River Tavy
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The Tavy (Template:IPAc-en) is a river on Dartmoor, Devon, England. The name derives from the Brythonic root Template:Lang, once thought to mean 'dark' but now generally understood to mean 'to flow'.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> It has given its name to the town of Tavistock and the villages of Mary Tavy and Peter Tavy.
It is a tributary of the River Tamar and has as its own tributaries: Collybrooke, River Burn, River Wallabrooke, River Lumburn, and River Walkham. At Tavistock it feeds a canal running to Morwellham Quay.
Its mouth is crossed by the Tavy Bridge which carries the Tamar Valley railway line.
Navigation
The river is navigable inland as far as Lopwell, where a weir marks the normal tidal limit, about a Template:Convert journey from North Corner Quay at Devonport.<ref>Ordnance Survey mapping</ref> River transport was an important feature of the local farming, mining, tourism, and forestry economies.<ref>Template:Cite map</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The Queen's Harbour Master for Plymouth<ref>Queen's Harbour Master Plymouth</ref> is responsible for managing navigation on the River Tavy up to the normal tidal limit.<ref>The Dockyard Port of Plymouth Order 1999</ref>
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Lopwell weir, highest point of navigation
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See also
- Tamar–Tavy Estuary SSSI
References
- Armstrong, Robin (1985). The Painted Stream. London: Dent. Template:ISBN.
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