Où Est-ce que l'Isère prend sa source ?
Où Est-ce que l'Isère prend sa source ?
Alpes grées L'Isère/Sources
Où se jette l Isere dans le Rhône ?
L'Isère est une rivière du sud-est de la France, affluent du Rhône. L'Isère prend sa source en Savoie, au glacier des Grandes Aiguilles rousses, et se jette dans le Rhône au niveau de Pont-de-l'Isère et de Cornas (en face) à quelques kilomètres au nord de Valence.
Where is Isère located?
- Isère is part of the current region of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes and is surrounded by the departments of Rhône, Ain, Savoie, Hautes-Alpes, Drôme, Ardèche, and Loire. Isère includes a part of the French Alps. The highest point in the department is the Sub-Peak "Pic Lory" at 4,088 metres, subsidiary to the Barre des Écrins.
What is the average slope of the Isère River?
- From its sources to Sainte-Foy-Tarentaise (except for those sources having a slope of around 25%), the average slope of the Isère is 5.1%, in a more or less confined valley (forests, gorges, and higher up, grasslands). As far as Moûtiers, the slope measures 1.18%. Before the river's confluence with the Arly, its slope is only 0.53%.
What language do they speak in Isère?
- Culture. As early as the 13th century, residents of the north and central parts of Isère spoke a dialect of the Franco-Provençal language called Dauphinois. It continued to be spoken in rural areas of Isère into the 20th century.
What is the upper valley of the Isère called?
- The upper valley of the Isère is called the Tarentaise, and its middle valley the Grésivaudan . The lower valley constitutes a section of the Plain of Valence [ fr] (also called the Valentinois) and is characterized by the river's deep, winding channel.