Yablon | |
Other Name: | Яблон |
Pushpin Map: | Russia Chukotka Autonomous Okrug |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Mouth location in Chukotka, Russia |
Source1 Location: | Oloy Range Kolyma Mountains |
Source1 Elevation: | ca 12000NaN0 |
Mouth: | Anadyr |
Mouth Coordinates: | 65.3848°N 168.5485°W |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | Russia |
Subdivision Type2: | Federal subject |
Subdivision Name2: | Chukotka Autonomous Okrug |
Length: | 2420NaN0 |
Basin Size: | 9280km2 |
The Yablon (ru|Яблон) is a river in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russia. It has a length of 242km (150miles) and a drainage basin of 9280km2.
The Yablon is a right tributary of the Anadyr. The river and its tributaries are frozen for between eight and nine months every year.[1] The nearest village is Markovo, located to the east of the mouth.[2]
The formerly unexplored Yablon river, was surveyed in March 1870 by geographer and ethnologist Baron Gerhard von Maydell (1835–1894) during his pioneering research of East Siberia.[3]
The source of the Yablon is in the northeastern slopes of 1787m (5,863feet) high Mount Snezhnaya, in the eastern section of the Oloy Range, Kolyma Mountains. The Yablon flows first northeastwards, then makes a wide bend roughly midway through its course and flows southeastwards splitting into multiple smaller channels. Finally it joins the right bank of the Anadyr a little upstream from the mouth of the Yeropol. The Yablon meets the Anadyr 759km (472miles) from its mouth.[4]
The river basin is in a desolate, mountainous area of Chukotka where there are no inhabited places. The main tributaries of the Yablon are the 78km (48miles) long Krestovaya and 54km (34miles) long Salamikha from the left, and the 88km (55miles) long Golaya from the right.