Aragón (river)

The Aragón (Spanish: Río Aragón; Basque: Aragon Ibaia) is a river in northern Spain, one of the left-hand tributaries of the river Ebro. It rises at Astún (province of Huesca) in the central Pyrenees Mountains, passes southwest through Jaca and Sangüesa (Navarre), and joins the Ebro at Milagro (Navarre), near Tudela. The name Aragón is related to the birth area of the former kingdom, which corresponds to the modern autonomous community of Aragón in Spain.

Aragón
Aragón river valley in the Huesca province
Watershed of the Aragon (in dark yellow)
Location
CountrySpain
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationCentral Pyrenees
Mouth 
  location
Ebro River

Watershed

The river, used for irrigation and hydroelectric power, is about 129 kilometres (80 mi) long; its chief tributary is the Arga River.[1]

The Aragón flows past the barranco of Peñalén

Ecology

Non-government sanctioned re-introduction of Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) in Spain around 2003 has resulted in tell-tale beaver signs documented on a 60-kilometre (37 mi) stretch on the lower course of the Aragon River and the area adjoining the Ebro River in Aragon, Spain.[2]

gollark: Well, not "happens to", "does".
gollark: Because it happens to work *okay* as a way to allocate resources so that you satisfy people's demands.
gollark: I mean, yes, if they can't do work of some sort, I don't see why you would expect they would be rewarded the same way as someone who *can*.
gollark: Nope.
gollark: Since my last name sounds like Marx I get jokes about it occasionally.

References

  1. "Aragon River". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2012-09-03.
  2. Juan Carlos Cena; et al. "Castor Europeo en Navarra y la Rioja" (PDF). Galemys. 2: 91–98. Retrieved 2012-09-03.

See also


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