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The Vit ( Bulgarian : Вит ; Latin : Utus ) is a river in northern Bulgaria , a right tributary of the Danube . Its length including the main stem Beli (White) Vit is 189 km, while the river proper, formed by the confluence of the Beli and Cherni (Black) Vit is 153 km. Vit Ice Piedmont in Antarctica is named after the river. The fish species Vit sculpin of the genus Cottus is endemic to the Vit.

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16-864: Vit may refer to: Vit (river) , a river in Bulgaria Vit Ice Piedmont (Vit Glacier), a glacier in Antarctica de Vit , European surname Vít , Czech given name vit. , short for vitamin Vit (album) , 2017 album by Christer Fredriksen "Vit" (song) , a 1994 song by The Future Sound of London See also [ edit ] VIT (disambiguation) Vitt (disambiguation) Vits (disambiguation) Vid (disambiguation) Veit (disambiguation) All pages with titles beginning with Vit All pages with titles containing Vit Saint-Vit (disambiguation) Topics referred to by

32-657: A steep forested valley. The other stem, the 27 km long Cherni Vit, springs at an altitude of 1,980 m about 800 m northwest of the summit of Baba (2,070 m) in the Zlatitsa–Teteven section of the Balkan Mountains and flows north in a deep forested valley. Both upper reaches of the Vit fall within the Central Balkan National Park . The river proper forms by the confluence of

48-1302: Is a species endemic to the upper reaches of the river and specifically Beli Vit. Twenty five of the recorded fish species are of conservation importance. The river flows in Lovech and Pleven Provinces . There are 19 settlement along its course, including 16 villages and three towns. In Lovech province are Teteven (town) and Glozhene in Teteven Municipality , and Toros, Dermantsi and Aglen in Lukovit Municipality . In Pleven Province are located Sadovets, Krushovitsa and Gradina in Dolni Dabnik Municipality , Tarnene , Disevitsa , Yasen and Opanets in Pleven Municipality , Dolna Mitropoliya (town), Bivolare , Bozhuritsa , Riben and Komarevo in Dolna Mitropoliya Municipality , and Kreta and Gulyantsi (town) in Gulyantsi Municipality . Its waters, especially in

64-599: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Vit (river) The main stem the Beli Vit is 36 km long and takes its source at an altitude of 1,595 m on the western foothills of the summit of Yumruka (1,819 m) at the boundary between the Zlatitsa–Teteven and the Troyan sections of the Balkan Mountains and flows in general direction northwest in

80-538: The Ogosta , and the Lom . Among the major cities of the region are Varna , Rousse , Pleven , Dobrich , Shumen , Veliko Tarnovo , Vratsa , Vidin , Montana , Silistra , Targovishte , Razgrad , Svishtov and Lom . The Danubian Plain contains a wide variety of minerals, such as: 43°15′N 25°20′E  /  43.250°N 25.333°E  / 43.250; 25.333 This Bulgaria location article

96-616: The Beli Vit (right branch) and the Cherni Vit (left branch) at an altitude of 367 m in the town of Teteven . It flows north in a deep forested valley between the Vasilyovska Mountain to the east and the Lisets Mountain to the west, both part of the fore-Balkan chain that runs parallel to and north of the Balkan Mountains. After the village of Glozhene part of its waters penetrate into karst fissures and feed

112-1093: The Cherni Vit is 3.2 m /s. A total of 45 fish species have been recorded from the Vit, of them 42 are autochthonous. A 2007–2008 study identified 35 species and estimated that nine of the ten that were not caught during the surveys were likely occurring it the river. The predominating family by number of species is Cyprinidae . The fish found in the Vit include river trout , northern pike , common roach , European chub , ide , asp , common rudd , common bleak , riffle minnow , white bream , common bream , white-eye bream , blue bream , vimba bream , common nase , European bitterling , gudgeon , Kessler's gudgeon , Danube whitefin gudgeon , Danubian longbarbel gudgeon , common barbel , Romanian barbel , Prussian carp , crucian carp , common carp , stone loach , European weatherfish , spined loach , Balkan loach , Balkan golden loach , Bulgarian golden loach , wels catfish , European perch , zander , Eurasian ruffe , striped ruffe , Balon's ruffe , Danube streber , zingel , monkey goby and European bullhead . The Vit sculpin

128-796: The Lower Danubian Plain), but its elevation is slightly higher and the relief is more hilly and rolling, featuring numerous plateaux and river valleys . The climate is markedly temperate continental with a weak Black Sea influence in the east. Precipitation is on average 450–650 mm a year. Important rivers include the Danube, the Iskar , the Yantra , the Osam , the Vit , the Rusenski Lom ,

144-477: The Vit enters the Danubian Plain in a wide and asymmetrical valley, with steeper right slopes. It flows into the Danube at an altitude of 22 m some 1.6 km northwest of the village of Dolni Vit . From the village of Gradina to the mouth, the river bed is corrected with water protection dikes. The Vit drainage basin covers a territory of 3,225 km or 0.4% of the Danube's total and borders

160-841: The basins of the Iskar to the west and northwest and the Osam to the east, both of the Danube drainage, as well as the Maritsa basin to the south of the Balkan Mountain's main water divide. Its main tributaries are the Kalnik (41 km), the Kamenitsa (49 km), the Chernyalka (27 km) and the Tuchenitsa (35 km), all of them right. The Vit has a mixed feed of snow, rain and karst waters. The importance of

176-483: The largest karst spring in Bulgaria Glava Panega, which is the source of the river Zlatna Panega of the neighbouring Iskar drainage further west. The Vit then turns northeast and follows that general direction until its mouth. Between the villages of Toros and Dermantsi its valley widens and until the village of Sadovets canyon-like ravines alternate with valley expansions. Downstream of Sadovets

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192-476: The lower course in the Danubian Plain, are utilized for irrigation. Part of them are also diverted for industrial needs, as well as limited electricity generation at the small Lisets Hydro Power Plant. Along the entire length of the river valley apart from the final three kilometers at the mouth and the uppermost section of the Beli Vit pass roads of the national network, including a 33 km stretch of

208-610: The northern part of Bulgaria , situated north of the Balkan Mountains and south of the Danube . Its western border is the Timok River , and to the east it borders the Black Sea . The plain has an area of 31,523 square kilometres (12,171 sq mi). It is about 500 kilometres (310 mi) long and 20 to 120 kilometres (12 to 75 mi) wide. The Danubian Plain is contiguous with the Wallachian Plain (forming

224-403: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Vit . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vit&oldid=1124609936 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

240-657: The snow feed increases from the north to the south, from the Danubian Plain, via the fore-Balkan to the Balkans Mountains. Underground water feed are prevalent in the fore-Balkan due to the abundance of karst springs. High water is in April–June due to the snowmelt in the mountains, leading at times to floods; low water is in August–November. The average annual discharge is 5.3 m /s at Teteven, 14.3 m /s at Sadovets and 14 m /s at Yasen . The discharge of

256-542: The third class III-358 road between the confluence with the Debelshtitsa and Glozhene, and the entire 61 km length of the third class III-305 road and 27 km length of the third class III-118 road. Near the village of Toros the river is crossed by the Hemus motorway . Danubian Plain (Bulgaria) The Danubian Plain ( Bulgarian : Дунавска равнина , romanized :  Dunavska ravnina ) constitutes

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