Tomashka is a river in Russia , flows in the Vologda region , in the Tarnogsky and Nyuksensky districts . The mouth of the river is 68 km along the left bank of the Uftyug River. The river is 17 km long.
| Tomashka | |
|---|---|
| Characteristic | |
| Length | 17 km |
| Watercourse | |
| Source | Losevitsky swamp |
| • Coordinates | |
| Mouth | Uftyuga |
| • Location | 68 km on the left bank |
| • Coordinates | |
| Location | |
| Water system | Uftuga → Sukhona → Severnaya Dvina → White Sea |
| A country |
|
| Region | Vologodskaya Oblast |
| Areas | Tarnogsky District , Nyuksensky District |
| HWR code | |
The source of the river is at the southeastern end of the vast Losevitsky swamp near the border with the Arkhangelsk region, 30 km southwest of the village of Loig. The river flows through marshy forests to the south-west, before flowing into the Uftugu it turns to the west. There are no settlements along the coast.
Water registry data
According to the state water register of Russia, it belongs to the Dvina-Pechora Basin District , the water sector of the river is the Northern Dvina from the beginning of the river to the confluence of the Vychegda River , without the South and Sukhon rivers (from the source to the Kubensky hydroelectric complex ), and the river sub-basin of the river is Sukhon. The river basin is the Northern Dvina [2] .
According to the geographic information system of water management zoning of the territory of the Russian Federation, prepared by the Federal Agency for Water Resources [2] :
- The code of the water body in the state water registry is 03020100312103000009098
- The code for hydrological knowledge (GI) is 103000909
- Pool code - 02/03/01.003
- GI Volume Number - 03
- GI Issue - 0
Notes
- ↑ Surface Water Resources of the USSR: Hydrological Understanding. T. 3. The Northern Territory / ed. N.M. - L .: Gidrometeoizdat, 1965 .-- 612 p.
- ↑ 1 2 State Water Register . Tomashka . textual.ru . Ministry of Natural Resources of Russia (March 29, 2009). Date of treatment December 20, 2018. Archived March 29, 2009.