River Ock
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Ock | |
River | |
Bridge across the River Ock as it flows into the Thames at Abingdon
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Country | England |
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Counties | Oxfordshire |
Towns | Abingdon-on-Thames |
Source | |
- location | Little Coxwell, White Horse Hills |
Mouth | River Thames |
- location | Abingdon-on-Thames, Oxfordshire |
Discharge | for Abingdon-on-Thames |
- average | 1.52 m3/s (54 cu ft/s) |
- max | 15.8 m3/s (558 cu ft/s) 6 March 1972 |
- min | 0.11 m3/s (4 cu ft/s) 23 August 1976 |
The River Ock is a small English river which is a tributary of the River Thames. It has as its catchment area the Vale of White Horse, a low-lying and wide valley in south Oxfordshire, and flows into the River Thames, at Abingdon on the reach above Culham Lock.
Contents
Course
The River Ock rises near the village of Little Coxwell. It collects tributaries from each village along the base of the White Horse Hills, where springs emanating from the chalk hills allowed settlements to flourish in former times.
From Little Coxwell, the Ock runs around Longcot and flows past Stanford in the Vale, where it is about 10 feet (3 m) wide. The name of Stanford comes from stony ford, possibly alluding to the Ock crossing at Stanford Mill. Thence it runs past Charney Bassett, Lyford, Garford and Marcham Mill, before losing its identity and its waters to the Thames at Abingdon by the old Hygienic Laundry building. An iron bridge crosses at the junction which was built by the Wilts & Berks Canal Company. This gives the erroneous impression that the Ock is that canal, but in fact the original canal entrance a few yards downstream is now blocked up. This has been replaced under a restoration project by a newer entrance closer to Culham Lock.
The soils through which the River Ock flows are the Jurassic sedimentary series (Greensands, Gault, Kimmeridge Clay and corallian limestone), while some of its tributaries arise in chalk springs. Until recent times, native crayfish and many freshwater fish species inhabited the river. Increased housing in the Vale, with the resultant surface drainage, may have threatened these species but surveys have not yet been performed in the 21st century.
Although normally placid, the Ock can flood low-lying areas of south Abingdon after persistent heavy rainfall; this last occurred in July 2007.
Name
The name Ock appears to be derived from a Celtic word for 'salmon'.[1]
See also
References
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Next confluence upstream | River Thames | Next confluence downstream |
Hinksey Stream (south) | River Ock | Wilts & Berks Canal (south) |
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