Lake Nyuk

Coordinates: 64°27′N 31°45′E / 64.45°N 31.75°E / 64.45; 31.75
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Lake Nyuk
Primary inflows
Rastas, Häme
Basin countriesRussia
Surface area214–230 square kilometres (83–89 sq mi)
Average depth8.5 metres (28 ft)
Max. depth40 metres (130 ft)
Water volume1.81 cubic kilometres (0.43 cu mi)
Shore length1255 kilometres (158 mi)
Surface elevation134 metres (440 ft)
Islands126
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Lake Nyuk

Kem River
basin.

General information

The surface area is 214 km², the catchment area is 3090 km².[4]

It has a blade shape. The coast is high and rocky. Food snow and rain. The level fluctuation range is 70 cm. It is covered with ice from the end of October to the end of April.[5]

There are 126 islands on the lake with a total area of about 10.3 km². The largest islands: Thorayssari (1.13 km²), Vezansari, Kurchunsari, Papinsari, Keurunsari, Hernesari.

The average amplitude of the level fluctuation is 0.9 m.[4]

The name Nyuk is translated from Karelian as Swan.

Water Sources

12 rivers flow into the lake. The largest ones are: Nogeusjoki(ru), Kangashoya(ru) and Vaivaoya(ru). The Rastas(ru)and Khyame(ru)rivers flow out (tributaries of the Chirko-Kem river(ru), Kem river basin ).

Lakes

The Nyuk basin also includes lakes:

A large area of the bottom is occupied by silty soils. In the bays, the higher aquatic vegetation is represented by reeds, horsetails, pondweeds.

Vendace, whitefish, pike, perch, roach, bream, burbot, and ruff live in the lake.

References

  1. ^ Map sheet(ru) Q-36-123,124 Kimasozero. Scale: 1 : 100,000. State of the area in 1988. Edition 1994
  2. ^ Nyuk (Nyukozero, Nokko, Nyukka, Sok, Nyuko) : [ rus .] / textual.ru // State Water Register : [ arch . October 15, 2013] / Ministry of Natural Resources of Russia . - 2009. - March 29., Nyuk // Great Soviet Encyclopedia  : [in 30 volumes]  / ch. ed. A. M. Prokhorov . - 3rd ed. - M .  : Soviet Encyclopedia, 1969-1978.
  3. ^ Surface water resources of the USSR: Hydrological knowledge. T. 2. Karelia and the North-West / ed. E. N. Tarakanova. - L . : Gidrometeoizdat, 1965. - 700 p.
  4. ^
  5. ^ Nyuk // Great Soviet Encyclopedia  : [in 30 volumes]  / ch. ed. A. M. Prokhorov . - 3rd ed. - M .  : Soviet Encyclopedia, 1969-1978.

See also