Sitte | |
Other Name: | Ситте / Сииттэ |
Source1 Coordinates: | 62.27°N 127.2433°W |
Source1 Elevation: | 250m (820feet) |
Mouth Coordinates: | 63.8764°N 127.2539°W |
Mouth Elevation: | 121m (397feet) |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Length: | 431km (268miles) |
Discharge1 Avg: | 28.6m3/s |
Basin Size: | 8250km2 |
Pushpin Map: | Russia Sakha Republic |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Mouth location in Yakutia, Russia |
The Sitte (Russian: Ситте; Yakut: Сииттэ, Siitte) is a river in Yakutia (Sakha Republic), Russia. It is a left tributary of the Lena with a length of 431km (268miles). Its drainage basin area is 8250km2.
The name of the river is based on the Yakut word "satyy" (сатыы), meaning "low".
The Sitte has its sources in a marshy area near Kiriyestyakh, at the northern edge of the Lena Plateau. It soon leaves the plateau area and flows across the Central Yakutian Lowland in a roughly northern direction. The river forms meanders as it heads north within a floodplain with oxbows and small thermokarst lakes to the east of the Tyugyuene and west of the Khanchaly. Close to the final stretch of its course the Sitte enters the Lena floodplain, dotted with a multitude of larger lakes and marshes. Finally it meets an arm of the left bank of the Lena, 1157km (719miles) from its mouth.[1]
The Sitte river is fed by rain and snow. Floods are common in the spring, but the rest of the warm season its channel is shallow and it may dry in stretches. Parts of the upper course are often encumbered by logs and fallen trees.[2]
The river basin is largely uninhabited territory, except for Bes-Kyuyel, a small Yakut settlement. There is a gas pipeline that crosses the Sitte about 1km (01miles) from the border between Gorny and Kobyaysky Districts.
The Sitte has eighteen tributaries that are over 10km (10miles) in length. The largest one is the 108km (67miles) long Dyuktyuene (Yakut: Дьүктүөнэ) from the left. The river freezes between the second half of October and mid May.[3]
The vegetation of the Sitte basin is mainly spruce and larch taiga. There are also birch forests in some areas of the Sitte's lower course.[3] The basin is prone to forest fires in some years.[4]
The main fish species are pike, perch and common roach, among others. Elk, wild reindeer, roe deer, wolf, hare, sable, muskrat and many other animals are common in the Tugyuene basin.[3]