Ozyornaya (Sea of Okhotsk)

Ozyornaya (Russian: Озёрная, lit.'Lake-river') is a river in the Kamchatka Krai of Russia. It originates in Lake Kurile and flows west to the Sea of Okhotsk.[1]

Ozyornaya
The source of the river in the Kurile lake
Map
Native nameОзёрная (Russian), Игдыг (Koryak)
Location
CountryRussia
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationKurile Lake
 • coordinates51°29′09″N 157°02′37″E / 51.48583°N 157.04361°E / 51.48583; 157.04361
 • elevation81 m (266 ft)
MouthSea of Okhotsk
 • coordinates
51°29′48″N 156°29′31″E / 51.49667°N 156.49194°E / 51.49667; 156.49194
Length48 km (30 mi)
Basin size1,030 km2 (400 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • average30 m3/s (1,100 cu ft/s)

The length of the river is 48 km (30 mi), and the area of the drainage basin is 1,030 km2 (400 sq mi).[1] Despite the small area of its basin, the average annual discharge of water near the sea reaches 30 m3/s (1,100 cu ft/s).[2] The significant amount of precipitation in this area ensures an abundant flow of water in the river and is due both to the geographical location near the Pacific Ocean and to the mountainous orography of the basin. The annual amount of precipitation on the Kurile Lake is 1,400 millimetres (55 in); it can significantly exceed this figure in mountainous areas. Precipitation mostly falls in the autumn and mostly in the form of snow in the mountains, which melts in the following summer without forming any noticeable glaciers.[3]

The mountain landscape of the river basin has volcanic origin and called the Pauzhetsky volcano-caldera complex.[4] Kurile Lake and the upper half of the Ozyornaya channel lie within this volcanic region, and the geothermal activity is often manifested here in the form of hot springs.[5] Some of them are named: Ozyornovskiye, Pauzhetsky hot springs, and White waterfalls. The latter is a cluster of cold water springs with a slightly elevated temperature of 4.7°C and has the status of a nature sanctuary.[6]

A distinctive feature of Ozyornaya is the absence of ice cover in winter: the river freezes only in its mouth part.[2] Because the river has a considerable geothermal underground inflow and has a steady, fast current throughout its course, ice does not form during the cold season. The source of the river in the Kurile Lake also plays a role in this, since it provides the inflow of warmer water from the lake deeper layers, thus preventing ice formation in winter.[7] In general, the combination of underground inflow and inflow from the lake leads to a smoothed river regime with high mean water levels in all seasons.

The abundance of geothermal resources in the region is exploited by the Pauzhetskaya geothermal power plant, the oldest geothermal plant in Russia. It is located near the Pauzhetka river, one of its tributaries.[5] The settlements of Ozyornovsky and Zaporozhye are located near the mouth of the Ozyornaya River and are centers of local fishing. There is also a Research Fisheries Center station on the river; it monitors the spawning of salmon and the development of its juveniles.

The specific nature of Ozyornaya is preferable for some fish species. It has the biggest herd of sockeye salmon in the Pacific Asia and therefore has a special status in the Kamchatka-Kuril subzone.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Ozyornaya river in the State Water Register of Russia". verum.wiki (in Russian).
  2. ^ a b "Река Озерная" (in Russian).
  3. ^ T.K. Ukolova (2008-01-01). "Physics-geographical characterization of the basin of the lake Kurilskoye and hydrochemical regime formative peculiarities of the tributaries // Research of water biological resources of Kamchatka and of the northwest part of Pacific Ocean: Selected Papers. // Vol. 11. Petropavlovsk-Kamchatski: KamchatNIRO. P. 15–23" (in Russian).
  4. ^ "Diky Greben and the Kurile Lake Caldera, Kamchatka, Russia". 2022-03-15.
  5. ^ a b "Geothermal Power Generation in Kamchatka, Russia", Dmitriy V. Kolesnikov, Aleksey A. Lyubin, and Aleksandr N. Shulyupin, Proceedings World Geothermal Congress 2015
  6. ^ "Памятник природы "Холодные минеральные источники Белые водопады" (гидрологический памятник природы Камчатки)". www.kamchatsky-krai.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2022-09-28. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  7. ^ "Satellite image of the source of Ozyornaya from March 03, 2023: the river is free of ice at its source at the rare time of ice cover on Lake Kurilskoye". apps.sentinel-hub.com. Retrieved 2023-03-19., Sentinel-2
  8. ^ "ДОКЛАД О СОСТОЯНИИ ОКРУЖАЮЩЕЙ СРЕДЫ В КАМЧАТСКОМ КРАЕ В 2020 ГОДУ // МИНИСТЕРСТВО ПРИРОДНЫХ РЕСУРСОВ И ЭКОЛОГИИ КАМЧАТСКОГО КРАЯ // ПРАВИТЕЛЬСТВО КАМЧАТСКОГО КРАЯ" (PDF) (in Russian).