Yeah (river)
Jaja Яя |
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Course of the Jaja (Яя) in the catchment area of the Tschulym |
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Data | ||
Water code | RU : 13010400312115200020257 | |
location | Kemerovo Oblast , Tomsk Oblast (Russia) | |
River system | If | |
Drain over | Tschulym → Ob → Arctic Ocean | |
source | about 3 km north of Jaschkino 55 ° 54 ′ 26 ″ N , 85 ° 25 ′ 40 ″ E |
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muzzle |
Tschulym coordinates: 56 ° 58 '2 " N , 86 ° 22' 18" E 56 ° 58 '2 " N , 86 ° 22' 18" E |
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Mouth height |
95 m
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length | 380 km | |
Catchment area | 11,700 km² | |
Discharge at the gauge Semjonowka A Eo : 11,500 km² Location: 22 km above the mouth |
NNQ (January 1967) MNQ 1955/1967 MQ 1955/1967 Mq 1955/1967 MHQ 1955/1967 HHQ (May 1966) |
7.86 m³ / s 11.5 m³ / s 82.7 m³ / s 7.2 l / (s km²) 500 m³ / s 780 m³ / s |
Left tributaries | Bolshoi Tschindat , Kitat (Kitat-Tschedat), Taschma , Kuila (Suchaja), Kul , Latat , ( Bolschaja ) Kutatka | |
Right tributaries | Kaigur , Barsas , Kelbes , Solotoi Kitat , Mutnaja | |
Small towns | Yes / Yes | |
Navigable | 114 km navigable |
The 380 km long Jaja ( Russian Яя ) is a left tributary of the Chulym in Siberia ( Russia , Asia ).
The Jaja rises near the settlement Jaschkino in the northwest of the Kemerovo Oblast , flows first in an easterly direction , then after taking up its right tributary Barsas partly strongly meandering through the southeastern part of the West Siberian lowlands in a northerly direction. At the settlement of Jaja , the river is crossed by the Trans-Siberian Railway and finally flows into the Tschulym ( 95 m ) about 10 km above the city of Assino ( Tomsk Oblast ).
The catchment area covers 11,700 km². The mean monthly water flow in the village of Semjonowka, 22 km above the mouth, is 82.7 m³ / s (minimum in March: 11.5 m³ / s, maximum in May: 500 m³ / s). The river there is 108 m wide and 0.7 m deep; the flow velocity is 0.4 m / s.
The Jaja freezes from late November to April.
It is navigable for 114 km from the estuary (to the village of Novostroika below the confluence of the left tributary Kitat ), but is not used regularly for inland navigation.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Article Jaja in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (BSE) , 3rd edition 1969–1978 (Russian)
- ↑ a b Jaja in the State Water Directory of the Russian Federation (Russian)
- ↑ a b Jaja at the Semjonowka gauge - hydrographic data at R-ArcticNET (22 km from the mouth, measurements 1955 to 1967)
- ↑ a b Jaja at dic.academic.ru
- ↑ List of inland waterways of the Russian Federation (confirmed by Order No. 1800 of the Government of the Russian Federation of December 19, 2002) (Russian)