Pregolya
The Pregolya or Pregola (Russian: Прего́ля; German: Pregel; Lithuanian: Prieglius; Polish: Pregoła) is a river in the Russian Kaliningrad Oblast exclave.
Pregolya | |
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The Pregolya in Gvardeysk. | |
Location | |
Country | Russia |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | Instruch and Angrapa confluence |
Mouth | |
• location | Vistula Lagoon, Baltic Sea |
• coordinates | 54.6827°N 20.3778°E |
Basin size | 15,500 km2 (6,000 sq mi) |
Discharge | |
• average | 90 m3/s (3,200 cu ft/s) |
Overview
It starts as a confluence of the Instruch and the Angrapa and drains into the Baltic Sea through the Vistula Lagoon. Its length under the name of Pregolya is 123 km, 292 km including the Angrapa. The basin has an area of 15,500 km². The average flow is 90 m³/s.
Euler's Seven Bridges of Königsberg problem was based on the bridges crossing the river in Königsberg (now Kaliningrad).
A possible ancient name by Ptolemy of the Pregolya River is Chronos, although other theories identify Chronos as a much larger river, the Nemunas.
Cities and towns
Tributaries
gollark: That means you still need to work out resource allocation/conflict resolution for the larger-scale things.
gollark: Anyway. People can probably work together in self-organizing small groups using social mechanisms, sure. *But* you're limited to Dunbar's number - about 150 people - and larger scale coordination than that is necessary.
gollark: I don't really know our family income so I can't compare that against the countrywide distribution.
gollark: Eh, upper middle maybe.
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See also
References
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