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River Kemp

Coordinates: 52°25′41″N 2°54′43″W / 52.428°N 2.912°W / 52.428; -2.912
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

River Kemp
The Kemp near to the confluence with the Clun
Map
Location
CountryEngland
CountiesShropshire
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
 • location
River Clun, Shropshire
 • coordinates
52°25′41″N 2°54′43″W / 52.428°N 2.912°W / 52.428; -2.912
Length17.3 km (10.7 mi)[1]
Basin size51 km2 (20 sq mi)[1]
River Kemp is located in Shropshire
source
source
mouth
mouth
Map of Shropshire - showing the source and mouth of the River Kemp

The River Kemp is a tributary of the River Clun which flows through Shropshire, England.[1]

Course

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The river is formed from two small unnamed streams that drain the area around Bishops Castle, the stream on the western side of the town rises near Bishops Moat and flows south-easterly in a well defined valley. The stream to the east rises on Lydham Heath near Lea and flows in a south-westerly direction to converge with the western stream to the east of Colebatch. The River Kemp begins at the confluence of these two streams.[1]

From this point the river then flows south, to reach the hamlet of Brockton, where it turns in a south-easterly direction to pass through the grounds on Walcot Hall, near Lydbury North. Here the river feeds the large lake known as Walcot Pool, which was allegedly constructed by French prisoners of war from the Napoleonic War.[1][2]

To the south of Walcot Park, it is crossed by the Shropshire Way and then passes through the village of Kempton, where there is a ford and footbridge. The river continues due south, until it reaches the Clun valley near Clunbury. It joins the larger river to the east of the village at Oaker near Aston on Clun.[1]

The total length of the Kemp is 10.7 miles (17.3 km). The drainage basin for the river, which lies between that of the River Unk to the west, and that of the River Onny to the north, has a catchment area of 51 square kilometres (20 sq mi).[1]

Ecology

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The River Kemp was classed as having moderate ecological quality under the Water Framework Directive in 2009, but this regressed to poor in 2016. Chemical quality remained good throughout the monitoring period. The five part framework scale ranges from high, good, and moderate, through to poor and finally bad.[1]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Kemp - source to conf R Clun". Catchment Data Explorer. Environment Agency. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  2. ^ "The Gardens". The History of Walcot Hall. Archived from the original on 16 May 2014. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
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Media related to River Kemp at Wikimedia Commons