Bureya River

Bureya River (Бурея)
Country Russia
Mouth
 - location Amur River
Length 623 km (387 mi)
Basin 70,700 km2 (27,297 sq mi)
Discharge mouth
 - average 940 m3/s (33,196 cu ft/s)
 - max 18,100 m3/s (639,195 cu ft/s)

The Bureya River (Russian: Бурея) is a 623-kilometre (387 mi) long south-flowing tributary of the Amur River. Its name comes from the Evenk word birija, meaning river. It is formed from the junction of the Pravaya (right) Bureya and the Levaya (left) Bureya.[1]

Descriptions

Its basin is bounded by: west: Turana Range and Zeya River, south: Amur River, east: Bureinskiy Range, Urmi River and Amgun River, north: Ezop Range and several rivers that flow northeast into the Sea of Okhotsk.

There are no cities on the river, the largest settlements on the river are Novy Urgal on the Baikal Amur Mainline and, Novobureysky and Bureya, both on the Trans-Siberian Railway. The Tyrma River is a left branch that crosses the railway south from Novy Urgal at the town of Tyrma. The Chegdomyn coal fields are north of Novy Urgal. The Bureya hydro power plant holds back middle stream of the river and mitigates extremal surge events during summer rainy seasons. Currently the project of Lower Bureya hydro power plant is under preliminary investigations and preparatory works. M58 highway (Russia) crosses it on a ferry.

References

  1. "Chapter 23. Rivers of Far East // Hydrography of USSR." (in Russian). 1954 y. |first1= missing |last1= in Authors list (help)

Coordinates: 49°24′22″N 129°32′10″E / 49.406°N 129.536°E / 49.406; 129.536


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.