River Tonge Explained

River Tonge
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:England
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Bolton MBC
Discharge1 Location:Darcy Lever
Source1 Location:northeast Bolton
Source1 Coordinates:53.5957°N -2.4251°W
Mouth Location:River Croal, southeast Bolton
Mouth Coordinates:53.5671°N -2.4036°W
Tributaries Left:Bradshaw Brook

The River Tonge is a short river, splitting Bolton from contiguous Tonge, both in Greater Manchester, England.

The Tonge is formed at the Meeting of the Waters, where Astley Brook, from Smithills in the west, meets the Eagley Brook drawing on more sources to the north. The Tonge meanders southwards, to the east of Bolton, past Springfield where it is joined by Bradshaw Brook, at the end of its route from the Jumbles and Wayoh reservoirs, close to Tonge Fold. The Tonge joins the smaller and thus counterintuitively superseding Croal at Darcy Lever, shortly before the Croal's confluence with the River Irwell.

Tonge Bridge section is a tract north of Tonge Bridge designated as a site of special scientific interest (SSSI).[1] [2] The 0.7ha site comprises the steep west right bank of the river. It was designated an SSSI 1987 for its geological interest, principally the fluvial sandstone which has yielded pteridosperm seeds, known as Trigonocarpus. The well preserved nature of the seeds make it of considerable sedimentological and palaeogeographic interest.[1] It is one of only seven geological SSSIs in Greater Manchester.

In 2017, invasive walking catfish Clarias were recovered from the river.[3]

Tributaries

See also

Manchester Bolton & Bury Canal

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tonge River Section citation sheet . English Nature . 2006-10-27.
  2. Web site: Map of River Tonge Section SSSI . Nature on the Map . 2006-10-27.
  3. News: . Environment Agency warning over Clarias Catfish found in River Tonge, Bolton . 19 July 2017 .