geo.wikisort.org - River

Search / Calendar

The Gauja River (Estonian: Koiva jõgi, German: Livländische Aa) is a river in the Vidzeme region of Latvia.[1] It is the only large river of Latvia that begins and ends its flow in Latvia. Its length is 460 km, of which 1/5 or 93.5 km are in the Gauja National Park. In this part, the Gauja River flows through a spacious ancient Gauja valley, which is 1 to 2.5 km wide, and the maximum depth near Sigulda is 85 m. Thus, in essence, Gauja is the longest river of Latvia when we count only the parts of the river in the country's territory. Daugava has only 367 km in Latvia, while the whole river is over 1000 km. The sandstone rocks on the banks of the Gauja and its adjoining rivers started forming 370 to 300 million years ago during the Devonian period.

Gauja
Location
Countries
  • Latvia
  • Estonia
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationVidzeme highland
  elevation234 metres (768 ft)
MouthGulf of Riga
  location
Carnikava
  coordinates
57°09′33″N 24°15′59″E
Length452 kilometres (281 mi)
Basin size9,800 km2 (3,800 sq mi)
Discharge 
  average71 m3/s (2,500 cu ft/s)
Devonian sandstone cliffs: the Ērgļu cliffs along the Gauja river
Devonian sandstone cliffs: the Ērgļu cliffs along the Gauja river

History


Before 13th century the Gauja River used to serve as a trade route and border river between the Livonian and Latgalian lands. In some territories, they used to live mixed together. When Livonian languages were still present along the Gauja River and the sea, it used to be called Koivo (the Birch River; Livonian keùv or Estonian kõiv). In Latvian, the name of the Gauja River used to mean 'a great amount', 'a crowd', and was therefore called the 'big river'. The Livonians suffered greatly during the Great Northern War and following plague in the 18th century. That was the period when the remaining Livonians assimilated with the Latvians.


Today


A panoramic view to the river Gauja, at the border between Estonia and Latvia.
A panoramic view to the river Gauja, at the border between Estonia and Latvia.

The Gauja River tends to change its bed rapidly. Therefore, it has gained the reputation of being deceitful. The bed of the river is made of unconsolidated sand and gravel deposits that move along with the current. In some places, the bed is pebbly, thus forming impressive boulder rapids: Kazu, Raiskuma, Rakšu, and Ķūķu. The bottom of the river in Gauja National Park is 60 to 120 meters wide with a rapidly changing depth from 0.3 m to 7 m. The decline is 0.5 m/km. The speed of flow during low water is 0.2 to 0.4 m/s, and during the spring water period 2 to 3 m/s. Due to the fluctuations in water level, current speed, and special flow features, the Gauja River may be characterized as a rather non-homogeneous watercourse.

Usually the Gauja River freezes over in the mid-December, and the ice starts moving in late March. During warm winters, the river does not freeze over. Much underground water flows into the Gauja River. It therefore has a lower water temperature than other large rivers in Latvia.


See also



References


  1. "Gauja River | Tūrisma informācija Gaujas nacionālajā parkā". Gnp.lv. Archived from the original on 2016-03-21. Retrieved 2016-03-27.

На других языках


[de] Gauja

Die Gauja (deutscher Name Livländische Aa; estnisch: Koiva jõgi) ist ein Fluss in der historischen Landschaft Livland (lettisch: Vidzeme) in Lettland.
- [en] Gauja

[es] Río Gauja

El río Gauja (en estonio Koiva jõgi; livonio, Koiva; alemán, Livländische Aa) es uno de los más largos ríos de Letonia, con una longitud de 452 km y una cuenca hidrográfica de 8.900 km². Su fuente está en las colinas al sureste de Cēsis. Primero fluye hacia el este y el norte y forma frontera con Estonia durante unos veinte kilómetros. Al sur de Valga y Valka, gira al oeste hacia Valmiera, continuando hacia el suroeste cerca de Cēsis y Sigulda. El Gauja fluye al mar Báltico al noreste de Riga.

[it] Gauja

Il fiume Gauja (anticamente: Aa di Livonia; in estone: Koiva jõgi; in livone: Koiva; in tedesco: Livländische Aa) è uno dei più importanti fiumi della Lettonia con una lunghezza di 452 km. Ciò lo rende il fiume che scorre per la più lunga distanza nel territorio lettone, in quanto il Daugava, complessivamente lungo 1005 km, scorre in Lettonia per 352 km.[1]

[ru] Гауя

Га́уя (латыш. Gauja, эст. Koiva; устар. Лифляндская Аа, Трейдер-Аа[1][2]) — река в Латвии, частично является границей с Эстонией. Длина — 452 км, площадь бассейна — 8900 км²[3]. Гауя имеет самое длинное русло в пределах Латвии.



Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.

Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.

2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии