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The Kakhovka Dam raised the natural level of the Dnieper River by 16 m (52 ft), [17] flooding the Great Meadow and creating the Kakhovka Reservoir. This was the second-largest reservoir in Ukraine by area (2,155 km 2 [832 sq mi]) and the largest by water volume (18.19 km 3 [4.36 cu mi]). [17] [18]
The Kakhovka Dam was a dam on the Dnieper River ... On 6 June 2023, an explosion caused significant damage to the central section of the 3.2 kilometres (2.0 mi) wide ...
Satellite images have revealed the damage from the massive collapse of a major dam and hydroelectric power plant in southern Ukraine.. The critical soviet-era Nova Kakhovka dam, which lies along ...
Significant damage has been found on the Nova Kakhovka dam following Russia's withdrawal from Kherson city. ... Watch: Satellite imagery shows new damage to bridges and dam near Kherson.
Satellite images reveal scale of destruction after Nova Kakhovka dam attack. Mapped: The damage caused by Ukraine’s devastated dam. 09:06, Maryam Zakir-Hussain. War-torn Ukraine is reeling from ...
A major dam in southern Ukraine collapsed Tuesday, flooding villages, endangering crops and threatening drinking water supplies as both sides in the war scrambled to evacuate residents and blamed ...
The breaching of the Kakhovka Dam on June 6 unleashed floodwaters across a large swath of land in southern Ukraine and in Russia-occupied parts of Ukraine, destroying farmland and cutting off ...
The Kakhovka Reservoir (Ukrainian: Каховське водосховище, romanized: Kakhovs'ke vodoskhovyshche) was a water reservoir on the Dnieper River in Ukraine. It was created in 1956 by construction of the Kakhovka Dam at Nova Kakhovka. It was one of several reservoirs in the Dnieper reservoir cascade.