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Umba River (Russia)

Umba (Russian: Умба)
River
Умба.jpg
Country Russia
Region Murmansk Oblast
Tributaries
 - left Vyala, Muna
 - right Kana
Source
 - location Lake Umbozero
 - elevation 149 m (489 ft)
Mouth
 - location Kandalaksha Gulf
 - elevation 0 m (0 ft)
Length 123 km (76 mi)
Basin 6,470 km2 (2,498 sq mi)
Discharge for Payalka, 3.7 km from the mouth
 - average 78.2 m3/s (2,762 cu ft/s)

Umba (Russian: Умба) is a 123 km long river on the Kola Peninsula, Murmansk Oblast, Russia.

The river's source is Lake Umbozero, 100 km northeast of Kandalaksha, located between the mountains of the Khibiny Massif and the Lovozero Tundras on the Kola Peninsula. From there it flows south, through a landscape of forests and hills. The river alternates between rapids and more quiet sections, and it flows through several lakes, the largest of which is Lake Kanozero.

The river exits from Lake Kanozero through two separate outlet channels, about five kilometers apart. The outlets are called the Kitsa and the Rodvinga, and the latter again divides forming yet another channel called the Nizma. The Kitsa and Rodvinga rejoins in Lake Ponchozero, below which the river is again called the Umba, and it is rejoined by the Nizma a few kilometers further downstream.

The river empties into the Kandalaksha Gulf at the urban-type settlement of Umba.

Its biggest tributary is the Vyala, which comes from Lake Vyalozero and joins the Umba 15 km before the outlet to the sea.

The Umba is known as a very good river for salmon fishing. Along with the Varzuga River, it was the first river on the Kola Peninsula to be made available for fishing tourism for foreign customers in the early 1990s, and infrastructure such as fishing lodges has been built along the river to accommodate this.

However, in recent years the number of salmon has dropped, as a result of poaching by the local population, caused by an unemployment rate of a staggering 90% in the municipal centre of Umba, and made worse by the fact that drivable roads go along the banks of the entire length of the river, making it easily accessible. [1]


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