Inja (Sea of Okhotsk)
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Inja Иня |
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| Data | ||
| Water code | RU : 20010000112119000147390 | |
| location | Khabarovsk region ( Russia ) | |
| River system | Inja | |
| origin | Lake Chel-Deli in the Suntar Chajata Mountains 61 ° 39 ′ 33 ″ N , 145 ° 49 ′ 45 ″ E |
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| Source height | 853 m | |
| muzzle |
Sea of Okhotsk coordinates: 59 ° 22 '11 " N , 144 ° 54' 42" E 59 ° 22 '11 " N , 144 ° 54' 42" E |
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| Mouth height | 0 m | |
| Height difference | 853 m | |
| Bottom slope | 2.6 ‰ | |
| length | 330 km | |
| Catchment area | 19,700 km² | |
| Discharge at the gauge near the mouth of the A Eo : 19,700 km²
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MQ Mq |
236 m³ / s 12 l / (s km²) |
| Right tributaries | Nilgyssy | |
| Communities | Novaya Inja | |
The Inja ( Russian Иня ) is a 330 km long river in the extreme northeast of the Khabarovsk region in the Far East of Russia .
It has its origins in Lake Chel-Deli , which is located in the Suntar-Chajata Mountains . The upper reaches of the river from the Chel-Deli to the confluence of the right tributary Cheidschan after 83 km also bears the name Nonna. The Inja flows in a south-southwest direction. The largest tributary of the Inja is the Nilgyssy, which comes from the right . The Inja finally empties into a lagoon of the Sea of Okhotsk at the Novaya Inja settlement .
Hydrology
The Inja drains an area of 19,700 km². The mean discharge is 236 m³ / s.
Fish fauna
The Inja is used by salmon fish as spawning water.
Web links
- Иня bei water-rf.ru (НАУЧНО-ПОПУЛЯРНАЯ ЭНЦИКЛОПЕДИЯ; Вода России) (Russian)
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Soviet General Staff Map 1: 200,000. Sheet P-55-XIX, XX. Edition 1989
- ↑ Soviet General Staff Map 1: 200,000. Sheet O-55-I. 1988 edition
- ↑ a b Article Inja in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (BSE) , 3rd edition 1969–1978 (Russian)
- ↑ a b Inja in the State Water Register of the Russian Federation (Russian)