River Trent

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Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox river

File:Head of Trent.jpg
The Trent passes over a man-made waterfall in Hollin Wood just downstream from its source

The Trent, the third-longest river in the United Kingdom, has its source in Staffordshire, on the southern edge of Biddulph Moor. It flows through and drains the North Midlands into the Humber Estuary. The river is known for dramatic flooding after storms and spring snowmelt, which in the past have often caused the river to change course.

The river passes through Stoke-on-Trent, Stone, Staffordshire, Rugeley, Burton-upon-Trent and Nottingham before joining the Yorkshire Ouse at Trent Falls to form the Humber Estuary, which empties into the North Sea between Kingston upon Hull in Yorkshire and Immingham in Lincolnshire. The wide Humber estuary has often been characterised as the boundary between the Midlands and Northern England ("The North").<ref name="Penn2001">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Bambra2016">Template:Cite book</ref>

Name

The name "Trent" is possibly from a Romano-British word meaning "strongly flooding". More specifically, the name may be a contraction of two Romano-British words, tros ("over") and hynt ("way").<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This may indeed indicate a river that is prone to flooding. However, a more likely explanation may be that it was considered to be a river that could be crossed principally by means of fords, i.e. the river flowed over major road routes. This may explain the presence of the Romano-British element rid (cf. Welsh rhyd, "ford") in various place names along the Trent, such as Hill Ridware, as well as the Old English‐derived ford. Another translation is given as "the trespasser", referring to the waters flooding over the land.Template:Sfn According to Koch at the University of Wales,<ref name=koch>Template:Harvnb</ref> the name Trent derives from the Romano-British Trisantona, a Romano-British reflex of the combined elements *tri-sent(o)-on-ā- (through-path-augmentative-feminine-) ‘great thoroughfare’.<ref name=koch/> A traditional but almost certainly wrong opinion is that of Izaak Walton, who states in The Compleat Angler (1653) that the Trent is "... so called from thirty kind of fishes that are found in it, or for that it receiveth thirty lesser rivers."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Course

The Trent rises within the Staffordshire Moorlands district, near the village of Biddulph Moor, from a number of sources including the Trent Head Well. It is then joined by other small streams to form the Head of Trent, which flows south, to the only reservoir along its course at Knypersley Reservoir. Downstream of the reservoir it passes through Stoke-on-Trent and merges with the Lyme, Fowlea and other brooks that drain the six towns of the Staffordshire Potteries to become the River Trent. On the southern fringes of Stoke, it passes through the landscaped parkland of Trentham Gardens.<ref name="OSmap">Template:Cite web</ref>

File:Swarkestone Bridge.jpg
Swarkestone Bridge

The river then continues south through the market town of Stone, and after passing the village of Salt, it reaches Great Haywood, where it is spanned by the 16th-century Essex Bridge near Shugborough Hall. At this point the River Sow joins it from Stafford. The Trent now flows south-east past the town of Rugeley until it reaches Kings Bromley where it meets the Blithe. After the confluence with the Swarbourn, it passes Alrewas and reaches Wychnor, where it is crossed by the A38 road dual carriageway, which follows the route of the Roman Ryknild Street. The river turns north-east where it is joined by its largest tributary, the River Tame (which is at this point actually the larger, though its earlier length shorter) and immediately afterwards by the River Mease, creating a larger river that now flows through a broad floodplain.

The river continues north-east, passing the village of Walton-on-Trent until it reaches the large town of Burton-upon-Trent. The river in Burton is crossed by a number of bridges including the ornate 19th-century Ferry Bridge that links Stapenhill to the town.<ref name="OSmap"/> To the north-east of Burton the river is joined by the River Dove at Newton Solney and enters Derbyshire, before passing between the villages of Willington and Repton where it turns directly east to reach Swarkestone Bridge. Shortly afterwards, the river becomes the Derbyshire-Leicestershire border, passing the traditional crossing point of King's Mill, Castle Donington, Weston-on-Trent and Aston-on-Trent.<ref name="OSmap" />

At Shardlow, where the Trent and Mersey Canal begins, the river also meets the Derwent at Derwent Mouth. After this confluence, the river turns north-east and is joined by the River Soar before reaching the outskirts of Nottingham, where it is joined by the River Erewash near the Attenborough nature reserve and enters Nottinghamshire. As it enters the city, it passes the suburbs of Beeston, Clifton and Wilford; where it is joined by the Leen. On reaching West Bridgford it flows beneath Trent Bridge near the cricket ground of the same name, and beside The City Ground, home of Nottingham Forest F.C., until it reaches Holme Sluices.<ref name="OSmap" />

File:Newark on Trent Castle - geograph.org.uk - 1276091.jpg
Newark Castle, Nottinghamshire

Downstream of Nottingham it passes Radcliffe-on-Trent, Stoke Bardolph and Burton Joyce before reaching Gunthorpe with its bridge, lock and weir. The river now flows north-east below the Toot and Trent Hills before reaching Hazelford Ferry, Fiskerton and Farndon. To the north of Farndon, beside the Staythorpe Power Station the river splits, with one arm passing Averham and Kelham, and the other arm, which is navigable, being joined by the Devon before passing through the market town of Newark-on-Trent and beneath the town's castle walls. The two arms recombine at Crankley Point beyond the town, where the river turns due north to pass North Muskham and Holme to reach Cromwell Weir, below which the Trent becomes tidal.<ref name="OSmap" />

The now tidal river meanders across a wide floodplain, at the edge of which are located riverside villages such as Carlton and Sutton on Trent, Besthorpe and Girton. After passing the site of High Marnham power station, it becomes the approximate boundary between Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire and reaches the only toll bridge along its course at Dunham on Trent. Downstream of Dunham the river passes Church Laneham and reaches Torksey, where it meets the Foss Dyke navigation which connects the Trent to Lincoln and the River Witham. Further north at Littleborough is the site of the Roman town of Segelocum, where a Roman road once crossed the river.<ref name="OSmap" /><ref name=littlebtv>Template:Cite web</ref>

It then reaches the town of Gainsborough with its own Trent Bridge. The river frontage in the town is lined with warehouses, that were once used when the town was an inland port, many of which have been renovated for modern use. Downstream of the town the villages are often named in pairs, representing the fact that they were once linked by a river ferry between the two settlements. These villages include West Stockwith and East Stockwith, Owston Ferry and East Ferry, and West Butterwick and East Butterwick.<ref name="eferry">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="estock">Template:Cite web</ref> At West Stockwith the Trent is joined by the Chesterfield Canal and the River Idle and soon after enters Lincolnshire fully, passing to the west of Scunthorpe. The last bridge over the river is at Keadby where it is joined by both the Stainforth and Keadby Canal and the River Torne.<ref name="OSmap" />

Downstream of Keadby the river progressively widens, passing Amcotts and Flixborough to reach Burton upon Stather and finally Trent Falls. At this point, between Alkborough and Faxfleet the river reaches the boundary with Yorkshire and joins the River Ouse to form the Humber which flows into the North Sea.<ref name="OSmap" />

Migration of course in historic times

Unusually for an English river, the channel altered significantly during historic times, and has been described as being similar to the Mississippi in this respect, especially in its middle reaches, where there are numerous old meanders and cut-off loops.<ref name=petts192>Template:Harvnb</ref> An abandoned channel at Repton is described on an old map as 'Old Trent Water', records show that this was once the main navigable route, with the river having switched to a more northerly course in the 18th century.<ref name=petts200>Template:Harvnb</ref> Farther downstream at Hemington, archaeologists have found the remains of a medieval bridge across another abandoned channel.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Ripper, S. and Cooper L.P., 2009, The Hemington Bridges: "The Excavation of Three Medieval Bridges at Hemington Quarry, Near Castle Donington, Leicestershire", Leicester Archaeology Monograph</ref> Researchers using aerial photographs and historical maps have identified many of these palaeochannel features, a well-documented example being the meander cutoff at Sawley.<ref name=petts198>Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The river's propensity to change course is referred to in Shakespeare's play Henry IV, Part 1:

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Henry Hotspur's speech complaining about the river has been linked to the meanders near West Burton,<ref name=MM1>Template:Cite web</ref> however, given the wider context of the scene, in which conspirators propose to divide England into three after a revolt, it is thought that Hotspur's intentions were of a grander design, diverting the river east towards the Wash such that he would benefit from a much larger share of the divided Kingdom. Downstream of Burton upon Trent, the river increasingly trends northwards, cutting off a portion of Nottinghamshire and nearly all of Lincolnshire from his share, north of the Trent.<ref name=dsc/>Template:Sfn The idea for this scene, may have been based on the disagreement regarding a mill weir near Shelford Manor, between local landowners Gilbert Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, and Sir Thomas Stanhope which culminated with a long diversion channel being dug to bypass the mill.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This took place in 1593 so would have been a contemporary topic in the Shakespearean period.<ref name=dsc>Template:Cite book</ref>

Prehistory

During the Pleistocene epoch (1.7 million years ago), the River Trent rose in the Welsh hills and flowed almost east from Nottingham through the present Vale of Belvoir to cut a gap through the limestone ridge at Ancaster and thence to the North Sea.<ref>Posnansky, M. The Pleistocene Succession in the Middle Trent Basin. Proc. Geologists' Assoc 71 (1960), pp.285–311</ref> At the end of the Wolstonian Stage (c. 130,000 years ago) a mass of stagnant ice left in the Vale of Belvoir caused the river to divert north along the old Lincoln river, through the Lincoln gap, along what is now the course of the Witham. During a following glaciation (Devensian, 70,000 BC) the ice held back vast areas of water – called Glacial Lake Humber – in the current lower Trent basin. When this retreated, the Trent adopted its current course into the Humber.Template:Sfn

Catchment

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The Trent basin covers a large part of the Midlands, and includes the majority of the counties of Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire and the West Midlands; but also includes parts of Lincolnshire, South Yorkshire, Warwickshire and Rutland. The catchment is located between the drainage basins of the Severn and its tributary the Avon to the south and west, the Weaver to the north-west, the tributaries of the Yorkshire Ouse to the North and the basins of the Welland, Witham and Ancholme to the east.<ref name=cfmp21>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

A distinctive feature of the catchment is the marked variation in the topography and character of the landscape, which varies from the upland moorland headwaters of the Dark Peak, where the highest point of the catchment is the Kinder Scout plateau at Template:Convert; through to the intensively farmed and drained flat fenland areas that exist alongside the lower tidal reaches, where ground levels can equal sea level. These lower reaches are protected from tidal flooding by a series of floodbanks and defences.<ref name=hilow>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="CEH3">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=cfmp3>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>

Elsewhere there is a distinct contrast between the open limestone areas of the White Peak in the Dove catchment, and the large woodland areas, including Sherwood Forest in the Dukeries area of the Idle catchment, the upland Charnwood Forest, and the National Forest in the Soar and Mease drainage basins respectively.<ref name=cfmp21 />

Land use<ref name=RoE/>

Land use is predominantly rural, with some three-quarters of the Trent catchment given over to agriculture. This ranges from moorland grazing of sheep in the upland areas, through to improved pasture and mixed farms in the middle reaches, where dairy farming is important. Intensive arable farming of cereals and root vegetables, chiefly potatoes and sugar beet occurs in the lowland areas, such as the Vale of Belvoir and the lower reaches of the Trent, Torne and Idle.<ref name=RoE>Rivers of Europe by Klement Tockner, Urs Uehlinger, Christopher T. Robinson (2009), Academic Press, London.</ref> Water level management is important in these lowland areas, and the local watercourses are usually maintained by internal drainage boards and their successors, with improved drainage being assisted by the use of pumping stations to lift water into embanked carrier rivers, which subsequently discharge into the Trent.<ref name=cfmp21 />Template:Rp<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The less populous rural areas are offset by a number of large urbanised areas including the conurbations of Stoke-on-Trent, Birmingham and the surrounding Black Country in the West Midlands; and in the East Midlands the major university cities and historical county seats of Leicester, Derby and Nottingham. Together these contain the majority of the 6 million people who live in the catchment.<ref name=cfmp21 />

The majority of these urban areas are in the upper reaches of either the Trent itself, as is the case with Stoke, or its tributaries. For example, Birmingham lies at the upper end of the Tame, and Leicester is located towards the head of the Soar. Whilst this is not unique for an English river, it does mean that there is an ongoing legacy of issues relating to urban runoff, pollution incidents, and effluent dilution from sewage treatment, industry and coal mining. Historically, these issues resulted in a considerable deterioration in the water quality of both the Trent and its tributaries, especially the Tame.<ref name=RoE/> To bring clean water to the West Midlands, Birmingham Corporation created a large reservoir chain and aqueduct system to bring water from the Elan Valley.

Geology

Underlying the upper reaches of the Trent, are formations of Millstone Grit and Carboniferous Coal Measures which include layers of sandstones, marls and coal seams. The river crosses a band of Triassic Sherwood sandstone at Sandon, and it meets the same sandstone again as it flows beside Cannock Chase, between Great Haywood and Armitage, there is also another outcrop between Weston-on-Trent and King's Mill.<ref name=BGSmap>Template:Cite web – Zoomable map – click to obtain the bedrock and superficial geologies.</ref><ref name=Geoevo>Template:Cite web</ref>

File:Cliffs at the south end of Gunthorpe weir - geograph.org.uk - 629291.jpg
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Downstream of Armitage the solid geology is primarily Mercia Mudstones, the course of the river following the arc of these mudstones as they pass through the Midlands all the way to the Humber. The mudstones are not exposed by the bed of the river, as there is a layer of gravels and then alluvium above the bedrock. In places, however the mudstones do form river cliffs, most notably at Gunthorpe and Stoke Lock near Radcliffe on Trent, the village being named after the distinctive red coloured strata.<ref name=Geoevo/><ref name=admills>Template:Cite book</ref>

The low range of hills, which have been formed into a steep set of cliffs overlooking the Trent between Scunthorpe and Alkborough are also made up of mudstones, but are of the younger Rhaetic Penarth Group.<ref name=BGSmap /><ref name=Geoevo/>

In the wider catchment the geology is more varied, ranging from the Precambrian rocks of the Charnwood Forest, through to the Jurassic limestone that forms the Lincolnshire Edge and the eastern watershed of the Trent. The most important in terms of the river are the extensive sandstone and limestone aquifers that underlie many of the tributary catchments. These include the Sherwood sandstones that occur beneath much of eastern Nottinghamshire, the Permian Lower Magnesian limestone and the carboniferous limestone in Derbyshire. Not only do these provide baseflows to the major tributaries, the groundwater is an important source for public water supply.<ref name=Geoevo />

Sand, gravels and alluvium deposits that overlie the mudstone bedrock occur almost along the entire length of the river, and are an important feature of the middle and lower reaches, with the alluvial river silt producing fertile soils that are used for intensive agriculture in the Trent valley. Beneath the alluvium are widespread deposits of sand and gravel, which also occur as gravel terraces considerably above the height of the current river level. There is thought to be a complex succession of at least six separate gravel terrace systems along the river, deposited when a much larger Trent flowed through the existing valley, and along its ancestral routes through the water gaps at Lincoln and Ancaster.<ref name=TVPP>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=tvform>Template:Cite web</ref>

This ‘staircase’ of flat topped terraces was created as a result of successive periods of deposition and subsequent down cutting by the river, a product of the meltwater and glacially eroded material produced from ice sheets at the end of glacial periods through the Pleistocene epoch between 450,000 and 12,000 years BP. Contained within these terraces is evidence of the mega fauna that once lived along the river, the bones and teeth of animals such as the woolly mammoth, bison and wolves that existed during colder periods have all been identified.<ref name=Balderton>Template:Cite journal</ref> Another notable find in a related terrace system near Derby from a warmer interglacial period, was the Allenton hippopotamus.<ref name=TVPP />

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The lower sequences of these terraces have been widely quarried for sand and gravel, and the extraction of these minerals continues to be an important industry in the Trent Valley, with some three million tonnes of aggregates being produced each year.<ref name=3495pal>Template:Cite web</ref> Once worked out, the remaining gravel pits which are usually flooded by the relatively high water table have been reused for a wide variety of purposes. These include recreational water activities, and once rehabilitated, as nature reserves and wetlands.<ref name=TVlandscape>Template:Cite web</ref>

During the end of the last Devensian glacial period the formation of Lake Humber in the lowest reaches of the river, meant that substantial lake bed clays and silts were laid down to create the flat landscape of the Humberhead Levels. These levels extend across the Trent valley, and include the lower reaches of the Eau, Torne and Idle. In some areas, successive layers of peat were built up above the lacustrine deposits during the Holocene period, which created lowland mires such as the Thorne and Hatfield Moors.<ref name=hhl>Template:Cite web</ref>

Hydrology

The topography, geology and land use of the Trent catchment all have a direct influence on the hydrology of the river. The variation in these factors is also reflected in the contrasting runoff characteristics and subsequent inflows of the principal tributaries. The largest of these is the River Tame, which contributes nearly a quarter of the total flow for the Trent, with the other significant tributaries being the Derwent at 18%, Soar 17%, the Dove 13%, and the Sow 8%.<ref name=cfmp2>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>Template:Rp Four of these main tributaries, including the Dove and Derwent which drain the upland Peak District, all join within the middle reaches, giving rise to a comparatively energetic river system for the UK.<ref name=4D>Template:Cite journal</ref>

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Rainfall

Rainfall in the catchment generally follows topography<ref name=metoff1>Template:Cite web</ref> with the highest annual rainfall of Template:Convert and above occurring over the high moorland uplands of the Derwent headwaters to the north and west, with the lowest of Template:Convert, in the lowland areas to the north and east.<ref name=cfmp5>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref> Rainfall totals in the Tame are not as high as would be expected from the moderate relief, due to the rain shadow effect of the Welsh mountains to the west, reducing amounts to an average of Template:Convert for the tributary basin.<ref name=metoff1 /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The average for the whole Trent catchment is Template:Convert which is significantly lower than the average for United Kingdom at Template:Convert and lower than that for England at Template:Convert.<ref name=ontrentrf>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=metoff3>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=metoff4>Template:Cite web</ref>

Like other large lowland British rivers, the Trent is vulnerable to long periods of rainfall caused by sluggish low pressure weather systems repeatedly crossing the basin from the Atlantic, especially during the autumn and winter when evaporation is at its lowest. This combination can produce a water-logged catchment that can respond rapidly in terms of runoff, to any additional rainfall. Such conditions occurred in February 1977, with widespread flooding in the lower reaches of the Trent when heavy rain produced a peak flow of nearly Template:Convert at Nottingham. In 2000 similar conditions occurred again, with above average rainfall in the autumn being followed by further rainfall, producing flood conditions in November of that year.<ref name=emble>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=hifcolw>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=mercian2000>Template:Cite web</ref>

Another meteorological risk, although one that occurs less often, is that related to the rapid melting of snow lying in the catchment. This can be a result of a sudden rise in temperature after a prolonged cold period, or when combined with extensive rainfall. Many of the largest historical floods were caused by snowmelt, but the last such episode occurred when the bitter winter of 1946–7 was followed by a rapid thaw due to rain in March 1947 and caused severe flooding all along the Trent valley.<ref name=emble /><ref name=RMS>Template:Cite web</ref>

At the other extreme, extended periods of low rainfall can also cause problems. The lowest flows for the river were recorded during the drought of 1976, following the dry winter of 1975/6. Flows measured at Nottingham were exceptionally low by the end of August, and were given a drought return period of greater than one hundred years.<ref name=76drought>Template:Cite book</ref>

Discharge

The river's flow is measured at several points along its course, at a number of gauging stations. At Stoke-on-Trent in the upper reaches, the average flow is only Template:Convert, which increases considerably to Template:Convert, at Great Haywood, as it includes the flow of the upper tributaries draining the Potteries conurbation. At Yoxall, the flow increases to Template:Convert due to the input of larger tributaries including the Sow and Blithe. At Drakelow upstream of Burton the flow increases nearly three-fold to Template:Convert, due to the additional inflow from the largest tributary the Tame. At Colwick near Nottingham, the average flow rises to Template:Convert, due to the combined inputs of the other major tributaries namely the Dove, Derwent and Soar. The last point of measurement is North Muskham here the average flow is Template:Convert, a relatively small increase due to the input of the Devon, and other smaller Nottinghamshire tributaries.<ref name="CEH2">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=CEHmap>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Trent has marked variations in discharge, with long term average monthly flows at Colwick fluctuating from Template:Convert in July during the summer, and increasing to Template:Convert in January.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=Sagedb>Template:Cite web</ref> During lower flows the Trent and its tributaries are heavily influenced by effluent returns from sewage works, especially the Tame where summer flows can be made up of 90% effluent. For the Trent this proportion is lower, but with nearly half of low flows being made up of these effluent inflows, it is still significant. There are also baseflow contributions from the major aquifers in the catchment.<ref name=davie>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=gardiner>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=rwe>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>

Average monthly flows of Trent in cubic metres per second measured at Colwick (Nottingham).<ref name=Sagedb />
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Sediment

In the lower tidal reaches the Trent has a high sediment load, this fine silt which is also known as ‘warp', was used to improve the soil by a process known as warping, whereby river water was allowed to flood into adjacent fields through a series of warping drains, enabling the silt to settle out across the land. Up to Template:Convert of deposition could occur in a single season, and depths of Template:Convert have been accumulated over time at some locations. A number of the smaller Trent tributaries are still named as warping drains, such as Morton warping drain, near Gainsborough.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Warp was also used as a commercial product, after being collected from the river banks at low tide, it was transported along the Chesterfield Canal to Walkeringham where it was dried out and refined to be eventually sold as a silver polish for cutlery manufacturers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=warp>Template:Cite book</ref>

Floods

The Trent is widely known for its tendency to cause significant flooding along its course, and there is a well documented flood history extending back for some 900 years. In Nottingham the heights of significant historic floods from 1852 have been carved into a bridge abutment next to Trent Bridge, with flood marks being transferred from the medieval Hethbeth bridge that pre-dated the existing 19th-century crossing. Historic flood levels have also been recorded at Girton and on the churchyard wall at Collingham.<ref name=MM1/><ref name=markers>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=hethbeth>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>

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One of the earliest recorded floods along the Trent was in 1141, and like many other large historical events was caused by the melting of snow following heavy rainfall, it also caused a breach in the outer floodbank at Spalford. Some of the earliest floods can be assessed by using Spalford bank as a substitute measure for the size of a particular flood, as it has been estimated that the bank only failed when flows were greater than Template:Convert, the bank was also breached in 1403 and 1795.<ref name=Brown>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Early bridges were vulnerable to floods, and in 1309 many bridges were washed away or damaged by severe winter floods, including Hethbeth Bridge. In 1683 the same bridge was partially destroyed by a flood that also meant the loss of the bridge at Newark. Historical archives often record details of the bridge repairs that followed floods, as the cost of these repairs or pontage had to be raised by borrowing money and charging a local toll.<ref name=MM1 /><ref name=Brown />

The largest known flood was the Candlemas flood of February 1795, which followed an eight-week period of harsh winter weather, rivers froze which that meant mills were unable to grind corn, and then followed a rapid thaw. Due to the size of the flood and the ice entrained in the flow, nearly every bridge along the Trent was badly damaged or washed away. The bridges at Wolseley, Wychnor and the main span at Swarkestone were all destroyed.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=sddc>Template:Cite web</ref> In Nottingham, residents of Narrow Marsh were trapped by the floodwaters in their first floor rooms, boats were used to take supplies to those stranded. Livestock was badly affected, 72 sheep drowned in Wilford and ten cows were lost in Bridgford.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The vulnerable flood bank at Spalford was breached again, floodwaters spreading out across the low-lying land, even reaching the River Witham and flooding Lincoln. Some Template:Convert were flooded for a period of over three weeks.<ref name=MM1 /><ref name=uwidb>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=Stonebridge>Template:Harvnb</ref>

File:Girton floodmarks - geograph.org.uk - 666010.jpg
Flood marks at Girton showing the height of the 1795 flood and others

A description of the breach was given as follows:

The bank is formed upon a plain of sandy nature, and when it was broken in 1795, the water forced an immense breach, the size of which may be judged from the fact that eighty loads of faggots and upwards of four hundred tons of earth were required to fill up the hole, an operation which took several weeks to complete.

The flood bank was subsequently strengthened and repaired, following further floods during 1824 and 1852.<ref name=uwidb />

The principal flood of the 19th century and the second largest recorded, was in October 1875. In Nottingham a cart overturned in the floodwaters near the Wilford Road and six people drowned, dwellings nearby were flooded to a depth of Template:Convert. Although not quite as large as 1795 this flood devastated many places along the river, at Burton upon Trent much of the town was inundated, with flooded streets and houses, and dead animals floating past in the flood. Food was scarce, "in one day 10,000 loaves had to be sent into the town and distributed gratuitously to save people from famine".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In Newark the water was deep enough to allow four grammar school boys to row across the countryside to Kelham. The flood marks at Girton show that this flood was only Template:Convert lower than that of 1795, when the village was flooded to a depth of Template:Convert.<ref name=MM1 />

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On 17–18 March 1947 the Trent overtopped its banks in Nottingham. Large parts of the city and surrounding areas were flooded with 9,000 properties and nearly a hundred industrial premises affected some to first floor height. The suburbs of Long Eaton, West Bridgford and Beeston all suffered particularly badly.<ref name=RMS/><ref name=ea1947>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="met" /> Two days later, in the lower tidal reaches of the river, the peak of the flood combined with a high spring tide to flood villages and 2,000 properties in Gainsborough. River levels dropped when the floodbank at Morton breached, resulting in the flooding of some Template:Convert of farmland in the Trent valley.<ref name=cfmp3/><ref name="met">Template:Cite web</ref>

Flooding on the Trent can also be caused by the effects of storm surges independently of fluvial flows, a series of which occurred during October and November 1954, resulting in the worse tidal flooding experienced along the lower reaches. These floods revealed the need for a tidal protection scheme, which would cope with the flows experienced in 1947 and the tidal levels from 1954, and subsequently the floodbanks and defences along the lower river were improved to this standard with the works being completed in 1965.<ref name=cfmp3/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In December 2013, the largest storm surge since the 1950s occurred on the Trent, when a high spring tide combined with strong winds and a low pressure weather system, produced elevated tidal river levels in the lower reaches. The resulting surge overtopped the flood defences in the area near Keadby and Burringham, flooding 50 properties.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

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The fifth largest flood recorded at Nottingham occurred in November 2000, with widespread flooding of low-lying land along the Trent valley, including many roads and railways. The flood defences around Nottingham and Burton constructed during the 1950s, following the 1947 event, stopped any major urban flooding, but problems did occur in undefended areas such as Willington and Gunthorpe, and again at Girton where 19 houses were flooded.<ref name=mercian2000/> The flood defences in Nottingham that protect 16,000 homes and those in Burton where they prevent 7,000 properties from flooding were reassessed after this flood, and were subsequently improved between 2006 and 2012.<ref name=ea1947 /><ref name=estaffs2>Template:Cite web</ref>

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History of navigation

Template:River Trent map Nottingham seems to have been the ancient head of navigation until the Restoration, due partly to the difficult navigation of the Trent Bridge. Navigation was then extended to Wilden Ferry, near to the more recent Cavendish Bridge, as a result of the efforts of the Fosbrooke family of Shardlow.

Template:Infobox UK legislation Later, in 1699, the baron William Paget (Lord Paget), who owned coal mines and land in the area, obtained an act of Parliament, the Template:Visible anchor (10 Will. 3. c. 26), to extend navigation up to Fleetstones Bridge, Burton, despite opposition from the people of Nottingham. Lord Paget seems to have funded the work privately, building locks at King's Mill and Burton Mills and several cuts and basins. The act gave him absolute control over the building of any wharves and warehouses above Nottingham Bridge. Lord Paget leased the navigation and the wharf at Burton to George Hayne, while the wharf and warehouses at Wilden were leased by Leonard Fosbrooke, who held the ferry rights and was a business partner of Hayne. The two men refused to allow any cargo to be landed which was not carried in their own boats, and so created a monopoly.<ref name=hadfieldwm>Template:Harvnb</ref>

In 1748, merchants from Nottingham attempted to end this monopoly by landing goods on the banks and into carts, but Fosbrooke used his ferry rope to block the river, and then created a bridge by mooring boats across the channel, and employing men to defend them. Hayne subsequently scuppered a barge in King's Lock, and for the next eight years goods had to be transhipped around it. Despite a Chancery injunction against them, the two men continued with their action. Hayne's lease expired in 1762, and Lord Paget's son, the Earl of Uxbridge, gave the new lease to the Burton Boat Company.<ref name=hadfieldwm/>

The Trent and Mersey Canal was authorised by the Trent and Mersey Canal Act 1766 (6 Geo. 3. c. 96), and construction from Shardlow to Preston Brook, where it joined the Bridgewater Canal, was completed by 1777.<ref name=jane>Template:Harvnb</ref> The canal ran parallel to the upper river to Burton upon Trent, where new wharfs and warehouses at Horninglow served the town, and the Burton Boat Company were unable to repair the damaged reputation of the river created by their predecessors.<ref name=hadfieldem1>Template:Harvnb</ref> Eventually in 1805, they reached an agreement with Henshall & Co., the leading canal carriers, for the closure of the river above Wilden Ferry. Though the river is no doubt legally still navigable above Shardlow, it is probable that the agreement marks the end of the use of that stretch of the river as a commercial navigation.Template:Sfn

The lower river

Template:Infobox UK legislation The first improvement of the lower river was at Newark, where the channel splits into two. The residents of the town wanted to increase the use of the branch nearest to them, and so the Template:Visible anchor (13 Geo. 3. c. 86) was obtained in December 1772 to authorise the work. Newark Navigation Commissioners were created, with powers to borrow money to fund the construction of two locks, and to charge tolls for boats using them. The work was completed by October 1773, and the separate tolls remained in force until 1783, when they were replaced by a one-shilling (5p) toll whichever channel the boats used.<ref name=hadfieldem1/>

Users of the Trent and Mersey Canal, the Loughborough Canal and the Erewash Canal next demanded major improvements to the river down to Gainsborough, including new cuts, locks, dredging and a towing path suitable for horses. The Dadfords, who were engineers on the Trent and Mersey Canal, estimated the cost at £20,000, but the proposal was opposed by landowners and merchants on the river, while the Navigator, published in 1788, estimated that around 500 men who were employed to bow-haul boats would have lost their jobs. Agreement could not be reached, and so William Jessop was asked to re-assess the situation. He suggested that dredging, deepening, and restricting the width of the channel could make significant improvements to the navigable depth, although cuts would be required at Wilford, Nottingham bridge and Holme. This proposal formed the basis for the Trent Navigation Act 1783 (23 Geo. 3. c. 41), which also allowed a horse towing path to be built. The work was completed by September 1787, and dividends of 5 per cent were paid on the capital during 1786 and 1787, increasing to 7 per cent, the maximum allowed by the act, after that. Jessop carried out a survey for a side cut and lock at Sawley in 1789, and it was built by 1793.<ref name=hadfieldem1/>

At the beginning of the 1790s, the navigation faced calls for a bypass of the river at Nottingham, where the passage past Trent Bridge was dangerous, and the threat of a canal running parallel to the river, which was proposed by the Erewash and the Trent and Mersey Canal companies. In order to retain control of the whole river, they supported the inclusion of the Beeston Cut in the bill for the Nottingham Canal, which prevented the Erewash Canal company from getting permission to build it, and then had the proposal removed from the Nottingham Canal company's bill in return for their support of the main bill. The parallel canal was thwarted in May 1793, when they negotiated the withdrawal of the canal bill by proposing a thorough survey of the river which would result in their own legislation being put before Parliament. William Jessop performed the survey, assisted by Robert Whitworth, and they published their report on 8 July 1793. The major proposals included a cut and lock at Cranfleet, where the River Soar joins the Trent, a cut, locks and weirs at Beeston, which would connect with the Nottingham Canal at Lenton, and a cut and lock at Holme Pierrepont. The River Trent Navigation Act 1794 (34 Geo. 3. c. 95) was obtained, and the existing proprietors subscribed the whole of the authorised capital of £13,000 (equivalent to £Template:Inflation in Template:Inflation-year),Template:Inflation-fn themselves.<ref name=hadfieldem2>Template:Harvnb</ref>

The aim of the improvements was to increase the minimum depth from Template:Convert to Template:Convert. By early 1796, the Beeston cut was operational, with the Cranfleet cut following in 1797, and the Holme cut in 1800, with the whole works being finished by 1 September 1801. The cost exceeded the authorised capital by a large margin, with the extra being borrowed, but the company continued to pay a 7 per cent dividend on the original shares and on those created to finance the new work. In 1823 and again in 1831, the Newark Navigation Commissioners proposed improvements to the river, so that larger vessels could be accommodated, but the Trent Navigation Company were making a good profit, and did not see the need for such work.<ref name=hadfieldem2/>

Competition

Template:Infobox UK legislation The arrival of the railways resulted in significant change for the company. Tolls were reduced to retain the traffic, wages were increased to retain the workforce, and they sought amalgamation with a railway company. The proposed Nottingham and Gainsborough Railway offered £100 per share during 1845, but this was rejected. Tolls decreased from £11,344 (equivalent to £Template:Inflation in Template:Inflation-year),Template:Inflation-fn during 1839 to £3,111 (equivalent to £Template:Inflation in Template:Inflation-year),Template:Inflation-fn in 1855. Many of the connecting waterways were bought by railway companies, and gradually fell into disrepair. In an attempt to improve the situation, the company toyed with the idea of cable-hauled steam tugs, but instead purchased a conventional steam dredger and some steam tugs. The cost of improvements was too great for the old company, and so the Template:Visible anchor (47 & 48 Vict. c. xxxviii) was obtained restructure the company and raise additional capital. Failure to raise much of the capital resulted in another act of Parliament, the Trent (Burton-upon-Trent and Humber) Navigation Act 1887 (50 & 51 Vict. c. cxv), being obtained, with similar aims and similar results. The Trent Navigation Act 1892 (55 & 56 Vict. c. cxxxv) reverted the name to the Trent Navigation Company, and this time, some improvements were performed.<ref name=hadfieldem3>Template:Harvnb</ref>

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Newark Town Lock

With traffic still between 350,000 and 400,000 tonnes per year, Frank Rayner became the engineer in 1896, and the company were persuaded that major work was necessary if the navigation was to survive. The engineer for the Manchester Ship Canal, Sir Edward Leader Williams, was commissioned to survey the river, while negotiations with the North Staffordshire Railway, who owned the Trent and Mersey Canal and had maintained its viability, ensured that some of the clauses from previous acts of Parliament did not prevent progress. A plan to build six locks between Cromwell and Holme, and to dredge this section to ensure it was Template:Convert wide and Template:Convert deep was authorised by the Trent Navigation Act 1906 (6 Edw. 7. c. lvii). Raising finance was difficult, but some was subscribed by the chairman and vice-chairman, and construction of Cromwell Lock began in 1908. The Newark Navigation Commissioners financed improvements to Newark Town lock at the same time, and dredging of the channel was largely funded by selling the 400,000 tonnes of gravel removed from the river bed. At Template:Convert, Cromwell lock could hold a tug and three barges, and was opened on 22 May 1911. The transport of petroleum provided a welcome increase to trade on the river, but little more work was performed before the beginning of the First World War.<ref name=hadfieldem3/>

Modernisation

Increased running costs after the First World War could not be met by increasing the tolls, as the company had no statutory powers to do so, and so suggested that the Ministry of Transport should take over the navigation, which they did from 24 September 1920. Tolls were increased, and a committee recommended improvements to the river. Nottingham Corporation invested some £450,000 on building the locks authorised by the Trent Navigation Act 1906 (6 Edw. 7. c. lvii), starting with Holme lock on 28 September 1921, and finishing with Hazelford lock, which was formally opened by Neville Chamberlain on 25 June 1926. A loan from Nottingham Corporation and a grant from the Unemployment Grants Committee enabled the company to rebuild Newark Nether lock, which was opened on 12 April 1926.<ref name=hadfieldem3/>

During the early 1930s, the company considered enlarging the navigation above Nottingham, in conjunction with improvements to the River Soar Navigation, between Trent Lock and Leicester. There were also negotiations with the London and North Eastern Railway, who were responsible for the Nottingham Canal between Trent Lock and Lenton. Plans for new larger locks at Beeston and Wilford were abandoned when the Trent Catchment Board opposed them. The Grand Union refused to improve the Soar Navigation, because the Trent Navigation Company could not guarantee 135,000 tons of additional traffic. The company also considered a plan to reopen the river to Burton, which would have involved the rebuilding of Kings Mills lock, and the construction of four new locks. An extra set of gates were added to Cromwell lock in 1935, effectively creating a second lock, while the Lenton to Trent Lock section was leased from the LNER in 1936, and ultimately purchased in 1946.<ref name=hadfieldem3/>

File:The Trent at Hoveringham - geograph.org.uk - 61404.jpg
Barges near Hoveringham in 1954

Frank Rayner, who had been with the company since 1887, and had served as its engineer and later general manager since 1896, died in December 1945. Sir Ernest Jardine, who as vice-chairman had partly funded the first lock at Cromwell in 1908, died in 1947, and the company ceased to exist in 1948 when the waterways were nationalised. The last act of the directors was to pay a 7.5 per cent dividend on the shares in 1950. Having taken over responsibility for the waterway, the Transport Commission enlarged Newark Town lock in 1952, and the flood lock at Holme was removed to reduce the risk of flooding in Nottingham. More improvements followed between 1957 and 1960. The two locks at Cromwell became one, capable of holding eight Trent barges, dredging equipment was updated, and several of the locks were mechanised. Traffic increased from 620,000 tonnes during 1951 to 1,017,356 tonnes during 1964, but all of this was below Nottingham. Commercial carrying above Nottingham ceased during the 1950s, to be replaced by pleasure cruising.<ref name=hadfieldem3/>

Although commercial use of the river has declined, the lower river between Cromwell and Nottingham can still take large motor barges up to around Template:Convert in length<ref name=jane/> with a capacity of approx 300 tonnes.<ref>British Waterways, River Trent Water Freight Feasibility Study, p11Template:Dead link, accessed 9 January 2010</ref> Barges still transport gravel from pits at Girton and Besthorpe to Goole and Hull.Template:Sfn

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The river is legally navigable for some Template:Convert below Burton upon Trent. However, for practical purposes, navigation above the southern terminus of the Trent and Mersey Canal (at Shardlow) is conducted on the canal, rather than on the river itself. The canal connects the Trent to the Potteries and on to Runcorn and the Bridgewater Canal.<ref name=crttrent>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=crtTM>Template:Cite web</ref>

Down river of Shardlow, the non-tidal river is navigable as far as the Cromwell Lock near Newark, except in Nottingham (Beeston Cut & Nottingham Canal) and just west of Nottingham, where there are two lengths of canal, Sawley and Cranfleet cuts. Below Cromwell lock, the Trent is tidal, and therefore only navigable by experienced, well-equipped boaters. Navigation lights and a proper anchor and cable are compulsory. Associated British Ports, the navigation authority for the river from Gainsborough to Trent Falls, insist that anyone in charge of a boat must be experienced at navigating in tidal waters.<ref name=jane/>

Between Trent Falls and Keadby, coastal vessels that have navigated through the Humber still deliver cargoes to the wharves of Grove Port, Neap House, Keadby, Gunness and Flixborough. Restrictions on size mean that the largest vessels that can be accommodated are Template:Convert long and 4,500 tonnes.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The use of a maritime pilot on the Trent is not compulsory for commercial craft, but is suggested for those without any experience of the river. Navigation can be difficult, and there have been a number of incidents with ships running aground and in one case, striking Keadby Bridge. The most recent occurrence involved the Celtic Endeavour being aground near Gunness for ten days, finally being lifted off by a high tide.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Trent Aegir

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File:Trent Aegir 2.JPG
The Trent Aegir seen from West Stockwith, Nottinghamshire, 20 September 2005

At certain times of the year, the lower tidal reaches of the Trent experience a moderately large tidal bore (up to Template:Convert high), commonly known as the Trent Aegir (named after the Norse sea god). The Aegir occurs when a high spring tide meets the downstream flow of the river.Template:Sfn The funnel shape of the river mouth exaggerates this effect, causing a large wave to travel upstream as far as Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, and sometimes beyond. The Aegir cannot travel much beyond Gainsborough as the shape of the river reduces the Aegir to little more than a ripple, and weirs north of Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, stop its path completely.

The literal North/South divide

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The Trent historically marked the boundary between Northern England and Southern England. For example, the administration of royal forests was subject to a different justice in eyre north and south of the river, and the jurisdiction of the medieval Council of the North started at the Trent.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In addition to this, the University of Oxford was formerly divided into a northern nation and a southern nation, the former consisting of English people north of the River Trent and the Scots and the latter consisting of English people south of the Trent, the Irish, and the Welsh.<ref name="British History">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>H. Rashdall, Universities of Europe, iii, 55–60.</ref>

Some traces of the former division remain: the Trent marks the boundary between the provinces of two English Kings of Arms, Norroy and Clarenceux.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This divide was also described in Michael Drayton's epic topographical poem, Poly-Olbion, The Sixe and Twentieth Song, 1622: Template:Poemquote

Pollution history

It is not clear when pollution first became an issue for the River Trent, but in the late 1880s, it had a thriving salmon fishery, with the river producing an annual catch of some 3,000 fish, a decade later, this had fallen to 100.<ref name=rcm>Template:Cite book</ref> The collapse of the fishery was due to the rapid population increase of the towns that developed following the Industrial Revolution. The tipping point being the introduction of piped water and a basic sewer network, which meant that effluent, which was previously stored in cesspits, was carried away through drains into the nearest brook.<ref name=rcm/><ref name=lester>Template:Cite book</ref>

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This was a particular problem in Stoke-on-Trent and the growing towns of the Potteries. Due to the relatively small size of the Trent and its tributaries such as the Fowlea Brook, which drained these towns, the river and brooks were unable to dilute the inflow of domestic sewage and soon became overwhelmed and badly polluted.<ref name=wwt>Template:Cite book</ref>

At the downstream end of the Potteries was Trentham Hall, here pollution became so bad that the owner, the Duke of Sutherland, made a claim against the local Fenton council in 1902. He also took out an injunction against the council to prevent the ongoing contamination causing a "most foul and offensive stench", the river not even being suitable to water grazing cattle on the estate.<ref name=trenthampoll>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Although he provided land for a sewage works nearby at Strongford, the problems continued such that in 1905 the Levenson-Gower family left Trentham altogether and moved to their other properties, including Dunrobin Castle in Scotland.<ref name=Stonetpoll>Template:Harvnb</ref>

Until the outbreak of the Second World War, the main source of pollution continued to be the Potteries, although there was contamination from the Tame and other lower tributaries it was not as prominent. During the 1950s, however, the same problem of effluent dilution that occurred in Stoke began to become significant in Birmingham and the Black Country. Domestic effluent and polluting discharges from the metal working industries in the upper reaches, combined to affect the whole length of the tributary River Tame.<ref name=wwt/>

The Tame pollution also reached the Trent as well, with one of the worse affected reaches being that downstream of the confluence with the Tame through Burton, this being exacerbated by its late introduction of sewage treatment, and the substantial wastewater arising from the breweries in the town.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Angling clubs in Burton used the Dove or local lakes for fishing, as the Trent through the town was absent of any fish. Downstream, the inflow of cleaner water from the Dove and then the Derwent meant that conditions improved enough to allow recreational coarse fishing in the lower reaches.<ref name=wwt/><ref name=BoTehist>Template:Cite web</ref>

The pollution of the "Trent catchment was probably at its worst in the late 1950s",<ref name=wwt/> this being the result of the ongoing industrialisation of the urban areas, combined with the interruption and under investment caused by two world wars, which lead to only piecemeal improvements of the sewerage treatment infrastructure taking place. One effect of this pollution was that the upper and middle reaches were completely devoid of any fish life.<ref name=wwt/>

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John Jennings, the local MP for Burton highlighted these problems in a speech to the House when he stated in 1956, that as in previous years the river had been declared unsafe for swimming on advice from the medical officer, and how its unhealthy condition affected a local rowing club.<ref name=jen1956>Template:Cite web</ref>

From the 1960s onwards, there were gradual but steady improvements to the inadequate sewage works and sewers built during the Victorian era in the urban areas, but this was expensive, and took time to complete. The changes were helped by the introduction of more stringent pollution control legislation, which required industrial waste to be discharged to sewers, and the formation of the Trent River Authority, which had new duties relating to managing water quality issues. Other changes, such as the replacement of town gas with natural gas, saw the end of the polluting and toxic coal tar emissions to rivers in 1963.<ref name=ecoip>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=LOI>Template:Cite book</ref>

In 1970, Mr Jennings again raised the issue of pollution through Burton, the River Tame continuing to be a source of the problem, and further improvements were promised.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The responsibility for sewage treatment works still belonged primarily to local authorities, which often meant an uncoordinated approach and a proliferation of small works. In 1974, these works were transferred to the regional water authorities, with the Severn Trent Water Authority taking over the role for the Trent catchment. This led to increased investment, the closure of older and smaller works, with sewage treatment being combined at larger modern works such as Strongford and Minworth.<ref name=wwt/>

The economic recession in the 1970s meant that there was a considerable contraction of heavy industrial sectors, reducing pollution loadings from factories and foundries. Later improvements such as the series of purification lakes that were constructed on the Tame in the 1980s, which allowed contaminated sediment to settle out from the river, also reduced pollution levels, and lessened the impact of first flush runoff events in the lower Tame and the middle Trent.<ref name=wwt/><ref name=urbanrivers>Template:Cite book</ref>

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The improvements in water quality along the Trent were recorded through the chemical monitoring of the river from the 1950s. Polluting substances such as ammonia showed a reduction, as did the biochemical oxygen demand, an indicator of the contamination present in the river. There were corresponding increases in dissolved oxygen, an indicator of a healthy river environment. The programme of monitoring also extended to taking biological samples, and one of the first biotic indices used for assessing the ecological rather than the chemical quality of rivers was developed by the local river board in the 1960s. Using invertebrates as an indicator of pollution levels, it was appropriately named the Trent Biotic index.<ref name=rcm/><ref name=rivhandbook >Template:Cite book</ref>

By 2004, it was reported that the Trent was cleaner than it had been in the last 70–80 years, and that episodic incidents of pollution had also reduced considerably since the 1970s.<ref name=rivermend /> The river remains vulnerable to these pollution events, such as the one that occurred in October 2009 when an accidental release of cyanide from a factory into the sewer system in Stoke-on-Trent, affected the treatment works at Strongford. This resulted in the release of raw sewage and the chemical into the river, killing thousands of fish, and posing a health risk to river users as far south as Burton.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Although now considered cleaner, there are still problems with diffuse pollution from agricultural runoff and urban areas, as well as point source contamination from sewage works.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The improvements that have taken place mean that the Trent can be used for public water consumption. Riverside lakes near Shardlow act as a reserve water source for Nottingham and Derby, and water is also abstracted at Torksey and Newton-on-Trent for supplies in Lincolnshire.<ref name=rivermend>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Wildlife and ecology

Artificial changes along the Trent, due to navigation, farming, mineral extraction and drainage works, mean that much of the riparian landscape has been altered, reducing the amount of natural habitat. The river channel links the remaining, but fragmented wetland areas and nature reserves, providing a refuge for native and migrant species.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=tvhab>Template:Cite web</ref> These include wildfowl and wading birds that use the Trent Valley as a migration corridor, with the river also being used as a wildlife route by mammals such as otters and non-native American mink.<ref name=tvhab/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It forms part of the Severn-Trent flyway, a route used by migratory birds to cross Great Britain.<ref name="WtgW">Template:Cite book</ref>

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Additional nature conservation areas were created beside the river in the 20th century, when a number of disused gravel pits, were rehabilitated as nature reserves.<ref name=tvhab /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> One of the most important of these is Attenborough Nature Reserve, a Template:Convert Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) which is visited by wildfowl such as Eurasian wigeon and common teal. Wading birds such as Eurasian oystercatcher and great bittern have also been observed at the reserve; as have kingfishers, reed warblers and water rails.<ref name=ANR>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=ANR2>Template:Cite web</ref>

Other managed wetland sites along the river include Beckingham Marshes, Croxall Lakes, Drakelow, and Willington Gravel Pits. At Besthorpe near Newark, breeding pairs of little egrets and grey herons have been observed.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Trent valley also links together other SSSI and local nature reserves, which have varying habitats not only for birds, but also mammals, insects and fish, a good example is the tributary River Mease where the entire watercourse has been designated both as a SSSI and a European special area of conservation.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

One of the more unusual ecological sites is Pasturefields nature reserve near Hixon, an inland saltmarsh, which is a rare habitat for the UK. A vestige of the saline marshes created by the brine springs that seep from the groundwater of the Mercia mudstones, the reserve contains salt tolerant species normally found on the coast, such as sea plantain, arrowgrass and milkwort.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Improvements in water quality and subsequent fish stocks, in combination with the ban on the use of certain persistent pesticides have meant that otters have now returned to the Trent system, having been absent as recently as the 1980s. A survey in 2003 showed a doubling in the number of sites where evidence, such as spraints and footprints of these elusive animals were found. They have also now been sighted at locations such as Wolseley, Willington, and Attenborough.<ref name=rivermend/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Seals have been reported up to near the head of the tidal section at Newark.<ref name="Grey seal caught on camera in the River Trent">Template:Cite news</ref>

Fishing

File:FishingTrent Turner.jpg
Fishing on the Trent near Ingleby by George Turner, 1850

Evidence of fishing along the Trent can be traced back to the Neolithic period, with the possible remnants of a fish weir discovered in the abandoned river channels at Hemington.<ref name=4D/><ref name=Kondolf2005>Template:Cite book</ref> More definitive finds from the medieval period were also found at this site and near Colwick. These consisted of V-shaped alignments of stakes; wattle panels and a large wicker trap and demonstrate that passive fishing techniques were in use on the river.<ref name=Brown1997>Template:Cite book</ref>

The Domesday catalogue showed that there were many successful mills and fisheries along the Trent. Mills were important locations for fish and eel traps, the eels being caught during ‘quill time’ between mid-August and early September.<ref name=BoTehist/> Written records show that in the 12th century landlords were paid in salmon, in lieu of rent at Burton upon Trent.<ref name=BoTehist/>

In the 17th century Izaak Walton described the River Trent as 'One of the finest rivers in the world and the most abounding with excellent salmon and all sorts of delicate fish.'<ref name=Izaak>Template:Cite book</ref> A list composed in 1641 for the Trent, contained thirty types of fish and other species including those that migrated from the sea such as shad, smelt, salmon and flounder, and riverine species such as trout, grayling, perch and pike.<ref name=tts-tb>Template:Cite journal</ref>

The largest of those listed was the sturgeon, which at one time were caught in the Trent as far upstream as King's Mill, but only in low numbers. Particular examples included one of Template:Convert taken near Donington castle in 1255, and another at King's Mill of Template:Convert in 1791.<ref name=Glover171>Template:Harvnb</ref> The last known catch was in 1902 near Holme, the fish was Template:Convert and weighed Template:Convert.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

The effluent and industrial pollution of the early 20th century, led to a rapid decline in fish stocks, large stretches of the river became fishless and species such as salmon almost disappeared. As water quality improved from the 1960s onwards, fish numbers recovered, and recreational coarse fishing became more popular.<ref name=Cowx1>Template:Cite journal</ref>

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By the 1970s the Trent was regarded as 'one of the most productive rivers in the British Isles'.<ref name=Cowx1/> by anglers, who would travel from South Yorkshire and other surrounding areas, to fish the Trent as their local rivers still remained badly polluted and were absent of fish.<ref name=recfish>Template:Cite book</ref>

Analysis of catch returns from 1969 to 1985, showed that the fish caught most often by anglers were barbel, bream, bleak, carp, chub, dace, eel, gudgeon, perch, and roach. Over the study period the returns revealed that there was a variation in the species caught, with a shift from roach and dace based catches, to one of chub and bream, a change that was perceived by anglers to represent a ‘serious detriment’ to the fishery.<ref name=Cowx1/> This led to comments that the river had become ‘too clean for its fish’, and its popularity, especially for match fishing, declined from the mid-1980s.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Competition from other fisheries such as well stocked ponds and lakes with better amenities and more consistent catches of fish also meant a reduction in the appeal of fishing the Trent.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Recreational fishing is still popular, although anglers no longer line the banks as they once did. There are many fishing clubs that use the river, with catches including barbel, bream, carp, chub, dace, pike, and roach.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Salmon, a species that became virtually extinct due to historic pollution, have been progressively reintroduced on the tributaries since 1998, with thousands of salmon parr being released into the Dove and its tributary the Churnet each year.<ref name=ukbars>Template:Cite web</ref> Returning adult salmon have been seen leaping over weirs on the river<ref name=ukbars/> and in 2011 a large salmon weighing over Template:Convert was caught at an undisclosed location, and was 'thought to be the biggest caught on the Trent in the last thirty years'.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Places along the Trent

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Cities and towns on or close to the river include:

Crossing the Trent

Prior to the mid-18th century there were few permanent crossings of the river with only four bridges downstream of the Tame confluence: the old medieval bridges at Burton, Swarkestone, Nottingham (known as Hethbeth Bridge) and Newark, all first built by 1204. There were, however, over thirty ferries that operated along its course, and numerous fords, where passage was possible, their locations indicated by the suffix ‘ford’ in many riverside place-names such as Hanford, Bridgford, and Wilford.<ref name=Stonetpoll/><ref name=humberpkt>Template:Cite web</ref>

File:Barton Ferry.jpg
Barton Ferry in 1949

Glover noted in 1829 that all three types of crossing were still in use on the Derbyshire section of the Trent, but that the fords were derelict and dangerous. These fording points only allowed passage across the river when water levels were low; when the river was in flood a long detour could be required. He reported that they could be treacherous to the unwary, since there were few gauges to show if the river had become too deep to cross, and that they were rarely used except by locals.<ref name=Glover259>Template:Harvnb</ref> One of the earliest known fords was the crossing at Littleborough, constructed by the Romans it was paved with flagstones, and supported by substantial timber pilings.<ref name=littleb>Template:Cite web</ref> The importance of these fords was demonstrated by their inclusion in the 1783 navigation Act, which limited any dredging at these sites so that they remained less than Template:Convert deep.<ref name=1783Act>Template:Cite book</ref>

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Farndon ferry in 1907 showing the white frontage of the Britannia Inn

Ferries often replaced these earlier fording points, and were essential where the water was too deep, such as the tidal section of the lower river. As they were a source of income, they were recorded in the Domesday Book at a number of locations including Weston on Trent and Fiskerton, both of which were still in operation in the middle of the 20th century. The ferry boats used along the Trent ranged in size from small rowing boats, to flat decked craft that could carry livestock, horses, and in some case their associated carts or wagons.<ref name="Stonetpoll"/><ref name=ferrymap>Template:Cite book</ref>

Bridges over the river were created in Saxon times at Nottingham at least (and for a time just north of Newark at Cromwell, although it is not known how long that bridge site lasted), and formed major centres of trade and military importance.<ref name="Bridges: Past & Future. The current state of knowledge and proposals for future research.">Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref> King Edward fortified the Nottingham bridge in 920, while a notable battle took place at Burton's bridge in 1322, and another in 1643. The medieval bridges of Burton and Nottingham survived relatively intact until the 1860s, when both were replaced and demolished. The central arches of the medieval Swarkestone bridge were knocked out by the great flood of 1795 and rebuilt, but the bridge's more rural location allowed large portions of the medieval bridge to survive and remain in use today. Crossing a wide flood plain, the bridge is almost Template:Convert long, a laborious project to allow flood waters to pass under it. At Newark, the last bridge on the Trent until modern times, the bridge was rebuilt in 1775. At least one other medieval attempt was made to bridge the Trent near Wilden at Hemington, but this was gone long before the end of the Middle Ages. The complex of three bridges provides evidence of attempts to keep a crossing open over slightly more than two hundred years from 1097, with three bridges constructed on the same site but felled by scouring, floods and course migration of the river to the south eroding the bridgehead.<ref name="Tools in fluvial geomorphology">Template:Cite book</ref> The bridge was probably gone by around 1311 when nearby Wilden ferry, near Shardlow was first recorded, and the site thereafter went without a bridge until Cavendish Bridge opened around 1760. As no archive sources record that the Hemington bridge existed, there may have been other medieval bridge projects now forgotten. (Until the late 18th century, a long period of stagnation for economic and technical reasons limited the number of bridges over the Trent; it has been noted that relatively few bridges were constructed in England on new sites anywhere between around 1250–1300 and 1750.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="The Oxford Companion to British History">Template:Cite book</ref>) Cavendish Bridge was itself damaged beyond repair by a flood in March 1947, requiring a temporary Bailey bridge to be used until a new concrete span was constructed in 1957.<ref name=Brown/><ref name=NWL>Template:Cite web</ref>

When bridge construction resumed, toll bridges were often constructed on the site of ferry routes. Such was the case at Willington, Gunthorpe and Gainsborough.<ref name="Stonetpoll"/><ref name=Barber>Template:Cite book</ref>

File:Bridge in Burton upon Trent.jpg
Ferry Bridge built in 1889, crosses the river between Stapenhill and Burton

At Stapenhill near Burton, there were similar calls for a new bridge, a tally of usage showed that the foot ferry was being used 700 times per day. The new Ferry Bridge was opened in 1889, although it needed the financial support of the brewer and philanthropist Michael Bass to pay for the construction, and later in 1898 to purchase the existing ferry rights so that it became free of tolls.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=ferrybridge>Template:Cite web</ref>

The toll bridges were mostly bought out by the county councils in the 19th century following government reforms, one of the earliest being Willington in 1898, the first toll free crossing was marked by a procession across the bridge and a day of celebration.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref><ref name=willbdg>Template:Cite web</ref> The only toll bridge that remains across the Trent is at Dunham, although it is free to cross on Christmas and Boxing Day.<ref name=DBC1>Template:Cite web</ref>

Power stations

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The tall chimneys and concave shaped cooling towers of the many power stations are a dominant and familiar presence within the open landscape of the Trent valley, which has been widely used for power generation since the 1940s.<ref name=Stoneps>Template:Harvnb</ref>

The primary reason for locating so many generating stations beside the Trent was the availability of sufficient amounts of cooling water from the river. This combined with the nearby supplies of fuel in the form of coal from the Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire coalfields, and the existing railway infrastructure meant that a string of twelve large power stations were originally constructed along its banks.<ref name=carr>Template:Cite book</ref> At one time these sites provided a quarter of the electricity needs of the UK, giving rise to the epithet 'Megawatt Valley'.<ref name=Stoneps/>

Once these early stations reached the end of their functional life, they were usually demolished, although in some cases the sites have been retained and redeveloped as gas fired power stations.<ref name=Stoneps/>

In downstream order, the power stations that have used the river as their source of cooling water are: Meaford, Rugeley, Drakelow, Willington, Castle Donington, Ratcliffe-on-Soar, Wilford, Staythorpe, High Marnham, Cottam, West Burton and Keadby.<ref name=Stoneps/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

There is one hydroelectric power station on the river, Beeston Hydro at Beeston Weir.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Recreation on the Trent

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Along with other major rivers in the Midlands, the Trent is widely used for recreational activities, both on the water and along its riverbanks. The National Watersports Centre at Holme Pierrepont, near Nottingham combines facilities for many of these sports, including rowing, sailing and whitewater canoeing.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=wrr>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Trent Valley Way created in 1998 as a long-distance footpath, enables walkers to enjoy the combined attractions of ‘the river’s rich natural heritage and its history as an inland navigation’. Extended in 2012, the route now runs from Trent Lock in the south through to Alkborough where the river meets the Humber. It combines riverside and towpath sections, with other paths to villages and places of interest in the wider valley.<ref name=ldwa>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=tvw>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref><ref name=tv2>Template:Cite web</ref>

Historically swimming in the river was popular, in 1770 at Nottingham there were two bathing areas on opposite banks at Trent Bridge which were improved in 1857 with changing sheds and an assistant. Similar facilities were present in 1870 on the water meadows at Burton-on-Trent, which also had its own swimming club. Open water swimming still takes place at locations including Colwick Park Lake adjacent to the river, with its own voluntary lifeguards.<ref name=tts-tb/><ref name=wrr/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The first person to swim the entire swimmable length of the Trent was Tom Milner, who swam Template:Convert over nine days in July 2015.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Rowing clubs have existed at Burton, Newark and Nottingham since the mid-1800s, with various regattas taking place between them, both on the river and on the rowing course at the national watersports centre.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Both whitewater and flat water canoeing is possible on the Trent, with published guides and touring routes being listed for the river. There is a canoe slalom course at Stone, a purpose built Template:Convert artificial course at Holme Pierrepont, and various weirs including those at Newark and Sawley are all used for whitewater paddling. Various canoe and kayak clubs paddle on the river including those at Stone, Burton, and Nottingham. <ref name=nwsc >Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=bcu>Template:Cite book</ref> <ref>Template:Cite web</ref> <ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Established in 1886 the Trent valley sailing club is one of two clubs that use the river for dingy sailing, regattas, and events. There are also a number of clubs that sail on the open water that has been created as a result of flooded gravel workings which include Hoveringham, Girton, and Attenborough.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Organised trips on cruise boats have long been a feature of the Trent, at one time steam launches took passengers from Trent Bridge to Colwick Park, similar trips run today but in reverse, starting from Colwick and passing through Nottingham they use boats known as the Trent Princess and Trent Lady. Others trips run from Newark castle, and two converted barges; the Newark Crusader and Nottingham Crusader, provide river cruises for disabled people via the St John Ambulance Waterwing scheme.<ref name=MAIB1>Template:Cite web</ref> <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Tributaries

Although Spenser endowed 'The beauteous Trent' with 'thirty different streams'Template:Efn the river is joined by more than twice that number of different tributaries,<ref name="WFD"/> of which the largest in terms of flow is the Tame which drains most of the West Midlands, including Birmingham and the Black Country. The second and third largest are the Derwent and the Dove respectively; together these two rivers drain the majority of Derbyshire and Staffordshire, including the upland areas of the Peak District.<ref name="CEH2"/>

The River Soar which drains the majority of the county of Leicestershire, could also be considered as the second largest tributary, as it has a larger catchment area than the Dove or Derwent, but its discharge is significantly less than the Derwent, and lower than the Dove.<ref name="CEH2"/>

In terms of rainfall the Derwent receives the highest annual average rainfall, whereas the Devon, which has the lowest average rainfall is the driest catchment of those tabulated.<ref name="CEH2"/>

Statistics of the Trent's largest tributaries
Name CountyTemplate:Efn Length Catchment Area Discharge RainfallTemplate:Efn Max. Altitude Refs
km mi km2 mi2 m3/s cfs mm in m ft
Blithe Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Devon Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Derwent Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Dove Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Erewash Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Greet Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Idle Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Leen Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Soar Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Sow Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Tame Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>
Torne Template:Flag Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Efn<ref name="CEH2"/><ref name="WFD"/>

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List of tributaries

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Alphabetical listing of tributaries, extracted from the Water Framework Directive list of water bodies for the River Trent:<ref name="WFD">Template:Cite web</ref>

TributaryTemplate:Efn River OrderTemplate:Efn Joins Trent at Bank
Adlingfleet Drain 1 Adlingfleet Left
Amerton Brook 60 Shirleywich Left
River Blithe 55 Nethertown Left
Bottesford Beck 8 East Butterwick Right
Bourne Brook 54 Kings Bromley Right
Catchwater Drain 16 West Burton Left
Causeley Brook 68 Hanley Left
Causeway Dyke 31 Bleasby Left
Chitlings Brook 66 Hanford Left
Cuttle Brook 42 Swarkestone Left
Cocker Beck 33 Gunthorpe Left
Darklands Brook 48 Drakelow Right
River Devon 27 Newark Right
River Derwent, Derby 40 Shardlow Left
River Dove 47 Newton Solney Left
Dover Beck 32 Caythorpe Left
River Eau 9 Barlings, Scotter Right
River Erewash 38 Attenborough Left
Eggington Brook 46 Willington Left
Fairham Brook 37 Clifton Bridge Right
Ferry Drain 11 Owston Ferry Left
Fledborough Beck 22 Fledborough Left
Folly Drain 6 Althorpe Left
Ford Green Brook 69 Milton Right
Fowlea Brook 67 Stoke Right
Gayton Brook 61 Weston Left
Grassthorpe Beck (Goosemoor Dyke) 24 Grassthorpe Left
River Greet 29 Fiskerton Left
Healeys Drain 7 Burringham Right
Holme Dyke (Bleasby) 30 Bleasby Left
River Idle, Nottinghamshire 13 West Stockwith Left
Laughton Drain 10 East Ferry Right
River Leen 36 Wilford Left
Longton Brook 63 Trentham Left
Lyme Brook 65 Hanford Right
Marton Drain 18 Marton Right
River Mease 50 Croxall Right
Milton Brook 43 Ingleby Right
Moreton Brook 57 Rugeley Left
Morton Warping Drain 14 Gainsborough Right
North Beck 20 Church Laneham Left
Old Trent (High Marnham) 23 High Marnham Left
Ouse Dyke 34 Stoke Bardolph Left
Park Brook 64 Trentham Right
Pauper's Drain 3 Amcotts Left
Polser Brook 35 Radcliffe on Trent Right
Pyford Brook 52 Alrewas Right
Ramsley Brook 41 King's Newton Right
Repton Brook 45 Repton Right
Rising Brook 58 Rugeley Right
Rundell Dyke 28 Averham Left
Scotch Brook 62 Stone Left
Sewer Drain 19 Torksey Right
Sewer Dyke (North Clifton) 21 North Clifton Right
Seymour Drain 17 Cottam Left
Shropshire Brook 56 Longdon / Armitage Left
River Soar, Leicester 39 Trentlock Right
River Sow 59 Great Haywood Right
River Swarbourn 53 Wychnor Left
River Tame 51 Alrewas Right
Tatenhill Brook 49 Branston Left
The Beck (Carlton on Trent) 26 Carlton on Trent Left
The Fleet 25 Girton Right
River Torne 5 Keadby Left
Twyford Brook 44 Twyford Left
Warping Drain (Keadby) 4 Keadby Left
Warping Drain (Owston Ferry) 12 Owston Ferry Left
Wheatley Beck 15 West Burton Left
Winterton Beck 2 Bole Ings Right

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See also

Notes

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Bibliography

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Notes

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References

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