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List of rivers of Lithuania

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Šventoji River nearVepriai

Rivers of Lithuania are typical lowland rivers: they are slow, they makemeanders, and the valleys are wide. Because of abundant precipitation, the river net is dense: on the average 0.99 km of rivers flow in 1 km² of the territory.[1] However, the rivers are not evenly distributed. The highest density is in theSamogitian Highlands where it rains more often and in the northern Lithuania where the soil has clay and it does not allow the water to drain underground. The lowest density is in the southeastern Lithuania where the soil has a lot sand and the rainwater quickly ooze into the underground.

Almost 70% (some 49,600 km2) of the territory of Lithuania are drained by theNeman River and its tributaries. The other five river basins are small and located nears the borders:Mūša-Nemunėlis (Lielupe; 8,976 km²),Venta (5,140 km²),Daugava (1,857 km²), small rivers flowing into theBaltic Sea (2,523 km²) andPregolya (54 km²). During the winter all rivers freeze over. In the spring almost all rivers flood from melting snow and ice. However, usually only in the Neman River delta the water bursts out of the valley. Nowadays floods are controlled by dams and also due to drainage most rivers have lower water levels than they used to have. In the western Lithuania rivers tend to irregularly flooded during the fall because of excessive rains. In the eastern Lithuania rivers tend to discharge a constant amount of water because they are regulated by flow-through lakes and sandy soil, which quickly absorbs any excess rain or snow water.

During the Soviet times (1945-1990) rivers suffered much damage because ofdrainage. Many swamps were drained and now they cannot feed the rivers anymore. Other smaller rivers were straightened and turned into drainage canals.

Lithuania counts around 29 thousand watercourses longer than 0.25 km. The total length of all these watercourses would be around 65,000 km. The number of rivers and rivulets longer than 3 km has been calculated very precisely – 4,418. 758[2] rivers are longer than 10 km. Lithuania has 21 rivers longer than 100 km (62 mi):

Longest rivers

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#NameLength (km)MouthSourceMost important cities
TotalIn Lithuania
1Nemunas937475Curonian LagoonHrodna,Druskininkai,Alytus,Kaunas,Sovetsk
2Neris510235NemunasVilnius,Kernavė,Jonava,Kaunas
3Venta346161Baltic SeaVenta,Kuldīga,Ventspils
4Šešupė298209NemunasMarijampolė,Kudirkos Naumiestis,Krasnoznamensk
5Šventoji246246NerisAnykščiai,Kavarskas,Ukmergė
6Nevėžis209209NemunasPanevėžys,Kėdainiai
7Merkys203190NemunasBaltoji Vokė,Merkinė
8Minija202202Nemunas DeltaSalantai,Gargždai,Priekulė
9Nemunėlis199160LielupeBauska
10Dysna17358Daugava
11Jūra172172NemunasRietavas,Tauragė
12Mūša157140LielupeBauska
13Lėvuo145145Mūša
14Šušvė135135Nevėžis
15Dubysa131131NemunasŠiauliai,Ariogala
16Širvinta129129Šventoji RiverŠirvintos
17Švėtė11850LielupeŽagarė
18Šešuvis115115Jūra
19Kotra River10924Nemunas
20Mituva102102NemunasJurbarkas
21Bartuva10155Baltic SeaSkuodas

TheVirvyčia (99.7 km) is just shy of the 100 km limit. The length of theŽeimena is an object of discussion; it could be up to 114 km.

Note: length in Lithuania also includes the length of rivers when they serve as borders with neighboring countries.

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^The Republic of Lithuania, Fishery Country Profile,Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, May 2005. Accessed June 9, 2006.
  2. ^Stasys Vaitiekūnas, Elena Valančienė, Lietuvos geografija (Geography of Lithuania), Alma littera, 2004, page 65.ISBN 9955-08-534-7

References

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