photo: Creative Commons
Dzerzhinsky Garden for the city district is situated on both banks of the Kama River.
photo: Creative Commons / D V S
Yegoshikha River
photo: Creative Commons
Lower Kama Reservoir, Nizhnekamsk Reservoir
photo: Creative Commons / D V S
Perm (Russian: Пермь, IPA [pʲɛrmʲ]; Komi-Permyak: Перем, Perem; Komi: Перым, Perym) is a city and the administrative center of Perm Krai, Russia. It is situated on the banks of the Kama River, in the European part of Russia near the Ural Mountains. Perm's 2007 estimated population was 990,200 (2007 est.)[3], down from 1,001,653 recorded in the 2002 Census and 1,090,944 recorded in 1989 Census. As of the 2002 Census, the city was the thirteenth most populous in Russia. Perm is served by Bolshoye
photo: Creative Commons / InvictaHOG
Kama (Russian: река́ Ка́ма, Tatar: Çulman, Чулман) is a major river in Russia, the longest left tributary of the Volga and the largest one in discharge; in fact, it is larger than the Volga before junction.
photo: Creative Commons / Sergei Dorokhovsky
Volga near Nizhny Novgorod, 2010, The Volga has many tributaries, most importantly the Kama, the Oka, the Vetluga, and the Sura rivers.
photo: Creative Commons
Belaya River, Ağidel, Aghidhel River
photo: Creative Commons / Obersachse
Yuryuzan River
photo: Creative Commons / Untifler
Kama River's mouth
photo: Creative Commons / Chowells
Kama river near Perm (1910). The bridge still stands today, but another similar bridge has been built along side it. Both are painted white.
photo: Creative Commons / Hugo.arg
Vyatka River
photo: Creative Commons / Hardscarf
Chusovaya River in the Ural Mountains.
photo: Creative Commons
A railway bridge across Chusovaya near its confluence to the Kama Reservoir
photo: Creative Commons
Map illustrating the confluence of the Volga and the Kama (the territory whereabout Magna Hungaria lay).
photo: Creative Commons
Northern Dvina Quay in Arkhangelsk
photo: Creative Commons / Prokudin-Gorskii
Verkhoturye 1910 LOC prok 02108.
photo: Creative Commons
Many Orthodox shrines and monasteries are strewn along the banks of the Volga
photo: Creative Commons / Latitude
Perm
photo: Creative Commons
View of Mulyanka River from the beginning of Parkovy Avenue
photo: Creative Commons
View of Parkovy Avenue from the bank of Mulyanka River
photo: Creative Commons
A suspension bridge across the Volga in Tver (built 1897)
photo: Creative Commons
Urban Bluefields street scene
photo: Creative Commons
Bluefields rural waterfront homes
photo: Creative Commons / ShinePhantom
The Zhiguli Hydroelectric Station or Zhigulyovskaya Hydroelectric Station (Russian: Жигулёвская ГЭС, Zhigulyovskaya GES), formerly known as Kuybyshev Hydroelectric Station (Kuybyshev GES) is a large dam and hydroelectric station on the Volga River, located near Zhigulyovsk and Tolyatti in Samara Oblast of Russia. It is the sixth stage of the Volga-Kama Cascade of dams, and the second of them by installed power.
photo: Creative Commons
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