Tumat ( Russian : Тумат ; Yakut : Тумат ) is a rural locality (a selo ), the only inhabited settlement and the administrative center of Tumatsky National Rural Okrug of Ust-Yansky District in the Sakha Republic , Russia , located 656 kilometers (408 mi) from Deputatsky , the administrative center of the district. Its population as of the 2010 Census was 533, of whom 286 were male and 247 female, down from 577 recorded during the 2002 Census .
4-589: The village is located by the right bank of the Chondon river, a little upstream from its confluence with the Nuchcha . There are numerous lakes near Tumat. Orotko , located to the northeast, is one of the largest. Two canine specimen preserved in permafrost have been found nearby Tumat: This Sakha Republic location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Chondon The Chondon (Russian: Чондон ; Yakut : Чондоон , Çondoon )
8-575: Is a river in Ust-Yansky District , Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia . It is 606 kilometres (377 mi) long, with a drainage basin of 18,900 square kilometres (7,300 sq mi). The Chondon mammoth was discovered in 2013 in the Chondon basin, at the feet of the Polousny Range , 66 km south-west of the village of Tumat . It had died at the age of 47 to 50 years. The river begins in
12-508: The Chondon basin, with a total area of 497 km (192 sq mi). The river freezes yearly between early October and early June. The main tributaries of the Chondon are the 170 km (110 mi) long Buor-Yuryakh , with its source in the Kyundyulyun , from the left, as well as the 142 km (88 mi) long Ygaanna (Ыгаанньа), the 104 km (65 mi) long Dodomo and the 243 km (151 mi) long Nuchcha (Нучча) from
16-816: The northern slopes of the Selennyakh Range at an elevation of 640 metres (2,100 ft). It flows roughly northwards west of the Yana River across the Yana-Indigirka Lowland meandering strongly among marshy areas and lakes. In its lower course it flows parallel to the Sellyakh in the east. Yarok Island lies across its mouth, in the Chondon Bay, by the Yana Bay of the Laptev Sea . There are over 6,600 lakes in
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