'Chusovaya River' (), a
river in
Perm Krai,
Sverdlovsk Oblast and
Chelyabinsk Oblast in
Russia, a
tributary of the
Kama River. Its length is 592
km. The
area of the
basin is 23,000 km². It flows into the Chusovoy
Cove of the
Kamsky Reservoir. The
floods usually take place from mid-April to mid-June. The Chusovaya River freezes up between late October-early December and stays under the ice until mid-April–first weeks of May. Its principal tributaries are
Mezhevaya Utka,
Serebryanka,
Koyva,
Usva,
Revda, and
Lysva. The Chusovaya River is widely used for water supply: its water is moved from the
Volchikhinsky Reservoir (37 km²) to the
Verkhneisetsky Reservoir to supply
Yekaterinburg. Its tributaries have fifteen small
reservoirs, as well. Main ports are
Perm and
Chusovoy.
The Chusovaya River is famous for its huge shore rocks. One of those rocks (small-sized one) is depicted on photo. Some rocks were very dangerous for boats during spring tide and were called ''Boytsy'' (бойцы'', lit. fighters). Most of them have their own names.
References
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