Argun (Amur)
Argun Аргунь |
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Catchment area of the Argun (Аргунь) with tributaries |
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Data | ||
Water code | RU : 20030200112118100000022 | |
location |
Inner Mongolia ( PR China ), Transbaikalia ( Russia ) |
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River system | Amur | |
Drain over | Amur → Tatar Sound | |
Headwaters |
Great Hinggan Mountains 49 ° 56 ′ 16 ″ N , 122 ° 27 ′ 53 ″ E |
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Source height | approx. 1200 m | |
muzzle |
Amur coordinates: 53 ° 19 '58 " N , 121 ° 28' 49" E 53 ° 19 '58 " N , 121 ° 28' 49" E |
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Mouth height | 305 m | |
Height difference | approx. 895 m | |
Bottom slope | approx. 0.55 ‰ | |
length | 1620 km | |
Catchment area | 164,000 km² | |
Left tributaries | Yimin He , Cherlen , Urow , Urjumkan , Gasimur | |
Right tributaries | Gen He , Jiliu He | |
Big cities | Hailar , Yakeshi | |
Small towns | Priargunsk | |
Navigable | 428 km ( Olotschi to mouth) |
The Argun or Ergun ( Buryat for "broad river"; Russian Аргунь / Argun ; Chinese 額爾古納河 / 额尔古纳河 , Pinyin É'ěrgǔnà Hé ) is the 1620 km long right, i.e. H. southern headwaters of the Amur ( Heilong Jiang ) in northeast China .
River course
It has its source in the Great Hinggan Mountains . From there it flows as Hailar-Argun ( Hailar He ) first over Yakeshi and Hailar (today the Hailar district of Hulun Buir ) to the west, and then flows 944 km in length along the Sino-Russian border to the northeast. Finally, west of Mohe , it unites with the Schilka to form the Amur ( Heilong Jiang ).
Kerulen-Argun-Amur
About 150 km west of the city of Hailar on the Argun is the lake Hulun Nur , which actually has no contact with the Argun River. In years with particularly high levels of rainfall, this lake, which is normally without drain, overflows on its north bank and flows into the Argun after about 30 km. This gives the Kerulen, which flows into this lake, a connection to the Argun, which from there forms the Sino-Russian border in its lower reaches over a length of 944 km and then forms the Amur , so that the Kerulen-Argun-Amur river then arises .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Article Argun in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (BSE) , 3rd edition 1969–1978 (Russian)