Allakh-Yun (river) explained

Allakh-Yun
Source1 Coordinates:61.8403°N 139.9669°W
Mouth:Aldan
Mouth Coordinates:60.6034°N 134.9561°W
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Russia
Length:586km (364miles)
Basin Size:24200km2
Pushpin Map:Russia Sakha Republic
Pushpin Map Caption:Mouth location in Yakutia, Russia

The Allakh-Yun (Russian: Аллах-Юнь, Yakut: Ааллаах Үүн, Aallaax Üün) is a river in Sakha Republic and Khabarovsk Krai, Russia. It is a right tributary of the Aldan. It is long, and has a drainage basin of .

Geography

The Allakh-Yun arises at an elevation of around 1070m (3,510feet) as the outflow from the mountain lake Amparyndzha, in the south-eastern Verkhoyansk Range. It flows generally in a south-westerly direction through a narrow valley along the Yudoma-Maya Highlands, to the east of the Sette-Daban range. The river cuts through the Ulakhan-Bom Ridge, before flowing into the Aldan by the southern end of the Kyllakh Range, at an elevation of 146m (479feet), approximately 20km (10miles) from the settlement of Eldikan.[1] [2] At its mouth, the Allakh-Yun is about 150m (490feet) wide and 2m (07feet) deep.

The Allakh-Yun freezes over from mid-October until late May.

Local economy and infrastructure

The river is navigable on its lower and middle sections. The surrounding area is very sparsely settled, with the few settlements that do exist on the river, such as Allakh-Yun, Zvyodochka and Solnechny, having originated as gold-mining centres in the 1930s. With the economic crisis arising after the breakup of the Soviet Union and subsequent cessation of mining activities, the area's population dropped from over 8,000 in 1989 to around 1,500 in 2010.

The 300km (200miles) long unsealed road connecting Eldikan with Yugoryonok on the Yudoma River crosses the Allakh-Yun on a concrete bridge north of Solnechny. This bridge has been repeatedly destroyed or damaged by floods, most recently in 2008.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://maps.vlasenko.net/smtm1000/p-53_54.jpg P-53 54 Map (in Russian)
  2. [Google Earth]
  3. http://www.gazetayakutia.ru/article.aspx?id=13915 Newspaper Yakutia, 22 May 2008