CanalPlanAC

Lower Seine (La Seine aval)

 
 
Information about the waterway

The Lower Seine (La Seine aval) is a seaway and is part of the River Seine. It runs for 176.01 kilometres from Le Havre (where it joins the English Channel) to Écluse de Poses-Amfreville (where it joins the Lower Seine (non-tidal section: Amfreville to Paris)).

The exact dimensions of the largest boat that can travel on the waterway are not known. The maximum headroom is not known. The maximum draught is not known.

Le Havre
River Seine joins the sea
Honfleur
Unmissable atmospheric town just off the river
11.15 kilometres 0 locks
Pont de Normandie 14.46 kilometres 0 locks
Pont de Tancarville 30.08 kilometres 0 locks
Quillebeuf-sur-Seine 36.38 kilometres 0 locks
Villequier 56.28 kilometres 0 locks
Pont de Brotonne 62.10 kilometres 0 locks
La Mailleraye-sur-Seine
Quai Paul Giradeau
67.36 kilometres 0 locks
Yville-sur-Seine 83.69 kilometres 0 locks
Bardouville 103.63 kilometres 0 locks
Quenneport 123.09 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Flaubert 130.93 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Guillaume le Conquérant 132.29 kilometres 0 locks
Rouen 132.38 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Jeanne d'Arc 132.90 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Boieldieu 133.15 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Pierre Corneille 133.50 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Mathilde 134.29 kilometres 0 locks
Île de la Crapaudière 140.54 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Ferroviaire Oissel - Tourville 146.45 kilometres 0 locks
Pont de D13 (Oissel) 146.47 kilometres 0 locks
Viaduc de Oissel 148.28 kilometres 0 locks
Île de Sainte-Catherine 148.70 kilometres 0 locks
Viaduc d'Orival 155.23 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Guynemer 157.64 kilometres 0 locks
Pont Jean-Jaurès 158.09 kilometres 0 locks
Pont de Seine (Criquebeuf-sur-Seine) 166.38 kilometres 0 locks
Pont de Rue de Paris (Pont-de-l'Arche) 169.91 kilometres 0 locks
Écluse de Poses-Amfreville
Tidal limit of River Seine at Amfreville
176.01 kilometres 0 locks
 
 
Maps
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External websites
 VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
 
Wikipedia

There is no page on Wikipedia called “Lower Seine”

Wikipedia pages that might relate to Lower Seine
[Seine] waterway" the Basse Seine "Lower Seine" from Paris to Rouen the Seine maritime "Maritime Seine" from Rouen to the English channel. The Seine is dredged and [Neuilly-sur-Seine] Neuilly-sur-Seine (French pronunciation: [nøji syʁ sɛn] (listen)), known as Neuilly, is a commune in the department of Hauts-de-Seine in France, just [Armorica] typical Continental connections of the Britannic coast were with the lower Seine valley instead. Archaeology has not yet been as enlightening in Iron-Age [Rollo] the lower Seine. After the Siege of Chartres in 911, Charles the Simple, the king of West Francia, gifted them lands between the mouth of the Seine and [Björn Ironside] encamped by the lower Seine in 861–862, but then split again. Veland agreed to become a Christian and joined royal service, while the Seine Vikings went [Normandy] historical Duchy of Normandy was a formerly independent duchy occupying the lower Seine area, the Pays de Caux and the region to the west through the Pays d'Auge [History of Normandy] the winters in Scandinavia. After 851, Vikings began to stay in the lower Seine valley for the winter. In January 852, they burned the Abbey of Fontenelle [Duchy of Normandy] the river Seine took place in 820. By 911, the area had been raided many times and there were even small Viking settlements on the lower Seine. The text [History of Rouen] the Gaulish tribe of Veliocasses, who controlled a large area in the lower Seine valley, which today retains a trace of their name as the Vexin. The Gauls [Esuvii] (or Esubii; Gaulish: Esuuii) were a Gallic tribe dwelling between the lower Seine and the Loire rivers, in what is now Normandy, during the Iron Age. Their
 
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