Hydrology of Oder River
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- Polish and Czech:
- Odra
The Oder has a limited flow volume; its mean ratio of outflow to precipitation is the lowest among the rivers flowing into the Baltic. During low-water periods, in summer and autumn, the river is fed from storage reservoirs built in the upper tributaries. The mean water depth in the Oder channel is three feet, and the mean velocity is three feet per second. In summer the upper reaches of the Oder system are flooded by heavy precipitation, while in spring the middle and lower reaches suffer from meltwater floods. Flow volume varies with the amount of precipitation. In the period 1951–80, for example, the discharge rate of the Oder’s upper course averaged 1,560 cubic feet (145 cubic metres) per second, with extremes of 150 and 31,430; during that same period in the middle course the average was 18,820 cubic feet per second, with extremes of 5,510 and 76,630. The ice cover on the river lasts up to 40 days per year. As is the case with many of the world’s great rivers flowing through heavily industrialized regions, the Oder’s waters have become heavily polluted; of the fish that are still found in the river, the most common are bream and eel.
The first hydraulic works—embankments and other structures for flood prevention—were started in the Oder valley as early as the 12th century; spillway dams built in the 13th century were in operation until the 18th century, when work was initiated on channel straightening by means of excavated cuts. Improvement of the straightened part of the Oder Channel was for the most part completed around 1900 (although final improvements were not made until after World War II), while control works in the middle and lower reaches were carried out in the interwar period.
The economy
The Oder River is an important element in the Polish economy, supplementing the heavily overburdened railway and highway systems that link the highly industrialized regions of the south with the largest Polish seaport, Szczecin, at the Oder’s Baltic mouth. The river carries about 10 percent of the total tonnage handled by the port. The Oder is also used by the barges of eastern Germany, which travel over a system of navigable canals that connect the Oder with the central European waterway network. A system of navigable canals connects the Oder with the Vistula, Poland’s largest river, and also with the rivers of the eastern portion of the country and the waterway systems of Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia. This creates the possibility that the entire system may evolve into an all-water commercial route for transporting commodities from west to east and from east to west.
History
Because of its geographic situation, the Oder was, in ancient times, of major importance as the zone where people inhabiting southern and northern Europe came into contact with each other and exchanged cultural values. The first agricultural population arrived from the south after passing the Moravian Gate, which separates the Sudeten ranges from the Carpathian Mountains. Along the middle reach of the Oder there developed the pre-Lusatian and the Lusatian cultures (of the Bronze Age), which greatly affected the later evolution of the Slav population. In the area surrounding the Oder estuary, there was a mutual interpenetration by Scandinavian, Germanic, and Slav cultures. Finally, in the 9th and 10th centuries, the Polish state developed between the Oder and the Vistula. In the 13th century the German expansion dislodged Poland eastward, away from the Oder basin. But, on the basis of the 1945 Potsdam Conference between the Soviet Union, the United States, and Great Britain, the Polish nation returned to its former lands bordering the Oder River.
Władysław Parczewski Jerzy Pruchnicki