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Inhulets Інгулець | |
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The boat station (built in 1957) at the historical confluence with theSaksahan river inKryvyi Rih | |
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Etymology | Turkiciyen-kul, "wide lake"[2] |
Location | |
Country | Ukraine |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | Kirovohrad Oblast,Ukraine |
Mouth | |
• location | Dnieper |
• coordinates | 46°41′03″N32°48′45″E / 46.6842°N 32.8125°E /46.6842; 32.8125 |
Length | 557 km (346 mi)[1] |
Basin size | 14,460 km2 (5,580 sq mi)[1] |
Basin features | |
Progression | Dnieper→Dnieper–Bug estuary→Black Sea |
TheInhulets (Ukrainian:Інгулець) orIngulets (Russian:Ингуле́ц) is a river, a righttributary of theDnieper, that flows throughUkraine. It has a length of 557 kilometres (346 mi) and adrainage basin of 14,460 square kilometres (5,580 sq mi).[1]
The Inhulets has its source in theDnieper Upland in a ravine (balka) to the west of Topylo village,[1] in theKropyvnytskyi Raion ofKirovohrad Oblast, about 30 kilometres (19 mi) from the Dnieper river, to which it initially flows parallel. The Inhulets turns south, where it flows throughKryvbas Iron Ore Basin, and theKherson andMykolaiv Oblasts, before finally flowing into the Dnieper about 30 kilometres (19 mi) east of the city ofKherson. The river flows through southern spurs of the Dnieper Uplands and then across theBlack Sea Lowland.[1] The upper portion of the Inhulets basin is in theforest steppe zone, the lower part within thePontic steppe.[1]
The river is dammed at the village ofIskrivka inKirovohrad Oblast and about 30 kilometres (19 mi) further downstream at the city ofKryvyi Rih inDnipropetrovsk Oblast to form reservoirs. The lower one, theKarachunivske Reservoir [uk], provides the water supply for Kryvyi Rih and for irrigation. On 14 September 2022 the Ukrainian government said a Russian missile attack had broken the dam, causing flooding.[3]
The course of the river near Kryvyi Rih has created many small islands, which have a rich vegetation. However, by 2017 the vegetation was impaired by the high level of contamination of the river, due to the nearby iron ore mining industry.[4]
Urban localities located on the river includeOleksandriia,Kryvyi Rih,Shyroke,Inhulets (former city merged with Kryvyi Rih), andSnihurivka.
TheM14 highway crosses the river over theDaryivka Bridge, connecting the cities of Kherson andBeryslav.[5]
FC Inhulets Petrove is a professional football team in Ukraine that is named after the river.[citation needed]
DuringKherson counteroffensive of the2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine between 1 September and 11 October, Ukraine regained the northern third of the rectangle between the Inhulets and Dnieper and continued to push slowly south toward Kherson and thedam at Nova Kakhovka.[6]
The main goal of the second stage of works the riverbed purification in the Inhulets River (in 2017) was the removal of a large amount of contaminated sediment. Contaminated sediment was formed as a result of activity the ore-dressing factories and the metallurgical plant, which are located higher on the river flow