Shangina

The Shangina (Шангина; Шангин, Şangin) is a river in Yakutia (Sakha Republic), Russia. It has a length of 344 km and a drainage basin of 5750 km2.

It is a right tributary of the Indigirka, flowing across the Middle Kolyma and Aby districts. The river usually freezes in early October and stays frozen until late May or early June.

History
In the summer of 1870 the Shangina was explored by geographer and ethnologist Baron Gerhard von Maydell (1835–1894) during his pioneering research of East Siberia. After he charted the Suor-Uyata and Ulakhan-Sis ranges of the East Siberian Lowlands, Maydell reached the Indigirka. Going about 100 km upriver he found out that the Ulakhan-Sis was separated from the Alazeya Plateau to the south by the roughly 50 km wide plain of the Shangina.

Course
The Shangina river begins in the northern part of the Alazeya Plateau. It heads first roughly eastwards then descends into in a wide floodplain where it heads northwestwards. There are many lakes in the middle and lower part of the basin. Finally the Shangina joins the right bank of the Indigirka 420 km from its mouth. There are no inhabited places in its course.

Its main tributary is the 74 km long Ogustakh on the right.