Hii River
| Hii River 斐伊川 | |
|---|---|
Hii River in 2010 | |
| Location | |
| Country | Japan |
| Prefecture | Shimane, Tottori |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Source | Mount Sentsū |
| • coordinates | 35°09′50″N 133°11′09″E / 35.1638°N 133.1858°E |
| Mouth | Miho Bay |
• coordinates | 35°33′15″N 133°16′22″E / 35.5541°N 133.2728°E |
| Length | 153 km (95 mi) |
| Basin size | 2,070 km2 (800 sq mi) |
| Discharge | |
| • location | Ohtsu, Izumo |
| • average | 1.4 bn m3/year |
The Hii River (斐伊川, Hii-kawa) is a river on the island of Honshu in Shimane Prefecture and Tottori Prefecture, Japan. With a length of 153 km and catchment of 2540 km2, it is the largest river in the east of Shimane Prefecture. It flows through the cities of Izumo and Matsue and through the lakes Shinji and Nakaumi and discharges into the Sea of Japan.
In antiquity the river was known as "Izumo-no-okawa" (出雲大川, "The great Izumo river").
The River Hii significantly changed its course and transformed the land several times during last 7 millennia. Alluvial deposits carried by the river joined the Shimane peninsula to the mainland, which may have been represented in the "Kunibiki-shinwa" myth. Since the 17th century it flows into lake Shinji, and since the early 20th century continues to the Sea of Japan. Hii river frequently caused floods in its catchment. On the other hand, it was and currently is an important source of drinking and irrigation water. During the Edo period the upper Hii catchment was the largest iron-producing region in Japan. Nowadays the river is dammed for the production of hydropower. The largest dams are Obara and Hinobori.