Sliven Valley

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Sliven Valley
А view of the valley from the Balkan Mountains
А view of the valley from the Balkan Mountains
Interactive map of Sliven Valley
Coordinates: 42°39′26″N 26°18′58″E / 42.65722°N 26.31611°E / 42.65722; 26.31611
LocationBulgaria
Area
  Total830 km2 (320 sq mi)
Dimensions
  Length70 km (43 mi)
  Width15 km (9.3 mi)

Sliven Valley (Bulgarian: Сливенска котловина) is situated in eastern central Bulgaria. It is named after the city of Sliven, its main settlement. It is the ninth of the eleven Sub-Balkan valleys in direction west–east and is the second largest of them, after the Sofia Valley.

The Balkan Mountains seen from a marshy area in the Sliven Valley

The valley is enclosed between the Balkan Mountains to the north and the Sredna Gora mountain range and the heights of Bakadzhitsite and Hisar to the south. The Shivachevski Ridge separates it from the higher Tvarditsa Valley to the west, while the Terzijski Ridge of the Balkan Mountains and the Hisar Heights form the divide with the Karnobat Valley to the northeast.[1] The northern slopes are part of Sinite Kamani Nature Park.

It spans a territory of 830 km2 and is thus the second largest of the Sub-Balkan valley by area. It reaches a length of 70 km in direction west–east and is 15 km at its widest. The average altitude is 150 m and is inclined in southern direction. It is divided in two parts by the heights of Hamambair, the higher Sliven field to the west and the partially marshy Straldzha field to the east.[1]

Along its northern slopes there are many alluvial fans formed by the rivers streaming from the Balkan Mountains. The valley is a one-sided graben filled with Tertiary and Quaternary sediments with depth of 150 m to 500 m. There are mineral springs at Slivenski Mineralni Bani. The soils are mostly alluvial and cinnamon. The Sliven Valley is in the transitional zone between the temperate continental climatic zone and the continental Mediterranean zone, with typical for the region northern winds.[1]

The valley is drained by the river Tundzha of the Aegean Sea basin and several of its left tributaries, including the Asenovska reka, the Sotirska reka and the Mochuritsa.[1]

Settlements

The City of Hall of Sliven

Administratively, the Sliven Valley falls in Burgas, Sliven and Yambol Provinces. There are one city, one town and 42 villages. In Sliven Province are located the city of Sliven and the villages of Blatets, Gavrailovo, Gergevets, Glufishevo, Glushnik, Gorno Aleksandrovo, Dragodanovo, Zhelyu Voyvoda, Zlati Voyvoda, Kaloyanovo, Kamen, Kovachite, Krushare, Malko Chochoveni, Mechkarevo, Panaretovtsi, Samoilovo, Selimovo, Sotirya, Strupets, Topolchane, Trapoklovo, Chintulovo and Chokoba. All of them are part of Sliven Municipality. Sliven is the eighth largest city in Bulgaria.

In Yambol Province there are one town and 14 villages. In Straldzha Municipality are located the town of Straldzha and the villages of Atolovo, Vodenichane, Dzhinot, Zimnitsa, Lozenets, Malenovo, Palauzovo and Charda. In Tundzha Municipality are situated Veselinovo, Drazhevo, Zavoy, Kabile, Mogila and Hadzhidimitrovo.

In Burgas Province, Karnobat Municipality are located four villages Venets, Devetak, Devetintsi and Tserkovski.

Transportation and economy

Citations

Sources

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