Shandrin

The Shandrin (Russian: Шандрин) is a river in Yakutia (Sakha Republic), Russia. It has a length of 414 kilometres (257 mi) and a drainage basin of 7,570 square kilometres (2,920 sq mi).[1]

Shandrin
Шандрин
Shandrin is located in Sakha Republic
Shandrin
Mouth location in Yakutia, Russia
Location
Federal subjectYakutia, Russia
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationOrgolyor Lake
  coordinates69°50′17″N 149°14′45″E
  elevation146 m (479 ft)
MouthIndigirka
  location
Kolymskaya canal
  coordinates
70°55′22″N 151°03′24″E
  elevation
0.4 m (1 ft 4 in)
Length414 km (257 mi)
Basin size7,570 km2 (2,920 sq mi)
Basin features
ProgressionIndigirkaEast Siberian Sea

It is a left tributary of the Indigirka, flowing across the Allaikhovsky District. There are no inhabited places in its course. The river usually freezes in early October and stays frozen until late May or early June.

History

The Shandrin mammoth was discovered in 1974 near the river at the feet of a steep slope in the eastern side of the Kondakov Plateau by geologist B. S. Rusanov of the Yakutsk Institute of Geology.[2] The study of the carcass revealed that the mammoth had died between 41 and 32 thousand years ago. Its entrails were well-preserved and their contents made it possible to determine the composition of the paleoflora of the area at the time the animal had lived. The contents of the entrails included species of grasses, sedges, wormwood, larch, spruce, dwarf pine, birch, alder and willow.[3][4]

Course

The Shandrin river begins north of the Arctic Circle, in the Orgolyor (Орголёр) lake of the northern slopes of the Ulakhan-Sis. It heads roughly eastwards across a treeless hilly area by the Kondakov Plateau until the mouth of its Antykchan tributary, after which it bends northeastwards and flows across a partly swampy floodplain. There are many lakes in the lower part of the basin where the river meanders across a wide plain among lakes. Finally the Shandrin joins the Indigirka in the Kolymskaya channel of its delta near Lake Bolshoi Otor.[5]

Its main tributary is the 135 kilometres (84 mi) long Tilekh joining it from the right.[6][7]

See also

References

  1. "Река Шандрин in the State Water Register of Russia". textual.ru (in Russian).
  2. Shandrinsky mammoth
  3. Шандринский мамонт. Новосибирск: «Наука». Юдин Б.С. 1974.
  4. Томская А.И. (2000). Кормовая база мамонта в позднем плейстоцене Якутии. Якутск. pp. 12–13.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. "Топографска карта R-55_56 - Topographic USSR Chart (in Russian)". Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  6. Google Earth
  7. USSR 1:1,000,000 scale Operational Navigation Chart, Sheet C-7
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