Syamzhena Сямжена (Russian) |
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Country | Russia |
Basin features | |
River mouth |
Kubena 128 m (420 ft) |
Basin size | 1,930 square kilometres (750 sq mi) |
Physical characteristics | |
Length | 117 km (73 mi) |
Coordinates: 60°02′16″N 40°45′25″E / 60.03778°N 40.75694°E
The Syamzhena (Russian: Сямжена) is a river in Sokolsky and Syamzhensky Districts of Vologda Oblast in Russia. It is a left tributary of the Kubena River. It is 117 kilometres (73 mi) long, and the area of its basin 1,930 square kilometres (750 sq mi). Its main tributaries are the Shichenga (right) and the Bolshoy Pungul (right). The center of Syamzhensky District, the selo of Syamzha, is located on both banks of the Syamzhena.
The name of the Syamzhena originates from Finnic languages and means "moss water" or "water from the swamp". The names of Syamzhensky District and its center, the selo of Syamzha (which was established in 1935 by merging a number of villages at the crossing of the Syamzhena by the highway connecting Vologda and Arkhangelsk) are derived from the Syamzhena.
The river basin of the Syamzhena comprises the south and the center of Syamzhensky District, as well as the northeastern part of Sokolsky District and minor areas in the west of Totemsky District. A relatively big lake, Lake Shichengskoye, drains into the Shichenga River and thus belongs to the river basin of the Syamzhena.