Pusta River (South Morava)

The Pusta River (Serbian: Пуста река / Pusta reka, lit. 'Desolate River') is a river in southern Serbia, a 71-km long left tributary to the South Morava.[1] It also gives the name to the Pusta Reka region in its valley.

Pusta River
Native nameПуста река  (Serbian)
Location
Country Serbia
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationRadan mountain, near Prolom Banja, Serbia
Mouth 
  location
South Morava, at Pukovac, Serbia
  coordinates
43°12′13″N 21°50′39″E
Length71 km (44 mi)[1]
Basin size590 km2 (230 sq mi)[2]
Basin features
ProgressionSouth MoravaGreat MoravaDanubeBlack Sea

River

The river originates northeast of Prolom Banja, near the Sokolovica village, on the northern tip of the Radan mountain, as the Golema River ("Big River"). It flows eastward, between the mountains of Radan (to the south) and Pasjača (to the north), next to the villages of Dobra Voda, Magaš, Brestovac and Velika Crkvica, before it reaches the regional center of Bojnik, after which, for the rest of the course of 46 km, it is known as the Pusta River. From Bojnik, the river bends north, next to the villages of Dragovac, Pridvorica, Đinđuša, Lapotince, Kacabać, Kosančić, Donje Brijanje, Međa and Draškovac, before it empties into the South Morava, near the village of Pukovac.

The Pusta River drains an area of 590 km²,[2] belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin, and is not navigable.

Region

The region of Pusta Reka mostly correspondence with the river's watershed. It is located between the Pasjača mountain and lower Toplica region (on the north), the Southern Pomoravlje (Field of Leskovac, on the east), the Jablanica region (on the south) and the Radan mountain (on the west).

The region is an agricultural area, almost without any industry, except for some smaller facilities in regional center, Bojnik. As if it confirms the name of the river (Pusta reka in Serbian means Desolate river), the region is economically undeveloped and poor, sparsely populated and depopulating (18,801 inhabitants in 1971 or 71 per km²; 13,118 in 2002 or 50 per km²).

References

  1. Statistical Yearbook of the Republic of Serbia 2017 (PDF) (in Serbian and English). Belgrade: Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. October 2017. p. 16. ISSN 0354-4206. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  2. Velika Morava River Basin, ICPDR, November 2009, p. 2
  • Mala Prosvetina Enciklopedija, Third edition (1985); Prosveta; ISBN 86-07-00001-2
  • Jovan Đ. Marković (1990): Enciklopedijski geografski leksikon Jugoslavije; Svjetlost-Sarajevo; ISBN 86-01-02651-6
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