Otin River

Otin River
Country Nigeria
Region Odo Otin LGA, Osun State
Physical characteristics
River mouth 7°56′14″N 4°35′43″E / 7.937343°N 4.595186°E / 7.937343; 4.595186Coordinates: 7°56′14″N 4°35′43″E / 7.937343°N 4.595186°E / 7.937343; 4.595186
Length 36 km (22 mi)
Basin features
River system Erinle River
Basin size 475 km2 (183 sq mi)

The Otin River is a river in Osun State, Nigeria. It is impounded by the Eko-Ende Dam.

Legend

According to myth the goddess Otin was personified in the Otin River. She protected the town of Inisa from invasion by enemies, and the townspeople therefore worship her. Otin was from the town of Otan, but came to Inisa to fight against invasions by its neighbors.

Region

The Otin River crosses the 950 square kilometres (370 sq mi) Odo Otin Local Government Area in the northeast of Osun state, and gives it its name.[1] The river flows through rugged country, with elevations ranging from 35 to 400 metres (115 to 1,312 ft) above sea level. Rainfall in the area is about 1,400 millimetres (55 in), with the rainy season lasting from April to November. Land cover is partly tropical rainforest, but there is also widespread rotational bush farming and cash crops like cocoa, kola and plantain are grown around the settlements.[2]

Course

The Otin River is 36 kilometres (22 mi) long, with a peak discharge of 76.01 cubic metres (2,684 cu ft) per second. The drainage basin covers 475 square kilometres (183 sq mi).[3] It is a tributary of the Erinle River. The Eko-Ende Dam in the Irepodun LGA on the Otin River was impounded in 1973 to form a reservoir with a capacity of 5.5 MCM. The headworks were designed to supply potable water to the communities of Inisa, Oba, Eko-Ende, Eko-Ajala, Ikirun, Iragbiji and Okuku. When the dam was built it flooded farmlands of the Oba people. As a quid-pro-quo, piped water was supplied to Oba.[4] Downstream, the Erinle Dam in the Olorunda LGA is an extension of the old Ede Dam on the Erinle River. The reservoir behind the Ede-Ernle dam extends about 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) north along the Ernle River and covers the lowest portion of the Otin River.[2]

References

Citations

Sources

  • "Brief Historical Background". Odo-Otin Local Government. Retrieved 2014-08-17.
  • Farazmand, Ali (1999-09-01). Handbook of Comparative and Development Public Administration. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-203-90475-6. Retrieved 2014-08-17.
  • Olajubu, Oyeronke (2012-02-01). Women in the Yoruba Religious Sphere. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-8611-5. Retrieved 2014-08-16.
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