Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | Switzerland |
Subdivision Type2: | Canton |
Subdivision Name2: | Valais |
Subdivision Type3: | Settlements |
Subdivision Name3: | Martigny, Bovernier, Sembrancher |
Source1: | Confluence of the Dranse d'Entremont and Dranse de Bagnes |
Source1 Location: | Sembrancher, Valais |
Source1 Coordinates: | 46.0781°N 7.1594°W |
Mouth Location: | Rhône at Martigny, Valais |
Mouth Coordinates: | 46.1253°N 7.0658°W |
Length: | 14.5km (09miles)/43km (27miles) (Dranse de Bagnes) |
Source1 Elevation: | 4308m (14,134feet) |
Mouth Elevation: | 454m (1,490feet) |
Discharge1 Location: | Martigny, Pont de Rossettan |
Discharge1 Min: | 2.08m3/s (NM7Q 1907–2017)[1] |
Discharge1 Avg: | 53.5m3/s[2] |
Discharge1 Max: | 177m3/s |
Basin Size: | 676km2[3] |
The Drance (French: La Drance/Dranse, in French pronounced as /dʁɑ̃s/) is a river in Valais, Switzerland with a length of 14.5km (09miles) to the confluence with the Rhône, a maximum length of 43km (27miles). It has a drainage basin of 676km2. The river is formed from the confluence of the Dranse d'Entremont and the Dranse de Bagnes at the village of Sembrancher. Further upriver the Dranse d'Entremont splits into the Dranse d'Entremont and the Dranse de Ferret.
In 57/56 BC Julius Caesar sent Servius Galba with the Twelfth Legion and some cavalry to open the Great St Bernard Pass. The legion fought the Veragri at the village of Octodurus along the Drance river and drove them across the river before establishing a camp near the river. The Seduni and Veragri attacked the legion camp a few days later in the Battle of Octodurus. In 1349 a wooden toll bridge and dam are mentioned near La Bâtiaz village (now part of Martigny). In 1595 the river flooded and destroyed a chapel in La Bâtiaz and damage in Bagnes. In 1818 a glacial dam gave way below Giétro Glacier releasing 18e6m3 of water into the river, killing 44 people and destroying many structures along the river. The last covered bridge in use in Valais today was built in 1829 to replace a bridge over the Drance which was destroyed in the 1818 flood.
On 26 July 2006 the Drance flooded destroying a 400m (1,300feet) section of railway track and derailing a St. Bernard Express train. All 34 passengers and the conductor of the train were uninjured. The floods also forced several thousand to evacuate in Martigny and other villages along the river.[4]
The Drance river is an alpine river mostly fed by glacial runoff. High in the Alps it is fed by numerous small streams that run down the surrounding mountains. The river flows into the Rhone river near the village of Martigny. About 14.5km (09miles) upriver at Sembrancher, the river splits into the Dranse d'Entremont and the Dranse de Bagnes. Continuing upstream past Sembrancher the Dranse d'Entremont rises to the south. At Orsières it splits into the Dranse d'Entremont and the Dranse de Ferret. The Dranse d'Entremont passes through Lac des Toules before reaching its source near the Great St Bernard Pass. The Dranse de Ferret continues south until it reaches the Lacs de Fenêtre on the western slope of the Pointe de Drône. The Dranse de Bagnes rises to the east and then south east, passing through Lac de Mauvoisin, before reaching its source at the Brenay Glacier.[5]