Olmeta Explained

Olmeta
Pushpin Map:Corsica#France
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:France
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Name2:Corsica
Subdivision Type3:Department
Subdivision Name3:Haute-Corse
Mouth:Mediterranean Sea

The Olmeta (French: '''Rivière d'Olmeta''', Corsican: '''Fiume d'Olmeta''', '''Fiume di Negru''') is a small coastal stream in the department of Haute-Corse, Corsica, France.It enters the Mediterranean Sea from the west of the Cap Corse peninsula.

Course

The Olmeta is long and flows through the commune of Olmeta-di-Capocorso.It rises in the center of the peninsula between the Monte Prunu to the southwest and the Monte Stello to the northeast.It flows west past the village of Olmeta-di-Capocorso to enter the sea in the village of Negru.Its mouth is between the mouths of the Fium'Albino to the south and the Guadu Grande to the north.

Ancient bridge

The Genoese built the Negru Bridge across the Olmeta river to carry the old road to Saint-Florent.It was in the center of the Marine de Negru, which gives the village of Olmeta di Capocorso access to the sea.It was among the highest and longest in Corsica.In 1785 it was damaged by a flood and was repaired by the government of Louis XVI.

The bridge was washed away by the flood of 24 November 2016, leaving only the two piles on each bank of the river.The Fondation du patrimoine launched a project to rebuild the bridge at a cost of €445,000, with the work scheduled to start in the fall of 2021.The rebuilt bridge would appear identical to the original, but two "scars" would make it possible to distinguish the surviving piles from the rebuilt part.

Genoese tower

The Tour de Negro or Torra di Negru, a Genoese tower, guards the river's mouth at the north end of the beach.The tower was one of a series of coastal defenses built by the Republic of Genoa between 1530 and 1620 to stem the attacks by Barbary pirates.The tower was built around 1559–1560.

Tributaries

The following streams (ruisseaux) are tributaries of the Olmeta (ordered by length):