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Abulog

Coordinates: 18°27′40″N 121°26′37″E / 18.46101°N 121.44364°E / 18.46101; 121.44364
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Abulog River
The river in Dibagat, Kabugao, Apayao.
Abulog is located in Luzon
Abulog
Abulog River mouth
Abulog is located in Philippines
Abulog
Abulog (Philippines)
Location
CountryPhilippines Philippines
Region
Province
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationApayao
Mouth 
 • coordinates
18°27′40″N 121°26′37″E / 18.46101°N 121.44364°E / 18.46101; 121.44364
 • elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length196 km (122 mi)
Basin size3,372 km2 (1,302 sq mi)
Depth 
 • minimum200 m3/s (7,100 cu ft/s)
Discharge 
 • locationBabuyan Channel

The Abulog River or Abulug River is the 9th largest river system in the Philippines in terms of watershed size.[1][2] It has an estimated drainage area of 3,372 square kilometres (1,302 sq mi) and a length of 196 kilometres (122 mi) from its source in the mountains of Apayao in the Cordillera Administrative Region. More than 90% of the drainage area of the river is located in Apayao province while the remaining, including the mouth of the river, is in Cagayan province.

Location and basin

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The river is located in the northern part of Cordillera, along with the Apayao River. The river is part of the Abulog-Apayao basin, which spans at about a 444,500 hectares (1,716 sq mi) size.[1] The upper reaches of the Abulug River, especially upstream from Kabugao, is commonly known as the Apayao River.

Dam

[edit]

Development plans were proposed for the river, for creating a dam, or more specifically four. The Gened 2 HEPP, the Aoan Dam, the Calanasan dam, and one more unnamed dam. The council still needs to get permission from the Isnag people to construct the dams. The reactions were mixed, with elders liking the project, stating that it will “will uplift the lives of so many generations to come.”[3]

Use

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The river is used by many as a fishing spot and a swimming spot. With the river being sacred by many, especially the Isnag people.[3]

Crossings

[edit]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Dams in the Cordillera" (PDF). Cordillera People's Alliance, Public Information Commission. 2001. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 28, 2008. Retrieved September 19, 2008.
  2. ^ "Principal River Basins of the Philippines" Published by the National Water Resources Board, October 1976 (p 12)
  3. ^ a b "Dam projects to swallow sacred grounds of Cordillera's river people". Rappler. January 15, 2022. Retrieved September 1, 2024.
  4. ^ "New Lucban bridge opened to Cagayan traffic". Manila Standard. Retrieved April 29, 2024.