River Tame, Greater Manchester

The River Tame flows through Greater Manchester, England. It rises on Denshaw Moor and flows to Stockport where it joins the River Goyt to form the River Mersey.

Tame
River Tame near Reddish Vale
The River Tame is highlighted in red
Coordinates: 53.4142°N 2.15689°W / 53.4142; -2.15689
Location
CountryEngland
RegionGreater Manchester
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationwest of Buckstones Moss, West Yorkshire
  coordinates53.6187°N 2.0035°W / 53.6187; -2.0035
  elevation473 m (1,552 ft)
MouthRiver Mersey
  location
Stockport
  coordinates
53.4143°N 2.1565°W / 53.4143; -2.1565
  elevation
40[1] m (130 ft)
Length47.7 km (29.6 mi)
Basin size146[2] km2 (56 sq mi)
Basin features
River systemRiver Mersey

Sources

The Tame rises on Denshaw Moor in Greater Manchester, close to the border with the modern metropolitan county of West Yorkshire but within the historic West Riding of Yorkshire.

Course

Most of the river's catchment lies on the western flank of the Pennines. The named river starts as compensation flow (that is, a guaranteed minimum discharge[3]) from Readycon Dean Reservoir in the moors above Denshaw. The source is a little further north, just over the county border in West Yorkshire, close to the Pennine Way. The highest point of the catchment is Greater Manchester's highest point at Black Chew Head.

The river flows generally south through Delph, Uppermill, Mossley, Stalybridge, Ashton-under-Lyne, Dukinfield, Haughton Green, Denton and Hyde. The Division Bridge (which spans the river at Mossley), marks the meeting point of the traditional boundaries of Lancashire, Yorkshire and Cheshire. The section through Stalybridge was once mooted as a diversion route for the restoration of the Huddersfield Narrow Canal although the canal was later de-culverted along a different route. At the end of its course, the confluence with the River Goyt forms the River Mersey at Stockport.

The 19th-century industrial concentrations in the above-named urban areas resulted in the Tame being a much polluted waterway. As well as industrial pollution from the dyes and bleaches used in textile mills, effluent from specialised paper-making cigarette papers, engineering effluents, including base metal washings from battery manufacture, phenols from the huge coal-gas plant in Denton, rain-wash from roads and abandoned coal spoil heaps there was also the sewage effluent from the surrounding population. Up to two-thirds of the river's flow at its confluence with the Goyt had passed through a sewage works. The anti-pollution efforts of the last thirty years of the 20th century have resulted in the positive fauna distributions listed below.

The Centre for Ecology and Hydrology measures the flow at two points for the National River Flow Archive, at Portwood weir (Stockport) and at Broomstairs weir (Denton). Portwood weir is 1¼ miles above the confluence with the Mersey and contains the great majority of the final flow (with the exception of waste water from a concrete facility).[4]

Boundary line

The river has been a border from the earliest times between the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Northumbria and Mercia.[5] For its course after the Division Bridge in Mossley the river marks much of the historical boundary dividing Cheshire and Lancashire.

Mouth

Railway viaduct and former lodge at Reddish Vale
The Tame (left) meets the Goyt in Stockport to form the Mersey

The Tame joins the River Goyt at Stockport, forming the River Mersey which eventually flows into the Irish Sea just past Liverpool.

Toponymy

The name Tame is attached to rivers across the UK in several forms, including Thames, Thame, Taff, and Tamar, alongside two other instances of Tame.[6][7] The name is Celtic in origin, but the meaning is uncertain.[8][9] Dark river or dark one has been suggested,[10][11] but Ekwall[8] finds it unlikely; Mills suggests it may simply mean river (c.f. Avon, Humber, Tyne).[7] The names of the Mersey's co-tributaries Etherow and Goyt are equally ancient and mysterious.[8] Mersey is an Old English name (i.e. more recent) derived from "river at the boundary". The earlier name is lost: Dodgson suggests that Tame may have been the name for the whole of the Mersey.[9] The Metropolitan Borough of Tameside is named after the river. While it flows through the borough, the river neither rises nor finishes inside its boundaries; however, most of the built-up area alongside the river is in Tameside.

Fauna

The fish species present vary along the river's length. The lower reaches (near Reddish Vale Country Park) are home to coarse fish such as gudgeon (Gobio gobio), chub (Leuciscus cephalus), and roach (Rutilus rutilus); pike (Esox lucius) and perch (Perca fluviatilis) are also present. The upper reaches (above Ashton) support brown trout (Salmo trutta) and smaller numbers of some coarse fish. The populations are self-sustaining. Migratory fish such as Atlantic salmon and sea trout cannot navigate the river as the weir at Reddish Vale is too tall and has no fish pass.[12] Furthermore,

  • Carr Brook (from its source to the Tame)
  • Diggle Brook (from Diggle Reservoir to the Tame)
  • Hull Brook (Head of Lower Castleshaw Reservoir to the Tame)
  • Swineshaw Brook (from the Head of Swineshaw Reservoir to the Tame)
  • and the Tame (from the Head of Readycon Dean Reservoir to foot of New Years Bridge Reservoir)

are all declared as salmonid waters by statute, and as such have set physical and chemical water quality objectives.[13][14]

Hull Brook is a Site of Biological Importance (SBI). Hull Brook and Castleshaw Reservoir have populations of white-clawed crayfish.[15] The river is now clean enough in principle to support otters, but none were found in a survey in 2000–2002.[16]

Environment

In 2018 a study found that the river contained the greatest amount of microplastic contamination of any river yet surveyed.[17]

Tributaries

  • Denton Brook ? (R)
  • Horse Close Brook ? (R)
  • Hulmes Brook ? (R)
  • Longacre Brook ? (L)
  • Pole Bank Brook ? (L)
  • Apethorne Brook ? (L)
  • Gower Hey Brook (L)
  • Wilson Brook (L)
    • Werneth Brook (L)
    • Godley Brook
    • Westwood Brook
  • Swineshaw Brook (L)
    • Cock Knarr Brook ? (L)
    • Wicken Spring Brook (R)
  • Staly Brook (L)
    • Micklehurst Brook (R)
      • Tamyon Brook (R)
    • Carr Brook
      • Iron Tongue
        • Far Harehill Brook
  • Quick Brook (R)
  • Chew Brook (L)
  • Wickens Brook (R)
  • White Brook (L)
  • Pickhill Brook (L)
    • Capper Brook
    • Royle Brook
    • Wickens Brook
      • Broadstone Clough
  • Diggle Brook
    • Thorns Brook (R)
      • Dean Head Brook
    • Brun Brook (R)
      • Will Brook (L)
    • Stable Brook (R)
    • Wicken Brook (L)
    • Dry Brook (L)
    • North Brook (R)
      • Hoar Brook (L)
    • Birchen Brook (L)
    • South Brook
  • Wall Hill Brook (R)
  • Thurston Clough Brook (R)
  • Hull Brook
    • Waters Brook (L)
    • Lee Brook (L)
    • Bank Brook (R)
    • Spa Brook
    • Cudworth Brook
    • Oaken Lee Brook
  • Coal brook (R)
  • Rams Brook (R)
  • Summer Hill Brook (L)
  • Lumb Hole Brook (R)
    • Cherry Brook
    • Brimmy Brook
  • Dowry Water (R)
  • Readycon Dean Brook (L)
    • Great Brook (R)
    • Middle Brook (R)
    • Black Gulf (R)
  • Dowry Water

See also

References

Notes

  1. Boyce, D (August 2005). "Mersey and Bollin Catchment abstraction management strategy" (PDF). Environment Agency North West, Warrington. p. 5. Retrieved 13 March 2007.
  2. Boyce, D (March 2004). "The Tame, Goyt and Etherow catchment abstraction management strategy" (PDF). Environment Agency, Warrington. p. 6. Retrieved 13 March 2007.
  3. "Glossary". Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. Archived from the original on 10 December 2007. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
  4. "69027 - Tame at Portwood". The National River Flow Archive. Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. Archived from the original on 27 October 2007. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
  5. Oliver, G.J (2008). "Tameside-Mottram history". Tameside Family Histories. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
  6. Ekwall, Bror Oscar Eilert (1922). The Place-Names of Lancashire. Publications of the University of Manchester, English series, number 11. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  7. Mills, A D (1998). A dictionary of English place-names. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-280074-4.
  8. Ekwall, Eilert (1928). English river names. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  9. Dodgson, J McN (1966). The place-names of Cheshire, part 1. Cambridge University Press.
  10. Ekwall, Bror Oscar Eilert (1947). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  11. Potter, Simeon M A (1955). Cheshire Place-Names (Reprinted from the Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire). London: International University Booksellers.
  12. "River Tame fish survey". Environment Agency. 8 December 2004. Archived from the original on 25 February 2006. Retrieved 7 January 2008.
  13. "Freshwater Fish Directive". DEFRA. 13 January 2004. Archived from the original on 21 November 2008. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
  14. "Schedule 2 Freshwaters in England and Wales to which Classification SW applies" (PDF). DEFRA. July 1998. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 June 2007. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
  15. "Report on update of sites of biological importance". Oldham MBC. 15 October 2007. Archived from the original (Word document) on 14 October 2011. Retrieved 20 January 2008.
  16. "Fourth Otter Survey of England 2000–2002" (PDF). Environment Agency. 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 December 2007. Retrieved 4 February 2008.
  17. Hurley, Rachel; Woodward, Jamie; Rothwell, James J. (April 2018). "Microplastic contamination of river beds significantly reduced by catchment-wide flooding". Nature Geoscience. 11 (4): 251–257. Bibcode:2018NatGe..11..251H. doi:10.1038/s41561-018-0080-1.

Bibliography

  • Carter, Charles Frederick, ed. (1962). Manchester and its region : a survey prepared for the meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science held in Manchester August 29 to September 5, 1962. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  • Arrowsmith, Peter (1997). Stockport : a history. Stockport: Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council. ISBN 0-905164-99-7.
  • Holden, Roger N. (1998). Stott & Sons : architects of the Lancashire cotton mill. Lancaster: Carnegie. ISBN 1-85936-047-5.
  • Williams, Mike; D A Farnie (1992). Cotton mills in Greater Manchester. Preston: Carnegie. ISBN 0-948789-69-7.
  • Greater Manchester Council (1981). Tame Valley : report of survey and issues. Greater Manchester Council.
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