Izh, İj, Otš
Location
CountryUdmurtia and Tatarstan, Russia
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationMalye Oshvortsy, Udmurtia
MouthKama
  location
Nizhnekamsk Reservoir
  coordinates
56°02′15″N 52°54′04″E / 56.03750°N 52.90111°E / 56.03750; 52.90111
Length259 km (161 mi)
Basin size8,510 km2 (3,290 sq mi)
Discharge 
  average587 m3/s (20,700 cu ft/s), maximum in 1979
Basin features
ProgressionKamaVolgaCaspian Sea

The Izh (Russian: Иж; Udmurt: Оӵ, ; Tatar: Иж, romanized: İj []) is a river in Udmurtia and Tatarstan, Russian Federation, a right-bank tributary of the Kama. It is 259 kilometres (161 mi) long, of which 97 kilometres (60 mi) are in Tatarstan, and its drainage basin covers 8,510 square kilometres (3,290 sq mi).[1] It begins near Malye Oshvortsy, Udmurtia and falls to the Nizhnekamsk Reservoir, Kama River, near Golyushurma tract in Agryzsky District, Tatarstan.

The river's major tributaries are the Agryzka, Chazh, Kyrykmas, Varzinka, Varzi and Azevka rivers. The mineralization 300 to 500 mg/L. Its drainage is regulated. The Izhevsk Reservoir was constructed in 1760 to supply Izhevsk industry with water. Since 1978 it is protected as a natural monument of Tatarstan. There are notable mineral springs in Izh valley.[2] Izhevsk and Agryz are the cities along the river.

References

  1. «Река ИЖ», Russian State Water Registry
  2. "Иж". Tatar Encyclopaedia (in Tatar). Kazan: The Republic of Tatarstan Academy of Sciences. Institution of the Tatar Encyclopaedia. 2002.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.