List of longest rivers of Romania
Geography of Romania |
Topography |
Hydrography |
Climate |
This is the list of longest rivers of Romania which entirely or partially flow through Romania. For the full list in alphabetical order, see List of rivers of Romania (alphabetic).
Longest rivers of Romania
The length and drainage area represent only the part of the river within Romania.[1]
River name | Length of the river (km) | Drainage area (km²) |
---|---|---|
Danube | 1,075 | 33,250[2] |
Mureș | 761 | 27,890 |
Prut | 742 | 10,990 |
Olt | 615 | 24,050 |
Siret | 559 | 42,890 |
Ialomița | 417 | 10,350 |
Someș | 376 | 15,740 |
Argeș | 350 | 12,550 |
Jiu | 339 | 10,080 |
Buzău | 302 | 5,264 |
Dâmbovița | 286 | 2,824 |
Bistrița | 283 | 7,039 |
Jijia | 275 | 5,757 |
Târnava | 246[3] | 6,253 |
Timiș | 244 | 5,673 |
Crișul Alb | 234 | 4,240 |
Vedea | 224 | 5,430 |
Târnava Mare | 223 | 3,666 |
Moldova | 213 | 4,299 |
Bârlad | 207 | 7,220 |
Târnava Mică | 196 | 2,071 |
Prahova | 193 | 3,738 |
Neajlov | 186 | 3,720 |
Olteț | 185 | 2,663 |
Someșul Mic | 178 | 3,773 |
Suceava | 173 | 2,298 |
Bega | 170 | 2,362 |
Arieș | 166 | 3,005 |
Trotuș | 162 | 4,456 |
References
- ↑ 2017 Romanian Statistical Yearbook, p. 13
- ↑ excluding tributaries which form first degree basins
- ↑ including source river Târnava Mare
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.