Sefid-Rud
The Sepid-Rud is a river, approximately long, rising in the Alborz mountain range of northwestern Iran and flowing generally northeast to empty into the Caspian Sea at Rasht.
Names
Other names and transcriptions include Sepīd-Rūd, Sefidrud, Sefidrood, Sepidrood, and Sepidrud. Above Manjil, "Long Red River".William Smith equated the river with the Amardus or Mardus river of antiquity.
The river is historically famous for its abundant fish, especially the Caspian trout, Salmo trutta caspius.
Geography
The Sefid-Rud has cut a water gap through the Alborz mountain range, the Manjil gap, capturing its two headwater tributaries, the Qizil Üzan and Shahrood rivers. It then widens the valley between the Talesh Hills and the main Alborz range. The gap provides a major route between Tehran and Gīlān Province with its Caspian lowlands.In the wide valley before the Sefid-Rud enters the Caspian Sea, a number of transportation and irrigation canals have been cut; the two biggest are the Khomam and the Now.
Dam and reservoir
The Sefid-Rud was dammed in 1962 by the Shahbanu Farah Dam, which created a reservoir and allowed the irrigation of an additional. The reservoir mediates some flooding and significantly increased rice production in the Sefid Rud delta. The hydroelectric component of the dam generates 87,000 kilowatts. The completion of the dam had a negative impact on the river's fisheries, through reduced stream flow, increased water temperature, and decreased food availability, especially for sturgeon but also for the Caspian trout.History
The river was known in antiquity as Mardos and Amardos. In the Hellenistic period, the north side of the Sefid was occupied by the Cadusii mountain tribe.David Rohl proposes identification of Sefid-Rud with the Biblical Pishon river.