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The Durance (; Durença in the classical norm or Durènço in the ) is a major in Southeastern . A left tributary of the Rhône, it is long. Its is . Bassin versant : Durance (La), Observatoire Régional Eau et Milieux Aquatiques en PACA

Its source is in the southwestern part of the , in the Montgenèvre ski resort near Briançon; it flows southwest through the following departments and cities:

The Durance's largest is the Verdon. The Durance itself is a tributary of the Rhône and flows into the Rhône near . The Durance is the second longest (after the Saône) of the tributaries of the Rhône and the third largest in terms of its flow (after the Saône and Isère).


Etymology
The Durance is documented as Druentia (1st c. AD), Drouéntios (Δρουέντιος; 2nd c. AD), Durantia (854) and Durentia (1127). The name Dru-ent-ia probably means 'the flowing one', stemming from the root * dreu- ('to run, walk fast').
(2025). 9788478825721, Ediciones Clásicas.

Similar names are found in the names of many rivers in the and further: in Italy, Dranse in , and the Drôme in south-eastern France. All these rivers have their sources in mountains, and are fast-running.

The Durance retains its name rather than either the Clarée or , even though the latter two are longer than the Durance when they each merge. The Durance is better known than the other two rivers because the Durance valley is an old and important trade route, whereas the valleys of the Clarée and Guisane are effectively dead ends.


Hydrography
The Durance is long from its source at the foot of Sommet des Anges, at high,Clébert & Rouyer, Durance, p.20. above Montgenèvre, to its with the Rhône. However, a longer route is traced by the Clarée-Durance system with a length of . Its descent is unusually rapid at 81 m/km (165 ft/mi) in its first , then 15 m/km (30 ft/mi) to its confluence with the ,Clébert & Rouyer, Durance, p.35. and then still nearly 8 m/km (16 ft/mi) to the confluence with the Ubaye. This descent stays relatively steep after this confluence, then shallows to approximately 0.33% in its middle course (to the Mirabeau bridge), then 0.24% in its lower course. For comparison, at approximately from its source, the Isère is at altitude and the Durance at , which contributes partially to its fast-flowing nature, including in the lower part of the river. It drops from its source to MirabeauGuy Barruol, p.24. and approximately from its source to the confluence with the Rhône.


Departments and main towns crossed
The river only runs through the towns of Briançon and  — built where the banks are very steep — the other towns are built on slopes close to the river:

The Durance catchment area extends to three other departments: Var, Drôme and . The Durance is the longest river in Metropolitan France without a department named after it.


Source to Serre-Ponçon
The source of La Durance is on the northern slope of the , where the first small streams combine into a river. This runs near to Montgenèvre and then flows into the larger Clarée river, and then passes through Briançon before the Guisane joins it. It then continues south combining with the Gyronde  — the Écrins  — at L'Argentière-la-Bessée. The confluence with the occurs below and . The Durance then flows south-south-west and flows into the Lac de Serre-Ponçon just downstream of Embrun. The confluence with the was flooded as the lake filled.


Middle section: from Serre-Ponçon to Mirabeau
The middle part of the Durance runs through a landscape that changes as the valley increasingly widens. The river itself becomes steeply banked by , and carves a channel, sometimes a few metres deep, sometimes tens of metres deep. In its middle and lower reaches the Durance is affected by the Mediterranean climate: flooding after autumnal rains, with low water levels in summer. Just before the in the mountains at Sisteron, the Durance joins Buëch and the . Water also flows in from the EDF Canal.

Beyond Sisteron further rivers and streams join the Durance: Jabron, Vançon, Bléone near Les Mées and from the Asse (river) a few kilometres to the south of . The Verdon flows into the Durance near . The valley widens still further into an alluvial plain several kilometres wide ( near ). Here the river was diverted for the development of modern agriculture and the construction of the A51 motorway.

There are several dams along the middle part of the Durance. In addition to main dam at Serre-Ponçon, there are dams at , Sisteron, L'Escale and Cadarache. There are small canals whose primary purpose is to draw water from the river into the EDF Canal which in turn feeds the hydroelectric power stations. Some of the water diverted by the dams is used for irrigation.


Mirabeau to Avignon
The valley narrows for a few kilometres until the at Mirabeau, at a depth of ,Guy Valencia, "Hydraulics and morphology of the bed in zone of Piedmont and plain", Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: Bond of life of the territory régional, S.l. : District council PACA, p.11 then widens again into an even broader plain until the confluence with the Rhône south of . Its direction changes from southerly to westerly then northwesterly, aligning with the small Provençal mountain ranges between which it flows ( and ). The Durance receives only one significant tributary on this last part of its course: the , which flows around the Lubéron range to the north.


Summary of tributaries
This is a list of rivers longer than that flow into the Durance. They are listed in order of the confluence, starting upstream.

(L) left bank tributary; (R) right bank tributary; (MR) main river, the name given to part of the water course taken into account in the calculation of its total length.


Hydrology
The river is considered "", alternating between the feared (called the third plague of Provence) and low water levels. The upper Durance is an alpine river with a flow ranging from . Its total drainage area is .Serge Gachelin, The Major Hydrographic Network of the Area, p.7-8. At the confluence with , used to thrive, and were found up as far as Sisteron, before the development of the river. Later it becomes a Mediterranean river with the characteristic morphology.


Flow
The sources of the water are a combination of melting snow and the drainage of rain from the surrounding hills and plateaux which have a Mediterranean climate. The latter's tributaries bring rain water mainly in spring, autumn and winter but little during the summer. At Serre-Ponçon, its basin of can create a flow as low as and a maximum flood of (value recorded in 1957).

At the confluence with the Rhône, the average natural flow of the Durance is approximately , with a high annual variability. It can vary between (the most severe low water levels) and in catastrophic historic floods,Cecile Miramont, "History of river landscapes", in Guy Barruol, Denis Furestier, Catherine Lonchambon, The Durance length into broad: ferries, boats and rafts in the history of a river capricieuse, The Alps of light No 149, Forcalquier 2005, , p.15. levels reached in 1843, 1882 and 1886. At the outlet into the Lac de Serre-Ponçon, the medium flow is ; at it is and after the confluence with the Verdon, flow reaches (250 to 330 m³/s in spring, 100 m³/s in the summerGéraldine Bérard, Archaeological chart Alp-of-High-Provence, Academy of the Inscriptions and the Humanities, Paris, 1997, p.51.). The contribution of water from the downstream tributaries is very low. The annual maximum flow generally occurs in May or June, but the most violent flash floods occur in autumn. The lowest water levels occur in winter in the upper valley, and in summer in the middle and lower part of the river.


Flash floods and low water levels
of Serre-Ponçon dam seen from Espinasse bridge - May 30, 2008]] The river is famous historically for its unstable course and violent floods. In the 12th century the Durance had swept away the town of (between Briançon and Embrun, with the confluence of Biaisse) .Guy Barruol, The Durance in Antiquity and the Middle Ages, p.24.

These increased in number and force from the second half of the 16th century, though lessened in the 20th century. The period of increased flooding was not only due to the cooling starting from the 14th and until the 19th century (with increased rain and snowfall), but also because the major deforestation of the slopes of the mountains of the basin of the Durance, starting from the 16th century.Cécile Miramont, The Durance length in large, p.18-19.

Between 1832 and 1890, the Durance had 188 floods of more than (measured at the Mirabeau Bridge).Cecile Miramont, The Durance length in large, p.15. The flood of 1843 carried away several newly built suspension bridges: the 1829 bridge at , the 1835 bridge at Mirabeau, the unfinished bridge at Manosque and the 1838 bridge at Les Mées. The flood of 1872 also swept away the 1847 bridge at .Philippe Autran, "The highway network from the 19th to the 20th centuries: revolution with mechanization", in Autran, Guy Barruol and Jacqueline Ursch, From one bank to another: bridges of High-Provence from Antiquity to Our Day, The Alps of Light No 153, Forcalquier, 2006. , p.46-47.

The catastrophic floods of 1843, 1856, 1886 attained Dans The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, Serge Gachelin gives 5000 m³ (p.8) like Henri Pignoly (p.99); in the same work, Bernard Amouretti gives 6000 m³ (p.25). Cecile Miramont ( to see haut' more; ') give it also an estimate of 6000 m³/s. Jacques Sapiega, in his géorama “the Durance & The Verdon” (DVD The Durance: course and regard '), 5500 m³/s on December 26, 1882 gives; Clébert & Rouyer give 6000 m³/s in November 1886, in Durance, p.39. For comparison, the flooding of 1910 was estimated at approximately .Bernard Amouretti, “the Man was a long time under the dependence of the Durance”, Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, District council PACA, p.25. Even lesser floods were devastating. The flood of 31 May and 1 June 1877 swept away the bridge of .Jean-Paul Clébert and Jean-Pierre Rouyer, the Durance, Pri , Toulouse, 1991, in the Rivières collection and valleys of France, , p.91.

In the 20th century, the floods were less frequent and violent thanks to the dams and the re-afforestation in the Durance basin, but there were still serious floods in 1957 and 1994 with maxima measured at Mirabeau and at Sisteron of ; and this volume was increased at the confluence with the Verdon by a further .

The height of the water at the gorge at Cadarache is at , after an average of of rain because 63% of the rain flows into the Durance.

At Mirabeau, the lowest flow was (during the drought of 1921) i.e. a ratio of 1:133 between minimum and maximum.Jacques Sapiega, géorama, "The Durance & The Verdon".


Islands
Three types of islands are formed in the bed of the Durance:
  • gravel banks, brought by the floods, and generally without or with little vegetation;
  • sand and silt banks, which can be highly fertile for plants like willow. These are only ever swept away by exceptional floods;
  • accumulations of tree trunks and branches.Clébert & Rouyer, "La Durance", p.32.


Principal bridges
Hautes-Alpes :
  • on Lac de Serre-Ponçon (on route nationale RN94) (length 924 metres).

Alpes-de-Haute-Provence :

  • Old bridge to Baume at
  • Viaduct of the A51 autoroute south of Sisteron
  • Dam/bridge at L'Escale (Route nationale RN 85). This replaced the Trébaste Bridge, 1962-3
  • Railway viaduct on the line from Saint-Auban to
  • Steel girder bridge at Les Mées (road D4a)
  • Pont de La Brillanne (road D4b)
  • Aqueduct at Villeneuve (canal EDF).
  • (road D907)

Between the Vaucluse and the Bouches-du-Rhône :

  • Viaduct on the A51 autoroute between Beaumont-de-Pertuis and Cadarache
  • Pont de Mirabeau (road ex-RN96)
  • Suspension bridge at
  • Suspension bridge at
  • Three viaducts for LGV Méditerranée at Cavaillon (length - 940, 900 et 1500 metres)
  • Twin viaducts for Route nationale RN7 and for the A7 autoroute at Bonpas
  • Suspension bridge at (road D970) to the south of Avignon
  • Rail viaduct for the old Paris - Marseille line south of Avignon.


Management of the course

Dams and canals
Dams have been built since the Middle Ages to prevent flooding. At first they were often boxes of wood filled up of stones, but these do not resist the floods for long. Dams have also long been used for irrigation. The first known irrigation canal is the , dug in 1171 by the Marquis de Forbin.Nicolas Bonci, “transported water”, inJacques Sapiega, The Durance, course & regard, District council PACA, 2004 (DVD). It was followed by the Adam de Craponne canal, long, dug in nine months in 1554 from to ), the canal des Alpilles, the canal de Marseille, the , the , the canal de Ventavon, and the hundreds of other smaller ones,Guy Barruol, “the Durance in Antiquity and with the Middle Ages”, p.25. totalling dug between the end of the 16th century and the end of the 19th century.Nicolas Bonci.


Marseille Canal
From 1839 to 1854, the engineer Franz Mayor de Montricher built a canal to supply the city of with drinking water. It is long with underground. The canal is made out of concrete, and the aqueducts out of stone or stone and brick. The volume of water flowing through the canal is with the slope of . The width across the surface of the canal is , and at its base.

The water was first abstracted near the bridge of , at an elevation of , from Marseilles. From there the canal diverges to the west from the Durance to Le Puy-Sainte-Réparade. Following the construction of the large EDF canal, which follows the Durance from Serre-Ponçon until Salon-de-Provence and the Étang de Berre, the water for the canal of Marseilles is now taken from the EDF canal, below Saint-Estève-Janson. From there to Marseille the canal follows an path, of which is underground. The Durance provides today two-thirds of the water for the city of Marseilles.


Hydroelectric installation
In 1955, the law defined the EDF Durance-Verdon project had three objectives:
  • production of electricity;
  • irrigation and the supply of water to towns;
  • minimisation of the flooding.Alain Daubas, The origin of the hydroelectric project of installation the Durance-Verdon, Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, District council PACA, p.39.

Over 40 years, this project required the construction of 23 dams and water extraction points starting upstream of Claux sur Argentiere down to and the supply of 33 hydroelectric power stations and several control stations.Alain Daubas, The network durancian: a renouvelable' energy source; , Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, District council PACA, p.41-42.

This programme was an almost complete success:

  • the Durance-Verdon project produces 6 to 7 billion kWh per annum (10% of the French hydroelectric production);
  • the reservoirs provide drinking water to the whole area, and irrigate all of Provence (a third of all French irrigation);
  • the lakes are a tourist attraction (Serre-Ponçon attracts 10% of the tourists visiting Hautes-Alpes);
  • although routine floods are prevented, the project cannot have any effect on major floods, as shown by the flood of 1994, which reached in Cadarache. Indeed, the lake at Serre-Ponçon only controls the upper reaches of the Durance, and does not control the lower tributaries, whose role is important in the creation of the major floods. All the other dams are only to abstract water. Only the flow of the Verdon is controlled by a dam, Lac de Sainte-Croix, and only if there is enough storage capacity at the time of the flood.Henri Pignoly, “the problems of believed and the culture of the risk” Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, District council PACA, p.99.


Impact of the works
The Durance used to have an average natural flow of and behaved like a Mediterranean river, but dams and canals have changed it considerably. When the flow is low, most of the water in the river now flows in "industrial channels" which by-pass the natural course of the river to run through hydro-electric power stations. These channels can take up to , so that it is only at the time of high flows that the water not diverted uses the river's natural channel. ]]


Ecology
Along the river there are many habitats of both regional and European importance that are naturally governed by the varying flow of the river. These habitats include both mountain and Mediterranean types. The river with its valley is an important biological corridor, within the national green infrastructure and the Pan-European ecological network. Consequently, it is classified as a Natura 2000 protected area.

Currently there are between 150 and 200 species of benthic macroinvertebrates,Jean Giudicelli, “original Characteristics of the river”, Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, District council PACA, p.57. but with few plant species (due to the greatly changing flow of the river).

Water quality is considered good in the higher valley, in spite of the number of dams, which deprive the Durance of the power needed to carry sediment away. This quality was obtained thanks to actions of clean-up projects on the river itself and on the tributaries of the and Calavon (also called le Coulon)). There remain some black spots in the valley (downstream from the factory at Château-Arnoux, below the confluence with the Calavon.Jean Giudicelli and Karine Viciana, "The Durance today", Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, S.l. : District council PACA, pp.59-60.

The depth variation results in significant temperature variations, from seasonally; daily temperatures have of amplitude in the summer and in the winter. These are a significant factor in the biodiversity of the river. The dams in the valley have reduced the incidence of floods and so have allowed the colonisation of alluvial space by and in . The banks, although less wet, still accommodate 110 species of birds during the year, plus 82 species of , which rest, feed and sometime reproduce. One-hundred-ten species of animal hibernate there. Avian diversity increased after the dams were built, but there was probably once a greater diversity. For some families of birds the number of individuals also increased.

There are approximately 75 species of mammals in the Durance catchment area, including: , southwestern water vole, Eurasian water shrew, many species of bat (barbastelle ( Barbastella barbastellus, large murine ( ), large rhinolophe ( Rhinolophus ferrumequinum), minioptère of Schreibers ( Miniopterus schreibersi), small murine ( ), small rhinolophe ( Rhinolophus hipposideros), vespertilion with indented ears ( Myotis emarginatus), and vespertilion of Capaccini ( Myotis capaccinii)). are becoming more problematic including and the recently arrived . have recently become extinct in the entire catchment area.Cf. Inventories Natura 2000, Diren. ]]

The populations of and water plants (100 species on average) and water (77 species) are more varied than before the dams compared with populations on the similar Asse and Buëch. Ludwigia, the primrose willow, is an invasive plant having gradually spread since 1986 in the stagnant water in dead gravel pits and ponds.Christophe Garrone, “the artificial wetlands basic Durance”, Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, S.l. : District council Paca, p.77.

There are only fourteen fish species, including some native species: , south-west European nase and large populations of and which are both endangered species of fish. But the silting and the lack of oxygen has greatly reduced the number of .Pour the §, Jean Giudicelli and Karine Viciana, “the Durance today”, p.60. The European brook lamprey has been seen in recent times but it may have disappeared since.Inventaires Natura 2000, Diren.


History
The Durance played a very important part in the history of , and largely contributed to the economic growth and population of the Marseilles area, after having been an obstacle for centuries. From until the 19th century, the Durance was famous for the difficulty of crossing it, its massive floods and an inconstant flow. The width of its bed, the force and depth of its current, and the changes of course after the floods hindered crossing by ford. The only durable fords are those of Mirabeau and Pertuis, obviously unusable in periods of floods.Bernard Amouretti, “However, the valley of the Durance was always an axis of passage”, Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional: District council PACA, p.27. The changes in the flow also limited river navigation (in spite of size of the river in periods with a high flow. It sometimes needed several ferries to cross the various arms or channels. The unstable and sometimes steep banks prevented easy access to ferries. In more recent times even suspension bridges often had to be re-built after floods.


Prehistory
Twelve million years ago, the Durance flowed directly into the Mediterranean.Jean-Paul Clébert and Jean-Pierre Rouyer, "La Durance", Privat, Toulouse, 1991, in the collection Rivers and valleys of France, , p.11. During the , the source of the Durance was at Sisteron, where the icecap finished.Clébert & Rouyer, "La Durance", pp.11-12. As the ice-cap receded, the Durance course changed towards the west, between Luberon and Alpilles, and flowed into the Rhône.


Antiquity
Gallo-Roman time: trade of on the Durance (Cabrières-d'Aigues, Vaucluse)]] In pre-Roman times, the Durance was the border between various people established along its course, such as the () and the (Bouches-du-Rhône).

The valley of the Durance is a route through the Alps, used by the . A statue of was erected at Montgenèvre, the only passage between and Gallia NarbonensisNicolas Masras, "The Durance, source and border", in Jacques Sapiega, The Durance, course & regard, District council PACA, 2004 (DVD). (1st century) reported that a ferry was established in Cavaillon,Barruol, The Durance length in large, pp.31-32, 39-40. The great Roman way from Spain to Italy only crossed the Durance at Cavaillon and Sisteron. The existence of a bridge at Sisteron was recorded. At other places there were ferries, in particular at , whose name is based on it ferry. Although it was difficult to cross, except in Sisteron, the Durance was nevertheless navigable. The at Cabrières-d'Aigues depict the river being used for the transport of various liquid food products such as wine and olive oil. Gallo-Romans used the towpaths (helciarii) and the wind to move upstream. Several specialized businesses maintained this system transport. Workers known as nautes had a of transport on large rivers and used boats, whereas the utricularii operated on the small rivers and in the marshes using rafts floating on inflated goatskins. There were two groups of utriculari, one in Sisteron and one in Riez.Barruol, The Durance length in large, p.32-36.

This trade fed the activity of an important port, near to the crossroads at Sisteron, at the place called 'Le Bourguet'. In the vicinity of L'Escale a port existed before the Roman conquest, but was developed during the 1st century BC, and was prosperous until the Crisis of the 3rd Century, before recovering its economic activity until the beginning of the 5th century.


Middle Ages
In the Middle Ages, the county of Forcalquier stretched all along the Durance, from Cavaillon to , close to Embrun. From the 12th to the 19th century, the river was used for downstream, in particular by the monks of , who were given the privilege in 1191 to use the river.Barruol, The Durance length in large, p.45.) The timber was used in the towns of the southern plains and in the shipyards.

Other goods were transported by the river, including , those these were subject to ten tolls along the of the river.Tolls at , La Bréole, Monêtier-Allemont, it , , Les Mées, , Saint-Paul, and . Barruol, The Durance length in large, p.46. The bridge of Sisteron, erected in the Middle Ages remained until the middle of the 19th century, the only crossing between two firm banks along the Durance. After the year 1000, the number of ferries increased, including some plied between the two banks of the main channel. The oldest known one was the one between La Roque-d'Anthéron and (in Gontard), recorded in 1037.Barruol, The Durance length in large, p.48. This ferry at Cadenet and one at Mirabeau were used to transport flocks of sheep for seasonal migrations.Catherine Lonchambon, “From one bank to another: the “trail ferry””, Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, S.l. : District council PACA, p.33. Thereafter, there is evidence of ferries at many other places notably , (13th century), , , Le Puy-Sainte-Réparade, , , Peyrolles, that of Cante-Perdrix in Mirabeau, , , Château-Arnoux, , , . Other ferries were established to supply the windmills built at the end of the 18th century in , and .Catherine Lonchambon, “From one bank to another: the “trail ferry””, p.33. Nevertheless, the ferry services were scarcer than on the Rhône with a ferry every on average, versus every on the Rhône.Catherine Lonchambon, “From one bank to another of the Durance: strange boats”, inGuy Barruol, Denis Furestier, Catherine Lonchambon, Cecile Miramont, the Durance length into broad: ferries, boats and rafts in the history of a capricious river, the Alps of light No 149, Forcalquier 2005, , p.55. Starting from the 12th century, wood bridges were also built. They lasted varying times until they were destroyed in various ways:

  • at Maupas (now Pont de Bonpas at Caumont), at the end of the 12th century until its destruction by the Count of Toulouse in 1241;
  • at Mirabeau, the beginning of the 13th century, close to Sainte-Madeleine-du-Pont;
  • at Savines, the most used bridge on the Upper Durance (built in the 15th century)
  • the ancient bridge of Sisteron which was rebuilt in 1365.Barruol, The Durance length in large, p.48. An important canal system develops, of which some deviating a small portion of the flow towards Arles (channel of Craponne) and Crau.


19th century
In 1843, 1856, 1882 and 1886 there were catastrophic floods. The 1852 floods affected the entire basin of the Durance, from Sisteron to its confluence in . It washed away many cultivated alluvial terraces, broke dams and destroyed canals.

The irrigation syndicates and the local services that maintained the roads and bridges requested exceptional help from the State. A service to monitor the river was created, the Service spécial de la Durance, in order to study the hydrology of the river, using the kilometre-long divisions from 1868 between the confluence with the Verdon with that with the Rhône. This division allows surveying and mapping of the land at risk.Claude Gouron (photographer), Helene Vésian (author), Serre-Ponçon: photographic voyage to the confluence of Ubaye and Durance, the Trigger guard: Editions Barthelemy and Hangar, 2004. , p.39.

The construction of the Marseille canal in the middle of the 19th century allowed the metropolitan area of Marseille to develop quickly.


20th century
The Durance was ceased to carry freight because of competition from road and . There were only 10 raftmen remaining in 1896 and only one in 1908.

Hydroelectric installations and chains of locks on the Durance, and its tributaries the Verdon, Buëch and Bléone had the most significant economic impacts and are the most visible change in the landscape. The major part of the flow was diverted into canals downstream from Serre-Ponçon, and the flow in the river's natural bed is a minimal flow of , which is only 1/40 of its natural flow. The silt in the river bed has become stabilised by vegetation and this also reduces the flow. Thanks to the reservoirs at Serre-Ponçon and Sainte-Croix, which together can hold more than 2 billion tonnes of water, irrigation remains possible in summer even during the driest years. The predictable water levels have also allowed development of the local economy through summer tourism.

Beginning in the 1950s, aggregate was extracted from the river bed for road surfacing and wear-resistant concrete. The majority of the quarries have closed or are closing. The few factories that used the river's energy have closed (an aluminium factory at L'Argentière-la-Bessée) or are being closed (Arkema at Saint-Auban).

At an experimental , , is under construction.

4/67 Durance Helicopter Squadron created in 1976, is charged with protecting the air force base at Apt-Saint-Christol and the nuclear missile site at Plateau d'Albion.


In the arts
The Durance is represented in the form of an ornate monument at the , in , built between 1862 and 1869 by the architect Espérandieu, to celebrate the arrival of water from the Durance, via the Canal de Marseille. It is also depicted beneath a sculpture of a pregnant woman in Charleval, Bouches-du-Rhône.

References in literature include:

  • refers to the Durance as one of the three scourges of
  • poets (1806–1861), Félibrige, republican and traditionalist, Paul Arène, and Élémir Bourges who referred to this river;
  • the best known writer to be inspired by the Durance, , who makes use of it in his imaginary geography of Provence, transforming it into river that flows to the sea and he refers to it as masculine,According to P. Citron, Giono, Threshold, 1990. and describing its flow through the at Sisteron without mentioning the town, then describing an imaginary Rebeillard highland.Clébert & Rouyer, "La Durance", pp.180-183. Horseman on the Roof is also set along the course of the Durance.

Among the painters to have represented it are and Monticelli, close friends, who settled in Saint-Paul-lès-Durance and made many paintings where it appears, either as background, or as subject (86 of the 421 paintings by Guigou). The Romanian painter, , took refuge in 1942 in and made several paintings on materials that he found.

For several years a club has revived the tradition of rafting, each year building rafts from tree trunks then navigating a section of the Durance with them.

An FM local radio station is called Radio Durance.

In French cinema is the setting of the film L'Eau vive by François Villiers is during the construction of the dam at Serre-Ponçon.

La Durance is also the name of an academic bulletin by history and geography professors at Aix-Marseille.


Other
The is a series of multi-product replenishment oilers, originally designed and built for service in the French Navy.


Notes and references

Bibliography
  • Direction of the environment, of sustainable development and agriculture, The Durance: bond of life of the territory régional, District council PACA, 106 pp.
  • Claude Gouron, photographer, Helene Vesian, author of the texts, , preface writer, The Durance: photographic voyage from the Alps in Provence, Avignon: Alain Barthélemy, 2002.
  • Henri Julien, and Jean-Marie Gibelin, You, Durance, Barred, ED. Terradou, 1991, .
  • Cecile Miramont, Denis Furestier, Guy Barruol, Catherine Lonchambon, The Durance length into broad: ferries, boats and rafts in the history a carpricious river, Forcalquier: the Alps of light, 2005, Collection: The Alps of light, ISSN 0182-4643, num. 149,120 p, .
  • (1990). 9782600028837, Librairie Droz.
  • Jean-Paul Clébert and Jean-Pierre Rouyer, "La Durance", Privat, Toulouse, 1991, in the collection Rivers and valleys of France, .


Video
  • Jacques Sapiega, The Durance, course & regard, District council PACA, 2004


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