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The Roer (, ) or Rur (; Ambleve/Rour Amel/Rur ) is a major river that flows through portions of , and the . It is a right (eastern) tributary to the (). About 90 percent of the river's course is in Germany.

It is not to be confused with the rivers Ruhr and Röhr, which are tributaries of the in North Rhine-Westphalia.


History
During the the valley of the Roer lay mostly within the Duchy of Jülich. In 1795, until 1814, during which time the area was part of the French Republic and Empire, it gave its name to the French département of the Roer.

The Roer represented an important front in the Allied push towards Germany at the end of the Second World War. A fortified area known as the Roer Triangle, formed by the towns of and , in the , and in , was the scene of heavy fighting at the beginning of 1945.

Operation Blackcock was the code name for the clearing of the Roer Triangle. It was conducted by the 2nd British Army between 14 and 26 January 1945. The objective was to drive the German 15th Army back across the Rivers Roer and Wurm and move the frontline further into Germany. The operation was carried out under command of the XII Corps by three divisions. The operation is relatively unknown despite the sometimes fierce battles that were fought for each and every village and hamlet within the "Roer Triangle".

Between 16 December 1944 and 23 February 1945, the U.S. Ninth Army was unable to advance across the Roer during , because German forces controlled dams close to the river's source in the densely forested region of the Hohes Venn. This meant Axis forces could potentially blow the dams, releasing enough water to wash out an Allied assault. At the same time, the German Ardennes Offensive meant any further westward push would leave Allied forces stretched and supply lines exposed. Eventually the counteroffensive was overwhelmed and German engineers, under pressure of aerial and artillery bombardment, released the dams. As the flood waters began to subside, Allied forces crossed the Rur in rafts in the early hours of February 23, 1945, as part of Operation Grenade.

Image:Rur zwischen Monschau und Dedenborn 30-01-2005.jpg|The Roer between Monschau and Dedenborn during winter File:Rur stream and the High Fens along the RAVeL L48 in Bütgenbach, Belgium (DSCF5836).jpg|The Roer in the High Fens


Geography
The Roer rises in the , near the high Signal de Botrange in Belgium at an elevation of above sea level. South of it flows into Germany, through North Rhine-Westphalia. It flows first through the northern part of the mountains.

After it reaches the , the second-largest artificial lake in Germany. After approximately it flows into the Netherlands, and at its mark it flows into the river in the city of .

Major tributaries of the Roer include the and the Wurm. The towns along the Roer are Monschau, , , Düren, Jülich, , Hückelhoven, (all in Germany) and Roermond (Netherlands).

In the 1960s and 1970s, the northern part of the Roer was heavily polluted by the of many German coal mines. Neither fish nor other organisms could be found, and it was dangerous to swim in the river. Foam flakes regularly flooded parts of the city of Roermond. After the closure of the mines, the waste water treatment in Germany and the Netherlands greatly improved. Only the lower part of the river is still contaminated. Water quality chart of the Rur published by the Ministry for Climate Protection, Environment, Agriculture, Nature Conservation and Consumer Protection of the German State of North Rhine-Westphalia The water in the upper part of the river is so clean that trout and more than 30 species of fish are back. After an absence of 125 years, returned to the Roer in 2004.


Tributaries


The Roer dams
In the upper reaches of the river the waters are held back by the Roer dams to form a series of reservoirs. The largest of these is the Schwammanauel Dam (officially the Schwammenauel barrage ( Absperrbauwerk Schwammenauel) enclosing the Roer reservoir ( Rurstausee) itself. Above this is the Paulushof Dam, forming the Upper lake ( Obersee), while the ( Urftalsperre) impounds the Urft reservoir ( Urftstausee). In 1944 the Schwammenauel Dam held back some 65,500,000 cubic metres of water, while the Urft Dam held another 4,550,000 cubic metres.


Recreation
The Roer is the only real in North Rhine-Westphalia. The upper section above the (German: Rurtalsperre Schwammenauel) offers of white water ranging from class III(+) to I. The town of Monschau is the venue for the yearly International White Water Race which was held on 17 March 2013 for the 58th time.


See also
  • (Roer Valley Railway)—The tracks run approximately along the river, from Heimbach to Linnich.


External links

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