Rivers of Romania
Source:
U.S. Library of Congress
Romania's lowest land is found on the northern edge
of the Dobruja region in the Danube Delta. The delta is a
triangular swampy area of marshes, floating reed islands,
and sandbanks, where the Danube ends its trek of almost
3,000 kilometers and divides into three frayed branches
before emptying into the Black Sea. The Danube Delta
provides a large part of the country's fish production, and
its reeds are used to manufacture cellulose. The region also
serves as a nature preserve for rare species of plant and
animal life including migratory birds.
After entering the country
in the southwest at Bazias, the Danube travels some 1,000
kilometers through or along Romanian territory, forming the
southern frontier with Yugoslavia and Bulgaria. Virtually
all of the country's rivers are tributaries of the Danube
River, either directly or indirectly, and by the time the
Danube's course ends in the Black Sea, they account for
nearly 40 percent of the total discharge. The most important
of these rivers are the Mures, the Olt, the Prut, the Siret,
the Ialomita, the Somes, and the Arge .
Romania's rivers primarily
flow east, west, and south from the central crown of the
Carpathians. They are fed by rainfall and melting snow,
which causes considerable
fluctuation in discharge and occasionally catastrophic
flooding. In the east, river waters are collected by the
Siret and the Prut. In the south, the rivers flow directly
into the Danube, and in the west, waters are collected by
the Tisza on Hungarian territory.
- Almaş
- Argeş
- Arieş
- Barcău
- Bārlad
- Bistra
- Bistriţa
- Buzău
- Crişul Alb
- Crişul Negru
- Crişul Repede
- Dāmboviţa
- Danube (Romanian:
Dunărea)* Ialomiţa
- Jijia
|
- Jiu
- Moldova
- Mostiştea
- Mureş
- Neajlov
- Olt
- Olteţ
- Poganis
- Prahova
- Prut
- Rāmna
- Siret
- Sitna
- Someş
- Someşul Cald
|
- Someşul Mare
- Someşul Mic
- Someşul Rece
- Suceava
- Tārnava Mare
- Tārnava Mică
- Teleorman
- Theiss (Romanian:
Tisa)
- Trotuş
- Tutova
- Vedea
- Vişeu
- Zăbala
- Zeletin
Wikipedia.org |
[Published at DVHH.org by Jody McKim Pharr]
Heritage
»
Society
»
Geography &
Natural Disasters
» Rivers of Romania
|