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The river Eridanos (or Eridanus) is an imagined river of Greek mythology whose name has been adopted by paleogeographers to describe the real ice age river that ran in the bed of the Baltic Sea. Mythic Eridanos is mentioned in ancient Greek writings as a river in northern Europe rich in amber. Hesiod, in Theogony, calls it " deep-eddying Eridanos" in his list of rivers, the offspring of Tethys. In Dionysiaca, the vast monster Typhon boasts that he will bathe in "starry Eridanus." Herodotus (III, 115) points out that the word Eridanos is essentially Greek in character, and surmises that consequently the river supposed to run round the world is probably a Greek invention. He associated it with the river Po, because the Po was located near the end of the Amber Trail. Amber originated from the tears of the Heliades shed when their brother, Phaeton, died and fell from the sky and tumbled into the Eridanos (Ovid, Metamorphoses II, 367-380), where, “along the green banks of the river Eridanos,” King Cygnus mourned him and was transformed into a swan. There in the far west, Heracles asked the river nymphs of Eridanos to help him locate the Garden of the Hesperides. Strabo disregards such mythmaking:
Eridanus ("the river") was considered one of the rivers of Hades by Virgil in his Aeneid VI, 659. Geologists' Eridanos. The name was given by geologists to a river which flowed in what is now the bed of the Baltic Sea. The geological Eridanos was most important about one million years ago, when it had a length of about 2,700 kilometres. It began in Laponia, and then flowed through the area of the modern-day Gulf of Bothnia to western Europe, where it had an immense delta which spanned almost the entire current North Sea. It was comparable in size to the current-day Amazon River. The Eridanos began about 40 million years ago. About 12 million years ago the river reached the North Sea area, where it began to build an immense delta with its sediments. The Eridanos disappeared during the first Ice age of 700,000 years ago, which completely covered the riverbed. By the time the ice caps retreated the ancient river valley had been widened into the current-day Baltic Sea. Remnants of the Eridanos are found all through northern Europe, from the Netherlands at its western end to sediments in northern Lapponia. |
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