Birbir River

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Birbir River
Location
CountryEthiopia
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
 • location
confluence with the Gebba
 • coordinates
8°14′28″N 34°57′39″E / 8.2411°N 34.9609°E / 8.2411; 34.9609Coordinates: 8°14′28″N 34°57′39″E / 8.2411°N 34.9609°E / 8.2411; 34.9609
Basin features
River systemNile
Tributaries 
 • leftSor River

The Birbir River of southwestern Ethiopia is a tributary of the Baro River, which it creates when it joins the Gebba at latitude and longitude 8°14′28″N 34°57′39″E / 8.24111°N 34.96083°E / 8.24111; 34.96083. It is politically important because its course defines part of the boundary between the Mirab Welega and Illubabor Zones of the Oromia Region. Richard Pankhurst notes that the Birbir is economically important for the discovery in 1904 of deposits of platinum along its course.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ Richard Pankhurst, Economic History of Ethiopia (Addis Ababa: Haile Selassie I University, 1968), pp. 231, 234.

External links