Vorotan (river)
The Vorotan (Որոտան), Bargushad (Bərguşad), or Bazarchay (Bazarçay) is a river in Transcaucasia, a left tributary of the Aras River. It rises in the northern part of the South-Armenian province of Syunik, flows for 119 kilometres (74 mi) in a generally southeastern direction through Armenia and then for another 59 km (37 mi) through Azerbaijan's Qubadli and Zangilan districts, before emptying into the Aras at the border with Iran. The river flows mostly through mountainous country and in several places through deep canyons. The towns of Sisian and Kubatly lie along its course. During the Soviet period, three reservoirs with adjoining hydro-power stations creating the Vorotan Cascade were constructed along its course.
Vorotan | |
---|---|
Vorotan River in Sisian | |
Location | |
Countries | Armenia and Azerbaijan |
Physical characteristics | |
Length | 178 km (111 mi) |
Basin size | 5,650 km2 (2,180 sq mi) |
Discharge | |
• average | 21.5 m3/s (760 cu ft/s) |
In an attempt to increase the volume of water in Lake Sevan, a 21.6-kilometre (13.4 mi) tunnel has been constructed to take water from the Vorotan to the lake.[1] Begun during the time in the 1980s, work had to be stopped in 1988, when only 18 km (11 mi) had been completed, because of the armed conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The Armenian government finally completed the Vorotan tunnel in 2003, but water has not yet begun to flow into the lake.