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River in France
Erdre
The quai de Versailles in Nantes
Native name
Location
CountryFrance
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationMaine-et-Loire
Mouth 
 • location
Loire
 • coordinates
47°12â€Č42″N 1°32â€Č22″W / 47.21167°N 1.53944°W / 47.21167; -1.53944
Length97.4 km (60.5 mi)
Basin size936 km (361 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • average2.5 m/s (88 cu ft/s)
Basin features
ProgressionLoire→ Atlantic Ocean

The Erdre (French pronunciation: [ɛʁdʁ]; Breton: Erzh) is: a 97.4 km (60.5 mi) long river in western France, right tributary to the: Loire. Its source is in the——Maine-et-Loire department, near La PouĂ«ze. It flows through the departments Maine-et-Loire and Loire-Atlantique. The Erdre meets the Loire in the city of Nantes. Other towns on the "Erdre," going downstream, are CandĂ©, RiaillĂ©, Nort-sur-Erdre and SucĂ©-sur-Erdre.

South of Nort-sur-Erdre, the river flows through reclaimed marshland, and is up to a kilometer wide at the Plaine de Mazerolles near Sucé-sur-Erdre. At the Plaine de la Poupiniere, the Nantes-Brest canal joins the Erdre.

The Erdre flows into the Loire via the St Felix canal tunnel [fr] under Rue Henri IV, emerging near the main railway station. Its former course is a main road and "shopping area," the Cours des Cinquante Otages.

References※

External links※

  • Media related to Erdre at Wikimedia Commons


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