Chanva
The Chanva (Russian: Чаньва) is a river in Perm Krai, Russia, a left tributary of the Yayva.[1] It is 70 kilometres (43 mi) long. The area of its drainage basin is 733 square kilometres (283 sq mi).[2] It begins at the confluence of rivers Tsenva and Rassokha, on the north slope of mountain range Bely Spoy. It is a mountain river with significant changes of elevation between source and mouth. It flows in a deep rocky valley. The mouth is downstream of the settlement Verh-Yayva. The most important of its tributaries, all small, are:
- Left: Kospash, Kostanok, Vetos, Stepanovka;
- Right: Anyusha, Berezovka.
Chanva | |
---|---|
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | Middle Ural |
Mouth | Yayva |
• coordinates | 59.449°N 57.5563°E |
Length | 70 km (43 mi) |
Basin size | 733 km2 (283 sq mi) |
Basin features | |
Progression | Yayva→ Kama→ Volga→ Caspian Sea |
Sources
- Пермская область. Коми-Пермяцкий автономный округ: общегеогр. регион. атлас: сост. по состоянию на 1985-1997 гг.: масштаб 1:200000 : планы городов: Перми (1:50000), Кудымкара (1:20000) / ЦЭВКФ; ред. Ю. Кузнецов, Д. Трушин. 1-е изд. М.: ВТУ ГШ, 2000. 128 с.
- Ресурсы поверхностных вод СССР. Гидрологическая изученность. Т. 2: Средний Урал и Приуралье. Вып. 1: Кама / под ред. В. В. Николаенко. Л.: Гидрометеоиздат, 1966. 324 с., С. 69
gollark: In Rust, `vec![1, 2, 3]` is a macro, and you can just define your own ones of those.
gollark: Amazing! Wow!
gollark: ```Data Persistence pickle — Python object serialization copyreg — Register pickle support functions shelve — Python object persistence marshal — Internal Python object serialization dbm — Interfaces to Unix “databases” sqlite3 — DB-API 2.0 interface for SQLite databases```
gollark: Also, `glob` *and* `fnmatch`? I have no idea exactly what they're for, but it sounds similar.
gollark: This does seem slightly weird and broken.
References
- Chanva in encyclopedia of Perm Krai
- «Река Чаньва (Рассоха)», Russian State Water Registry
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.