Creuse (river) explained

Creuse
Map:Creuse.png
Mouth Location:Vienne
Mouth Coordinates:47.0061°N 0.5686°W
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:France
Length:263km (163miles)
Source1 Elevation:932m (3,058feet)
Discharge1 Avg:81m3/s
Basin Size:9570km2

The Creuse (in French pronounced as /kʁøz/; Occitan (post 1500);: Cruesa) is a 263km (163miles) long river in western France, a tributary of the Vienne. Its source is in the Plateau de Millevaches, a north-western extension of the Massif Central.

Course

The Creuse flows northwest through the following departments and towns:

The Creuse flows into the Vienne about 20km (10miles) north of Châtellerault. It receives its longest tributary, the Gartempe, in La Roche-Posay.

The Creuse valley is the setting for paintings by the so-called Crozant School, including works by Armand Guillaumin and a series of vivid landscapes by the Bordeaux artist Alfred Smith.[1]

Dams and lakes

There are six hydroelectric dams on the river. Three are in the Creuse département with one at Chambon-Sainte-Croix above Anzême, one at Les Chezelles near Le Bourg-d'Hem and one at L'Âge upstream of La Celle-Dunoise. The remaining three are in the Indre including the Éguzon Dam which was opened in 1926 and was, at the time, the largest dam in Europe. The lakes created by the dams are popular tourist destinations and several have artificial beaches and leisure facilities.

Main tributaries

Left bank:

Right bank:

Notes and References

  1. Book: https://books.google.com/books?id=V9hntB4BJzIC&pg=PA156 . Alfred Smith . 156–157 . Telfair Museum of Art: collection highlights . Hollis Koons McCullough . University of Georgia Press . 2005 . 0-933075-04-9.