Aldan river

Aldan
The Aldan by the Kyllakh Range
Map of the Aldan River course
Location
CountryRussia
Physical characteristics
SourceStanovoy Mountains
 • locationNeryungri, Sakha
 • coordinates56°29′06″N 123°44′02″E / 56.485°N 123.734°E / 56.485; 123.734
 • elevation1,224 m (4,016 ft)
MouthLena
 • location
Sakha
 • coordinates
63°26′46″N 129°33′13″E / 63.44611°N 129.55361°E / 63.44611; 129.55361
 • elevation
43 m (141 ft)
Length2,273 km (1,412 mi)
Basin size729,000 km2 (281,000 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • average5,489 m3/s (193,800 cu ft/s)
(near mouth)
Basin features
ProgressionLenaLaptev Sea
Tributaries 
 • leftAmedichi, Amga
 • rightTimpton, Uchur, Maya, Allakh-Yun

The Aldan (Sakha and Russian: Алдан) is the second-longest right tributary of the Lena in the Sakha Republic in eastern Siberia.[1] The river is 2,273 kilometres (1,412 mi) long, of which around 1,600 kilometres (990 mi) is navigable. It has a drainage basin of 729,000 square kilometres (281,000 sq mi).[2]

The river was part of the River Route to Okhotsk. In 1639 Ivan Moskvitin ascended the rivers Aldan and Maya and crossed to the Ulya to reach the Sea of Okhotsk.

Its basin is known for gold and for Cambrian fossils.

Course

The Aldan rises in the Stanovoy Mountains southwest of Neryungri. It flows roughly in a northeast / ENE direction south of the Lena Plateau across the Aldan Highlands, where it forms the northern border of the Sunnagyn Range. Then it flows past Aldan and through Tommot, Ust-Maya, Eldikan and Khandyga before turning northwest. In its last stretch it flanks the southern slopes of the Verkhoyansk Range and joins the Lena near Batamay.[3]

Tributaries

The river's main tributaries are the following:[4]

From the right
From the left
Basin of the Lena with the Aldan River in the right side

See also

References

External links