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At the centre of Sapporo, the City Hall and the Sapporo Station are located
at the end of an alluvial fan, at 20m above sea level, while the Salmon
Museum, in Makomanai, is at an altitude of 80m. The distance between the
two places is about 8 kilometres. The total superficy of the alluvial fan
is approximately 20 square kilometres.
The central part of Sapporo was formed 6,000 years before by the deposit
of earth carried by the Toyohira River from Jozankei and was frequently
flooded in the 19th century, when the river banks were not built yet. There
is abundant ground water away from the riverbed, due to the river underflows.
Since there is no need to dig deep wells to draw an high quality water,
life is easy on this fertile land, which was used for agriculture, including
the culture of fruit trees.
The place where the Sapporo Station and the Odori Park are located is
the connection between the end of the alluvial fan and the beginning of
a floodplain, the Ishikari Plain. There used to be lots of springs in this
area which was called Memu by Ainus, the first inhabitants. Even now, the pounds of the Former Hokkaido
Government Office, of the Hokkaido Governor's Official Residence, of the
Hokkaido University Botanic Garden, the Sakushu Kotani River of Hokkaido
University, the Sapporo Beer Factory or the Yukijirushi milk factory are
the remains of those ancient springs.
The water drawn from a well situated 150m under Tancho Warehouse (the
Sapporo Chitosetsuru sake factory) and which is used to brew this sake,
also comes from the underflows of the Toyohira River. Permeating into the
ground during several years, it gets a perfect balance in minerals, and
that is why it is often said: "we will not leave this place while
we can drink this water."
Ainus settled in a village (kotan) near the Memu where we can easily imagine a great number of salmons ascending the river
towards the springs. Salmon is called kamuiciepu (fish of god) in Ainu language. Even now there are still salmons in the
Toyohira River, laying eggs between Higashi Bashi (same altitude as the
Sapporo Station) and Horohira Bashi (above Odori Park, Tancho Warehouse,
Susukino, Nakajima Park). Right in the middle of a two million people city.
Water is essential for humans and salmons.
The statue named Izumi depicts three symbolic dancers in Odori Park and is obviously a reference
to the Memu (springs). As its sculptor, Shin Hongo (1905-1980), native of Sapporo, puts it: "at the beginning, I did not intend to sculpt dancers; I wanted something that would hold the sky from the ground, I wanted to make the clouds and the wind play together, I wanted to call the snow and the rain".
According to Hideo Yamazo (1899-1992) who carried out research on Ainu
place-names, the Toyohira River was called Sapporobet (sa = dry, poro = big, bet = river) by Ainus, a name that suits this river that runs in the alluvial
fan. There is a lot of rivers around Sapporo and Sapporobet is the biggest.
Thus we can easily understand the name "big". As for "dry",
since a river that runs across an alluvial fan always splits, its quantity
of water tends to decrease, or since during summer time, rain rate is low,
the size of the riverbed is dramatically reduced so that the stones at
the bottom of the river appears. We can also assume that the name of the
river points at the numerous traces of dry rivers in the alluvial fan.
(Mikio Sugiyama, November 1st, 2007)
■ Affiliated articles
About Sapporo
Facts and Figures
Sapporo's water
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Hoheikyo Dam
Built in 1972 to supply the region in water. Above it lies a primeval forest. Thanks to this high quality water (from underground water or snow) retained in this uninhabited montains and forests, the inhabitants of Sapporo are never thirsty.

Water you can drink in the Chitosetsuru Sake Museum. Medium hard water
that is perfect to brew sake. According to the brewmaster: "we have
been brewing sake for 135 years. The very reason why we keep brewing Chitosetsuru
sake in the center of a big city of 1.9 million people like Sapporo is
the water. Here is the water whose quality is our pride"
Delicious sake, thanks to the snow

The Toyohira River that flows rapidely in the alluvial fan, having little
water. At the junction of the fan and the Ishikari floodplain, the river
is getting bigger, as the underground springs join the river at its bottom, and runs slowly towards the Ishikari River.
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