Lena River

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Lena River
Lena watershed
Lena watershed
Origin Baikal Mountains
Mouth Arctic Ocean
Basin countries Russia
Length 4,400 km (2,734 mi)
Source elevation 1,640 m (5,381 ft)
Avg. discharge 17,000 m³/s (600,440 ft³/s)
Basin area 2,500,000 km² (965,250 mi²)

The Lena (Russian: Ле́на) in Siberia is the 10th longest river in the world and has the 9th largest watershed. Rising at the height of 1640 m at its source in the Baikal Mountains south of the Central Siberian Plateau, 20 km west of Lake Baikal, the Lena flows northeast, being joined by the Kirenga River and the Vitim River. From Yakutsk it enters the lowlands, joined by the Olyokma River and flows north until joined by its right-hand affluent the Aldan River. The Verkhoyansk Range deflects it to the north-west; then, after receiving its most important left-hand tributary, the Viljuj River, it makes its way nearly due north to the Laptev Sea, a division of the Arctic Ocean, emptying south-west of the New Siberian Islands by a delta 10,800 km² in area, and traversed by seven principal branches, the most important being Bylov, farthest east.

At the mouth of the Lena River is a delta that is about 400 km (250 miles) wide. The delta is frozen tundra for about 7 months of the year, but in May transforms the region into a lush wetland for the next few months. Part of the area is protected as part of the Lena Delta Wildlife Reserve.

The total length of the river is estimated at 4,400 km (2,800 m.). The area of the Lena river basin is calculated at 2,490,000 km². Gold is washed out of the sands of the Vitim and the Olyokma, and mammoth tusks have been dug out of the delta. The Lena has the unusual distinction of appearing to be the longest river in the world when viewed on a map using a Mercator projection, the most common method of displaying the spherical earth on a flat surface, due to that projection's tendency to exaggerate the size of areas near the poles (the Amazon and Nile both cross the equator.)

The majority of researchers believe that the name of the river Lena has been acquired from the original Even-Evenk name Elyu-Ene, which means "the Large River".

It has been suggested that Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov is believed to have named his alias after the river Lena — Lenin — after the events leading to the Lena Goldfields Massacre of workers by the tsarist army in April of 1912, although the adoption of his pseudonym predates this event. Another suggestion is that the adoption comes about as a result of a personal feud with Georgi Plekhanov who called himself 'Volgin' after the Volga river. The adoption of the Lena, which is much stronger and flows in the opposite direction to the Volga, would be an obvious choice for Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov but one that is refuted due to the fact that when the name was first used he had no disagreement with Plekhanov.

Lena river Delta by Landsat 2000
Enlarge
Lena river Delta by Landsat 2000

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This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.