directorate of State Hydraulic Works, Turkey


Wildlife

The
Batman River loach ''Paraschistura chrysicristinae'', the Diyarbakır loach or Batman River loach is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus ''Paraschistura''. It was recorded from two locations from the Batman River (a tributary of the upper Tigris The Tigr ...
(''Paraschistura chrysicristinae'') is a Critically Endangered fish native to the Batman and Ambar rivers. The fish is endangered by drought, habitat destruction, and
habitat fragmentation Habitat fragmentation describes the emergence of discontinuities (fragmentation) in an organism's preferred environment (habitat), causing population fragmentation and ecosystem decay. Causes of habitat fragmentation include geological processes ...
from construction of the Batman Dam. It had not been observed since 1974 and was feared extinct until a 2021 expedition netted 14 fish living above the Batman Dam.Greene, Graeme (2021) "Batman loach returns: fish feared extinct found in Turkey". ''The Guardian'' 9 December 2021

/ref>


References

{{Tigris Tributaries of the Tigris River Rivers of Turkey Landforms of Batman Province Roman–Sasanian Wars