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| Kymi | |
|---|---|
Topographic map of the Kymi river | |
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| Nativeย name | |
| Location | |
| Country | Finland |
| Physicalย characteristics | |
| Source | ย |
| ย โขย location | Pรคijรคnne |
| ย โขย elevation | 78.2ย m (257ย ft) |
| Mouth | ย |
ย โขย location | Gulf of Finland (Baltic Sea) |
| Length | 204ย km (127ย mi) |
| Discharge | ย |
| ย โขย average | 283ย m3/s (10,000ย cuย ft/s) |
Kymijoki (Swedish: Kymmene รคlv) is a river in Finland. It begins at Lake Pรคijรคnne, flows through the provinces of Pรคijรคnne Tavastia, Uusimaa and Kymenlaakso, and discharges into the Gulf of Finland. The river passes the towns of Heinola and Kouvola. The town of Kotka is located on the river delta. The length of the river is 204 kilometres (127ย mi), but its drainage basin of 37,107 square kilometres (14,327ย mi2) extends to almost 600 kilometres (370ย mi) inside the Tavastia, Central Finland, Savonia and Ostrobothnia. The furthest source of the river is Lake Pielavesi, its furthest point being some 570 kilometres (350ย mi) from the sea measured by flow route. The name of the river, itself, kymi, means "large river", in Old Finnish.[1][2][3]


Being one of the largest rivers in Southern Finland, Kymijoki is a major source of hydroelectricity. The towns of Kotka, Kuusankoski, Myllykoski and Inkeroinen along the river are major centres of the pulp and paper industry. Formerly the river was extensively used for timber rafting.
Kymijoki has five mouths. It divides into two main branches near the Kultaankoski rapids in Kotka, about 15 kilometres (9ย mi) inland of the Gulf of Finland. The eastern branch splits into the Korkeakoski and Koivukoski branches, the latter branch dividing again to form two mouths (Langinkoski and Huumanhaara). The Korkeakoski branch has only one river mouth.
The western branch divides into Ahvenkoski and Klรฅsarรถ branches, each with one mouth.
The westernmost Ahvenkoski branch of the river served as part of the border between Sweden and Russian Empire from 1743 to 1809, and between the Grand Duchy of Finland and the rest of Russia from 1809 to 1812. The parts of Finland east of the river were later called Old Finland. Old Finland was incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Finland in 1812.
Kymijoki is very swift: it takes three days for its waters to run from lake Pyhรคjรคrvi to sea. Its mean depth is 9 metres (30ย ft), and the deepest place is 29 metres (95ย ft).
Hydroelectric plants and rapids
editIn Kymijoki, there are 12 hydroelectric plants and several dams to regulate the water level. The first power plants were built is 1882. The canal and dam at Kalkkinen is used to regulate the water level of Lake Pรคijรคnne. The Hirvivuolle Dam regulates water flow between eastern and western branches. The Paaskoski Dam near Tammijรคrvi regulates the flow into the Klรฅsarรถ branch and the Strรถmfors Dam regulates the water level of the Strรถmfors industrial area.
Upper and middle reaches:
- Kalkkistenkoski rapids and regulating dam (Asikkala)
- Jyrรคngรถnkoski rapids (Heinola)
- Vuolenkoski, hydroelectric plant (Iitti)
- Mankala, hydroelectric plant (Iitti)
- Voikkaa, hydroelectric plant (Kouvola)
- Pessankoski rapids (Kouvola)
- Lappakoski rapids (Kouvola)
- Kuusankoski, hydroelectric plant (Kouvola)
- Keltti, hydroelectric plant (Kouvola)
- Myllykoski, hydroelectric plant (Kouvola)
- Anjalankoski (Ankkapurha), hydroelectric plant (Kouvola)
- Piirteenkoski rapids (Kouvola)
- Susikoski rapids (At the boundary of Kouvola and ja Kotka)
- Ahvionkoski rapids area, elevation 1,9 m (At the boundary of Kouvola and Kotka)
- Kultaankosket rapids, elevation 1,5 m (At the boundary of Kouvola and Kotka)
Western branch:
- Hirvivuolle, regulating dam, built in 1933 (Pyhtรครค)
- Hirvikoski rapids (Pyhtรครค)
- Paaskoski, regulating dam, built in 1933(At the boundary of Pyhtรครค and Loviisa)
- Klรฅsarรถ (Loosarinkoski), hydroelectric plant (Pyhtรครค)
- Ediskoski, hydroelectric plant (Pyhtรครค)
- Strรถmfors, regulating dam, built in 1965 (Loviisa)
- Ahvenkoski, hydroelectric plant (At the boundary of Pyhtรครค and Loviisa)
Eastern branch:
- Pernoonkosket rapids area, elevation 5 m (Kotka)
- Laajakoski rapids (cleared away, Kotka)
- Koivukoski, hydroelectric plant and regulating dam (Koivukoski branch, Kotka)
- Siikakoski rapids (Koivukoski branch, Kotka)
- Kokonkoski rapids (Koivukoski branch, Kotka)
- Langinkoski rapids (Langinkoski branch, Kotka)
- Hinttulankoski rapids (Huumanhaara branch, Kotka)
- Korkeakoski, hydroelectric plant (Korkeakoski branch, Kotka)
Gallery of Kymijoki locations
edit-
Kimola Canal
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Mankala Power Station along Kymijoki in the Iitti municipality
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Voikkaa Paper Mill in Kuusankoski
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UPM Kymi in Kouvola
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Kymi River in Kouvola
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Ankkapurha in Anjalankoski
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Korkeakoski casting pier on Kymijoki, Kotka
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Kymijoki at the Korkeakoski hydroelectric power plant in Kotka
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Langinkoski is a rapid through which a branch of Kymijoki flows into the Gulf of Finland
See also
edit- Kymiring
- Kymi, former municipality of Finland
- Langinkoski, rapids on the river
- Treaty of ร bo
References
edit- ^ "Yleistietoa Kymijoesta". Ymparisto. 8 December 2017. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
- ^ Hoikkala, Ulla (9 February 2020). "Kymijoki - sykkivรค valtasuoni". Kymisun. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
- ^ Sairo, Laila (25 June 2017). "Kymijoki oli kahden vallan vรคlissรค 70 vuoden ajan โ rantojen asukkaiden vรคlille muodostui 11 pรคivรคn aikaero". Kouvolan Sanomat. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
External links
edit
Media related to Kymi River at Wikimedia Commons
60ยฐ29โฒ25.81โณN 026ยฐ27โฒ08.82โณE๏ปฟ / ๏ปฟ60.4905028ยฐN 26.4524500ยฐE
