Dunno - a river in the Moscow region and Moscow , the left tributary of the Desna . The length is 32 km [2] . The catchment area is 207 km² [2] .
| Dunno | |
|---|---|
| Characteristic | |
| Length | 32 km |
| Pool | 207 km² |
| Watercourse | |
| Source | |
| • Location | Odintsovskii district |
| • Coordinates | |
| Mouth | Gum |
| • Location | 30 km on the right bank |
| • Coordinates | |
| Location | |
| Water system | Desna → Pakhra → Moscow → Oka → Volga → Caspian Sea |
| A country |
|
| Regions | Moscow region , Moscow |
| HWR code | |
The source is located at the Rozhnovka farm in the Odintsovo district , the mouth is at the Desna village of Moscow.
Content
Description
The source of Dunno is lost among the sedge thickets.
It flows through the territory of the Odintsovo district of the Moscow region and the Novomoskovsky district of Moscow. The following settlements are located on the river: Brekhovo farm, villages of Sanino , Sharapovo , Davydkovo , Harino , Staroselye , Maryino , Penino and Piskovo .
Near the village of Krekshino, the dam forms a large pond. Near the village of Bolshoi Svinorye , the Svinorye River flows into Dunno [3] ; another tributary flows through Marushkino - Alyoshenka stream.
The river slope averages 1.5 m / km, which makes Dunno the most steeply falling river in the near Moscow region.
Tributaries
In order from the mouth:
- Likova (flows 4.2 km from the mouth of Dunno)
- Aleshin [3]
- Pigland [3]
- Aleshinka [3]
Alloy
Rafting on Dunno is possible only on kayaks and at peak floods. Although the river is theoretically passable from the Kiev highway bridge and even from the Krekshino railway station in the Kiev direction of the Moscow Railway , due to blockages, rafting usually starts from the dam of the pond near the Zorka holiday home, several kilometers below the river crossing with the Kiev highway. The rafting ends either in Maryino or in the village of Desna [4] .
Etymology
The name had variants of Neznan, Neznanka and, apparently, is connected with the stem of the verb (not) to know, that is, it can be interpreted as “unknowable”, “unknown” (river).
See also
- List of rivers in the Moscow region
Notes
- ↑ Surface Water Resources of the USSR: Hydrological Understanding. T. 10. Upper Volga region / ed. V.P. Shaban. - L .: Gidrometeoizdat, 1966 .-- 528 p.
- ↑ 1 2 State Water Register of the Russian Federation: Dunno . Date of treatment April 17, 2011. Archived February 26, 2012.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Map sheet N-37-15 Aprelevka . Scale: 1: 100,000. Status of the terrain for 1982. 1987 edition
- ↑ Tourist water encyclopedia. Moscow region, tributaries of Moscow.