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Kuydusun

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Kuydusun ( Russian : Куйдусун ; Yakut : Куйдуһун , Kuyduhun ) is a rural locality (a selo ) in Borogonsky 2-y Rural Okrug of Oymyakonsky District in the Sakha Republic , Russia , located 567 kilometers (352 mi) from Ust-Nera , the administrative center of the district, and 3 kilometers (1.9 mi) from Tomtor , the administrative center of the rural okrug . Its population as of the 2002 Census was 139.

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4-580: The village is located on the left bank of the Kuydusun , a tributary of the Indigirka . There is a bridge over the river east of the village. This Sakha Republic location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Kuydusun (river) The Kuydusun ( Russian : Куйдусун ; Yakut : Куйдуһун , Kuyduhun ) is a river in Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia . It

8-634: Is a left tributary of the Indigirka. It has its sources in the northeastern slopes of the Suntar-Khayata , at the border with Khabarovsk Krai . The river flows roughly in a northern direction across the mountainous territory, then turns northeastwards into a plain of the Yana-Oymyakon Highlands filled with lakes where it meanders and divides into multiple channels. In its final stretch the river turns again northwards. Finally

12-597: Is one of the major tributaries of the Indigirka . The river has a length of 247 kilometres (153 mi) and a drainage basin area of 20,400 square kilometres (7,900 sq mi). The river flows south of the Arctic Circle , across desolate tundra territories of the Oymyakonsky District marked by permafrost . Kuydusun village is located by the banks of the lower course of the river and Tomtor further north, near its mouth. The Kuydusun

16-529: The Kuydusun joins the left bank of the Indigirka 1,674 km (1,040 mi) from its mouth. The main tributaries of the Kuydusun are the 94 km (58 mi) long Mannyk-Yuryakh on the right, as well as the 68 km (42 mi) long Buor-Yuryakh on the left. The river is frozen between early October and the end of May. There are more than 20,000 lakes in its basin with a total area of 81 km (31 sq mi), as well as 60 ice fields , with

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