Ichinomiya River

The Ichinomiya River (一宮川, Ichinomiyagawa) is a river in Chiba Prefecture, Japan. It is 37.3 kilometers (23.2 mi) in length and has a drainage area of 222 square kilometers (86 sq mi). Under the Rivers Act of 1906 the Ichinomiya is designated as a Class 2 River. The river basin of the Ichinomiya was a social, cultural, and economic center of Kazusa Province in pre-modern Japan. Although very shallow, the river was used to transport sardines from Kujukuri Beach to Tokyo Bay until the beginning of the Meiji period.

Ichinomiya River
Native name一宮川
Location
CountryJapan
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationFukusawa District, Chōnan, Chiba Prefecture
Mouth 
  location
Pacific Ocean
  elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length37.3 km (23.2 mi)
Basin size222 km2 (86 sq mi)

Geography

The source of the Ichinomiya River is in the Fukusawa District of Chōnan, and crosses the southern part of the Kujukuri Plain through Ōtaki, Nagara, Mobara, and Mutsuzawa, and the town of Ichinomiya. It pours into the Pacific Ocean in the Ichimatsu District of the village of Chōsei.

Tributaries

  • Mizusawa River
  • Habu River
  • Chōrakuji River
  • Obuta River
  • Satsubo River
  • Tsurue River
  • Aku River
  • Toyoda River
  • Sanzu River
  • Mizugami River

Sources

  • "Ichinomiya-gawa". Nihon Rekishi Chimei Taikei (日本歴史地名大系 “Compendium of Japanese Historical Place Names”). Tokyo: Netto Adobansusha. 2011. Archived from the original on 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2011-07-12.

gollark: "Do not multiply entities beyond necessity", not "simple things are always right".
gollark: Do you know what that *is*?
gollark: Some definitions of omnipotence exclude logically impossible stuff.
gollark: That's stupid.
gollark: "Conventional thought" includes stuff like the law of the excluded middle, which is important or any statement you make about god is basically meaningless because the opposite is true.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.