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Dnieper River, river of Europe, the fourth longest after the Volga, Danube, and Ural. It is 1,367 miles (2,200 km) in length and drains an area of about 195,000 square miles (505,000 square km).
Eastern Europe's Dnipro River begins in Russia, flows through a significant portion of Belarus, and then bisects Ukraine on its way to the Black Sea. It is the longest river in Ukraine and the fourth longest on the continent.
The Dnipro River flows south through the center of Ukraine and bisects its natural zones—forest, forest-steppe, and steppe—interconnecting them and connecting them with the Black Sea. Of the long-settled principal areas of Ukraine, only Galicia, western Volhynia, and Transcarpathia lie beyond the basin of the Dnipro.
The Dnieper Basin lies within Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia. It borders on the Volga Basin in the northeast, on the Donets River Basin in the east, which belongs to the Don River Basin, and in the southeast on several small watersheds, the watercourses of which flow in flow into the Sea of Azov.
Dnipro's river port is located close to the area surrounding the central railway station, on the banks of the river. Rail. The city is a large railway junction, with many daily trains running to and from Eastern Europe and on domestic routes within Ukraine. Dnipro Railway station.
Carving an arc through Ukraine from its northern border to the Black Sea, through Kyiv, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, the Dnipro shapes the country’s geography and economy, its culture and its very...
A monument celebrating the founding of Kyiv on the Dnieper River is boarded up to protect it from potential Russian drone attacks in February 2023.
Dnieper River , Russian Dnepr ancient Borysthenes, River, east-central Europe. One of the longest rivers in Europe, it rises west of Moscow and flows south through Belarus and Ukraine, emptying into the Black Sea after a course of 1,367 mi (2,200 km).
Google News - Dnipro River - Latest
The Dnieper river is the 3rd largest river in Europe, and flows through three different countries: Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine [1]. It has a catchment area of more than half a million sq. kilometers as it flows for 2200 km towards the Black Sea (Fig 1), and joins with up to 32 000 tributaries, 90 of which are longer than 100 km [1] .