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  2. Sakmara (river) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakmara_(river)

    The Sakmara (Russian: Сакмара; Bashkir: Һаҡмар, Haqmar) is a river in Russia that drains the southern tip of the Ural Mountains south into the river Ural. It is 798 kilometres (496 mi) long, and has a drainage basin of 30,200 square kilometres (11,700 sq mi). [ 1 ]

  3. Sakmara (rural locality) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakmara_(rural_locality)

    Sakmara (Russian: Сакмара; Bashkir: Һаҡмар, Haqmar) is a rural locality (a selo), the administrative center of Sakmarsky District in Orenburg Oblast, Russia. Located on the banks of the Sakmara river .

  4. Sakmara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakmara

    Sakmara may refer to: Sakmara (river), a river in the Ural Mountains, Russia; Sakmara (rural locality), a rural locality (a selo) in Sakmarsky District of Orenburg ...

  5. Sakmarsky District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakmarsky_District

    Sakmarsky District (Russian: Сакмарский райо́н) is an administrative [1] and municipal [5] district (), one of the thirty-five in Orenburg Oblast, Russia.It is located in the center of the oblast.

  6. Sakmarian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakmarian

    The Sakmarian Stage is named after the Sakmara River in the Ural Mountains, a tributary to the Ural River. The stage was introduced into scientific literature by Alexander Karpinsky in 1874. In Russian stratigraphy, it originally formed a substage of the Artinskian Stage.

  7. Shaytan-Tau Nature Reserve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaytan-Tau_Nature_Reserve

    The Shaytan-Tau Reserve is located in low valleys of the right bank of the Sakmara River and Kurasha River in Southern Urals. The Shaytantau ridge is in fact the most southern spur of the Urals. The terrain that is mostly forest-steppe. There are mountain streams, but by the mid-summer many of them are dry. [3]

  8. Bolshoy Ik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolshoy_Ik

    The Bolshoy Ik (Russian: Большой Ик, literally Greater Ik; Bashkir: Оло Ыйыҡ, Olo Iyıq) is a tributary of the Sakmara, which flows south from the southern end of the Ural Mountains in Bashkortostan and Orenburg Oblast, Russia. The Bolshoy Ik flows into the Sakmara at Saraktash. The river is generally fed by snowmelt. [1]

  9. Ural (river) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ural_(river)

    The tributaries, in order going upstream, are Kushum, Derkul, Chagan, Irtek, Utva, Ilek (major, left), Bolshaya Khobda, Kindel, Sakmara, Tanalyk (major, right), Salmys, Or (major, left) and Suunduk. [20] The Kushum and Bagyrlai are distributaries. [22] The entire length of the Ural River is considered the Europe-Asia boundary by most ...