White Tisza is a river in the Ukrainian Carpathians , in the Rakhiv district of Transcarpathian region . At the confluence of the White and Black Tisza, 4 km above the central part of the city of Rakhiv , the Tisza River ( Danube basin) originates.
| White yew | |
|---|---|
| Ukrainian Bila Tisa | |
| Characteristic | |
| Length | 26 km |
| Pool | 489 km² |
| Watercourse | |
| Source | river confluence: Stogovec and Balzatul |
| • Coordinates | |
| Mouth | Yew |
| • Coordinates | |
| Location | |
| Water system | Tisa → Danube → Black Sea |
| A country |
|
| Region | Transcarpathian region |
| Area | Rakhiv district |
Content
Description
Length - 26 km, basin area - 489 km². The river slope is 10 m / km. The valley is V-shaped, the width of the channel is 15–20 m. There are rapids and swifts. Food mixed with the predominance of rain. In certain areas, the channel is fixed. There are floods, sometimes very destructive. Used for fish farming and water supply.
Location
White Tisza is formed by the confluence of two rivers - Stogovec and Balzatul , on the southwestern slopes of the Montenegro massif. The river flows mainly to the west, separating the Montenegrin massif (in the north) from the Rakhiv Mountains (in the south). It flows into Tisu near the north-eastern part of the city of Rakhiv .
Tributaries: Hoverla, Bogdan, Paul, Saul, Kvasny.
Settlements
White Tisza flows through such villages: Goverla , Luga , Breba , Bogdan , Vydrichka , Rostock .
Sources
- Geographic encyclopedia of Ukraine : 3 tons / Editorial: A.M. Marynich et al. - K .: Ukrainian Radyansk encyclopedia, 1989-1993. - ISBN 5-88500-015-8 . (Ukrainian)
- Belaya Tisa // Catalog of Ukraine / state .: G. І. Shvets , N. І. Drozd , S.P. Levchenko ; Ed .: V. І. Moklyak . - Kyiv : View of the Academy of Sciences of the Ural Soviet Socialist Republic , 1957. - 192 p. - 3000 copies. (Ukrainian)
- Surface water resources of the USSR. Description of rivers and lakes and calculations of the main characteristics of their regime. - T. 6. Ukraine and Moldova. Vol. 1. Western Ukraine and Moldova (without the basin of the Dniester River). - L., Gidrometeoizdat, 1978. - 198—201 p.