The Dujaila River (Arabic: نهر الدجيلة), also called the Dujailah, Dujaili, Dujaylah or Nahr Shaţţ ad Dujaylah, is a river and irrigation canal in the Wasit Governorate of Iraq.[2][3] The canal was created shortly after the Kut Barrage was created in 1943 as part of an agricultural project to convert the desert into fertile farmland.[4] The canal starts at 32°29′56″N 45°48′45″E / 32.49891°N 45.8124°E and ends at 32°02′39″N 46°33′33″E / 32.0441°N 46.5592°E. Due the canal being a tributary of the Tigris, droughts on the Tigris have caused problems on the river. In February 2018, a drought struck the river, causing people to drill wells as well as buy water and transport it in tanks to get water. It also caused farmers to block roads and protest the government's negligence in developing water solutions.[5] The canal is designed to irrigate 92,000 hectares of land.[6]
Dujaila River Dujaylah, Dujailah, Dujaili, Nahr Shaţţ ad Dujaylah | |
---|---|
Etymology | Dujaila depression |
Native name | نهر الدجيلة (Arabic) |
Location | |
Country | Iraq |
Governorate | Wasit |
District | Kut |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | Nazim Sadr Al-Dujaili Bridge/Regulator |
• elevation | 25 m |
Length | 69.45 km (43.15 mi)[1] |
Width | |
• average | 15 m (49 ft) |
Depth | |
• average | 2.8 m (9.2 ft) |
Discharge | |
• average | 42.15 m3/s (1,489 cu ft/s) |
Basin features | |
River system | Tigris |
References
edit- ^ Al-Dabbas, Moutaz A.; Maiws, Sattar Obaid (2016). "Validity of Dujaila River Water within Wasit Governorate - Central Iraq". Iraqi Journal of Science. 57 (2C).
- ^ "GeoNames.org". www.geonames.org. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
- ^ "دراسة بعض الخصائص الهيدرولوجية لنهر الدجيلة في محافظة واسط أ.م.د. حسين عذاب خليف الهربود شذى سالم إبراهيم الخفاجيجامعة واسط / كلية التربية جامعة بابل/ كلية التربية" (in Arabic).
- ^ Burns, Norman (1951). "Development Projects in Iraq: I. The Dujaylah Land Settlement". Middle East Journal. 5 (3): 363. ISSN 0026-3141.
- ^ "واسط.. جفاف نهر الدجيلي يهدد آلاف السكان". وكالة يقين للأنباء (in Arabic). Retrieved 2023-04-25.
- ^ Abdel Azim, M.; Gismann, Anne (1956). "Bilharziasis survey in south-western Asia*". Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 14 (3): 403–456. ISSN 0042-9686. PMID 13342925.
Further reading
editFisk, Brad (1952). "Dujaila: Iraq's Pilot Project for Land Settlement". Economic Geography. 28 (4): 343–354. doi:10.2307/141972. ISSN 0013-0095.