ALCANTARA (RIVER)


The Alcantara at the time of the 2003 floods

The 'Alcantara' is a river in Sicily. It has its source on the south side of Monti Nebrodi and its mouth in the Ionian Sea at Capo Schiso in Giardini-Naxos. The river is 52 km long.
The name Alcantara is of Arabic origin (al Quantarah = the bridge) and refers to a bridge from Roman times found by the Arabs.

Contents
Course
Alcantara river park
External link

Course


The Alcantara has its source at an altitude of 1250m in the municipality of Floresta. On its way to the sea, past the north of Mount Etna, it flows through the municipalities of Randazzo, Mojo Alcantara, Francavilla di Sicilia, Motta Camastra, Castiglione di Sicilia, Graniti, Gaggi, Calatabiano, Taormina and Giardini-Naxos.
Several thousand years ago, the river bed was blocked by a lava flow from Mount Etna. As the lava was cooled much more quickly by the water than it would have done otherwise, it crystallised in the form of columns. Over the next millennia, the river naturally eroded a channel through these columns, resulting in impressive gorges and ravines such as the "Gole dell'Alcantara".

Alcantara river park


Gola dell'Alcantara

The Alcantara river park (''Parco fluviale dell'Alcantara'') was established in 2001 for protection of the river, and to encourage its use as a relaxation area and tourist destination.

External link



Alcantara river park

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