Sulak River

Sulak River
Country Dagestan, Russia
Basin features
Main source confluence of Avar Koysu and Andi Koysu
River mouth Caspian Sea
43°15′22″N 47°32′46″E / 43.256°N 47.546°E / 43.256; 47.546Coordinates: 43°15′22″N 47°32′46″E / 43.256°N 47.546°E / 43.256; 47.546
Basin size 15,200 km2 (5,900 sq mi)
Physical characteristics
Length 144 km (89 mi)
Discharge
  • Average rate:
    176 m3/s (6,200 cu ft/s)
source
mouth
Andi Koysu
Avar Koysu
Kara Koysu
Kazikumkh Koysu
Gergebil
Sulak River and its tributaries

The Sulak River (Russian: Сула́к, Сулахъ, Sulaq Chechen: Ġoysu[1]) drains most of the mountainous interior of Dagestan northeast into the Caspian Sea. It and most of its branches flow in canyons. Its main tributaries are, from north to southeast:

North of the Sulak basin is the Terek River basin and south of it is the Samur River basin. To the west is the crest of the Caucasus Mountains and to the east are many short rivers that flow down into the Caspian.

The Sulak proper starts at the junction of the Andi and Avar Koysus. It flows northeast into the broad Chirkey Reservoir. It then flows northwest through the narrow Miatli canyon and reservoir. It reaches flat country at Miatli and leaves the last mountains just south of Kizilyurt and enters the Terek-Sulak Lowland about 50 km (31 mi) from its source. Here there are meanders, former channels and canals. It flows northeast about 25 km (16 mi), turns east and reaches the Caspian after about 50 km (31 mi). Its delta is a smaller version of the Terek River delta about 66 km (41 mi) north. The lower Sulak supplies water to Makhachkala through a canal.

The Sulak Basin

In 1735 the Sulak river was stipulated as defining the boundary between the Russian and the Persian empires.

References

  1. Lepiev A.S., Lepiev İ.A., Türkçe-Çeçençe sözlük, Turkoyŋ-noxçiyŋ doşam, Ankara, 2003
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