Laleia River | |
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![]() A braided channel of the river, lined with Savanna and Casuarina | |
Native name |
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Location | |
Country | Timor-Leste |
Municipalities | |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | Baucau / Viqueque border |
Mouth | Wetar Strait |
• location | Suco Lifau (Laleia) |
• coordinates | 8°29′47″S126°09′39″E / 8.49633°S 126.16075°E |
The Laleia River (Portuguese : Ribeira de Laleia or Rio de Laleia, Tetum : Mota Laleia) is a major river in northeastern Timor-Leste. It flows north from the country's central mountains into Wetar Strait.
The river shares its name with the village of Laleia (also known as Leleia or Lifau), on its left bank, a short distance south of its mouth. Extending eastwards from the village is a bridge, the Laleia Bridge, which carries National Road A01 (Dili – Com, Lautém) across the river. [1] [2]
Both the village and the bridge are adjacent to the border between Haturalan and Lifau, two of the three sucos of another namesake of the river, Laleia Administrative Post, Manatuto municipality (the third suco is Cairui ). [3] [4]
According to a list prepared by Afonso de Castro , governor of the colony of Portuguese Timor from 1859 to 1863, Laleia was one of 47 kingdoms in that colony at the time. [5]
The headwaters of the river are in the portion of Timor-Leste's central mountains ranging from, in the west, the westernmost parts of northern Suco Barique in Barique Administrative Post, Manatuto municipality, to, in the east, the area surrounding the border between Suco Ossouala , Vemasse Administrative Post, Baucau municipality, and Suco Liaruca , Ossu Administrative Post, Viqueque municipality. [3] [6] [7]
The river itself rises in the area surrounding the border between Suco Ossouala, Vemasse Administrative Post, Baucau municipality, and Suco Liaruca, Ossu Administrative Post, Viqueque municipality. In its upper reaches, it is referred to in at least one source as the Mori River. Initially, it flows generally southwest, along or near the border between Baucau and Viqueque municipalities, to the tripoint between those two municipalities and Manatuto. [6] [7] [8] [9]
After running a short stretch further west, along the border between Manatuto and Viqueque municipalities, the river turns right and then flows generally north through Laleia Administrative Post, Manatuto. The first significant settlement it passes is Raimea, Suco Cairui, on its left bank. Further north, it passes Samalai village, northern Cairui, also on its left bank, and later Laleia village, again on its left bank, where it flows under the adjacent Laleia Bridge, both being near the border between Sucos Haturalan and Lifau, Laleia Administrative Post. A short additional distance north, it discharges into Wetar Strait, at the northern tip of the border between Suco Lifau, Laleia Administrative Post, Manatuto, and Suco Vemasse, Vemasse Administrative Post, Baucau. [3] [6] [7]
The main tributaries of the river, in order of entrance, are as follows: [3] [6] [7]
The river's catchment or drainage basin is located mainly in the municipality of Manatuto; some parts of it are in one or other of the adjacent municipalities of Baucau and Viqueque. [40] : 16 It is about 533 km2 (206 sq mi) in area, with a channel length of 55 km (34 mi). [41] : 9
Timor-Leste has been broadly divided into twelve 'hydrologic units', groupings of climatologically and physiographically similar and adjacent river catchments. [41] : 2, 52 [42] The Laleia River catchment is one of the two major catchments in the Laleia hydrologic unit, which is about 1,009.9 km2 (389.9 sq mi) in total area and covers 6.8% of the country; the other is the Vemasse River catchment. [41] : 9, 52, 58 [42]
A 2017 article reporting on recent archaeological analyses of Pleistocene epoch human activity at Laili cave (which overlooks the braided plain of the river) stated that shellfish "from fresh water to brackish habitats" were abundant there, and that the freshwater species had likely been gathered from the river. There were also "... at least three families of "true" crabs, derived from marine, mangrove, brackish, freshwater, and terrestrial environments." [43]
The authors of that article also found a modest quantity of fish remains from that epoch, including remnants of freshwater eels (Anguillidae), at the cave. As there was no evidence of fishing by owls present in Timor at the time, those remains could be attributed to human consumption. However, it was thought that the fish had been caught using traps or spears, and not with fishing hooks. [43]
Another article, published in 2023, expanded on the 2017 article by reporting on excavations at the cave in 2011 and 2019. At least 41 species of molluscs, along with crustaceans, were identified from a range of habitats including freshwater environments. Additionally, at least 10 taxa of fish were identified, of which the most abundant were the freshwater eels, mullets (Mugilidae) and needlefishes (Belonidae). According to the 2023 article, the eels "... were probably caught in the adjacent Laleia River using eel pots or nets." [44]
In 20th and 21st century Timor-Leste, involvement in fishing has been low by comparison with other small island countries. Along the north coast of Timor, fishing levels are higher than elsewhere in the country, other than in pockets along parts of the south coast. Many of the north coast fishers fish part time or seasonally, and are otherwise occupied in additional activities such as carpentry, labouring or security work. [45]
However, in December 2024 Deputy Prime Minister, Coordinating Minister of Social Affairs, and Minister of Rural Development and Community Housing, Mariano Sabino Lopes, led a groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of fishing sector strategic infrastructure in Laleia. The infrastructure project, first discussed during a meeting in 2013 between Prime Minister Xanana Gusmão and the President of China, was to be developed by Timor South Sea Fishery Development Lda. in partnership with a Chinese company, Guanxi Yixin Fishery Development Co. Ltd. [46]
In November 2022, the Timor-Leste government, through its Council of Ministers, approved the opening of concession areas in three rivers, including the Laleia River, for the mining of industrial minerals to be used in the production of construction materials. [47] [48]
Also approved in November 2022 were tender terms for the award of mining rights in the concession areas. [47] [48]
Each of the three rivers has abundant sediments transported from upstream in its catchment, or created by erosion of its banks. The sediments are deposited as either gravel or sand on the river's braided flood plains. After being deposited, the gravel and sand can be extracted and used primarily in the construction of small- to medium scale projects. [40] : 9–10, 16–18
The Laleia River concession has a total estimated surface area of 174 ha (430 acres). It is made up of two zones, one 500 m (1,600 ft) upstream of the Laleia Bridge, and the other extending from 500 m downstream of the bridge to 500 m away from the Wetar Strait shoreline. [40] : 18
Baucau is a municipality, and was formerly a district, of East Timor, on the northern coast in the eastern part of the country. The capital is also called Baucau. The population of the municipality is 111,694 and it has an area of 1,506 km2.
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Media related to Laleia River at Wikimedia Commons