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GUADALQUIVIR ( See also: river of See also: southern See also: Spain
.
What is regarded as the See also: main stream rises 4475 ft. above See also: sea-level between the Sierra de Cazorla and Sierra del Pozo, in the province of See also: Jaen
.
It does not become a large river until it is joined by the Guadiana Menor (Guadianamenor) on the See also: left, and the Guadalimar on the right
.
See also: Lower down it receives many tributaries, the chief being the Genil or Jenil, from the left
.
The general, direction of the river is west by See also: south, but a few See also: miles above Seville it changes to south by west
.
Below Coria it traverses the series of broad See also: fens known as See also: Las Marismas, the greatest See also: area of swamp in the Iberian Peninsula
.
Here it forms two subsidiary channels, the western 31 M., the eastern 12 M. long, which rejoin the main stream on the See also: borders of the province of Cadiz
.
Below Sanlilcar the river enters the See also: Atlantic after a See also: total course of 36o m
.
It drains an area of 21,865 sq. m
.
Though the shortest of the See also: great See also: rivers of the peninsula, it is the only one which flows at all seasons
with a full stream, being red in winter by the rains, in summer by the melted snows of the Sierra See also: Nevada
.
In the See also: time of the Moors it was navigable up to Cordova, but owing to the accumulation of silt in its lower reaches it is now only navigable up to Seville by vessels of r 200 to 1500 tons
.
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