Bormida (river) explained

Bormida
Map:Bormida location map.jpg
Source1 Location:Rocca Barbena, Liguria
Source1 Elevation:Colle Scravaion, 800m (2,600feet)
Mouth Coordinates:44.9345°N 8.6746°W
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Italy
Length:153km (95miles)[1]
Discharge1 Avg:44.2m3/s
Basin Size:3663km2[2]
Tributaries Right:Bormida di Spigno, Erro, Orba

The Bormida (Bormia in Piedmontese language) is a river of north-west Italy.

Toponymy

The hydronym Bormida derives from the pre-Roman Ligurian proto-form *bormo ('warm or bubbling water'), also linked to the names of the gods of the springs Bormō and Bormānus. Similar hydronyms are present in the region: the river Borbera and the river Borbore, but also the town of Bormio in Lombardy know since the ancient times for the thermal waters and the town of Burbons les bains in France known for the same reason. The root *borm- itself could have pre-Indo-European origins[3] and, therefore, could be connected with the lost language (or languages) of Prehistoric inhabitants of Europe who occupied Northern Italy before the possible arrival of the Indo-Europeans.

Geography

The Bormida rises in Liguria from the Rocca Barbena (close to Colle Scravaion) as Bormida di Millesimo, and flows at first through Liguria and then through Piedmont. After converging with the Bormida di Spigno near Bistagno it joins the Tanaro, of which it is the major tributary, north-east of Alessandria.

Notes and References

  1. Book: AA.VV. . Piano di Tutela delle Acque - Revisione del 1º luglio 2004; Caratterizzazione bacini idrografici. 2016-01-10. 2004. Regione Piemonte. Elaborato I.c/5. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304111906/http://www.regione.piemonte.it/ambiente/acqua/dwd/PTA/b_monografie/b1_aree_idrogr/AI25_basso_bormida.pdf. 2016-03-04. dead.
  2. Book: AA.VV.. Piano di Tutela delle Acque - Revisione del 1º luglio 2004; Caratterizzazione bacini idrografici. pdf. 8 April 2017. 1 July 2004. Regione Piemonte. Elaborato I.c/7. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303033444/http://www.regione.piemonte.it/ambiente/acqua/dwd/PTA/e_allegati_tecnici/I/Ic07.pdf. 3 March 2016. dead.
  3. Francesco Perono Cacciafoco. 2015. Pre-Indo-European Relics: The *borm- Root in the European Pre-Latin Context. Acta Linguistica: Journal for Theoretical Linguistics, 9, 2, pp. 57-69.