Bulun (river)

The Bulun (Russian: Булун), also known as "Rassokha", is a river in Magadan Oblast, Russia. It has a length of 428 kilometres (266 mi) and a drainage basin of 17,000 square kilometres (6,600 sq mi).[2] The Bulun is the longest tributary of the Korkodon, of the Kolyma basin. Its river basin is located in a discontinuous permafrost zone.[3]

Bulun
Булун
Bulun (river) is located in Magadan Oblast
Bulun (river)
Mouth location in Magadan Oblast, Russia
Location
CountryRussia
Federal subjectMagadan Oblast
DistrictSevero-Evensky District,
Omsukchansky District
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationKongin Range
Kolyma Mountains
  coordinates64°43′30″N 157°43′59″E
  elevation447 m (1,467 ft)
MouthKorkodon
  coordinates
65°03′49″N 154°51′55″E[1]
  elevation
125 m (410 ft)
Length428 km (266 mi)
Basin size17,000 km2 (6,600 sq mi)
Basin features
ProgressionKorkodonKolymaEast Siberian Sea

The river flows across an uninhabited area of the Kolyma Mountains. Formerly there was a gold-mining settlement in its basin named Rassokha, but it was abandoned in the 1970s.[4]

Course

The Bulun is a right tributary of the Korkodon. Its source is in a small lake of the western slopes of the Kongin Range. The river flows first in a northern direction, bending towards the northwest. As it leaves the mountainous area, it bends towards the southwest in a floodplain fringing the southern side of the Yukaghir Highlands. The river flows slowly in its last stretch meandering strongly and the floodplain becomes wider, with swamps and oxbow lakes. There are also numerous small thermokarst lakes. At last the Bulun joins the right bank of the Korkodon 91 kilometres (57 mi) from its mouth.[1][4]

The main tributaries of the Bulun are the 156 kilometres (97 mi) long Vizualnaya, the 132 kilometres (82 mi) long Nenkal and the 254 kilometres (158 mi) long Aly-Yuryakh from the right, as well as the 73 kilometres (45 mi) long Nelgyu from the left.[2] The river is frozen between early October and late May. There is a winter road running along the left bank.[3]

See also

References

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