Musi River (Indonesia)
River in Sumatra, Indonesia
Musi RiverSungai Musi, Air Musi, Musi River, Palembang River, Sungai Palembang, Air Moesi, Kali Musi
Location of river mouth
Show map of Sumatra Musi River (Indonesia) (Indonesia)
Show map of Indonesia Country South Sumatra , IndonesiaSource • location Barisan Mountains , Kepahiang , Bengkulu • coordinates 3°24′21.528″S 102°35′53.1204″E / 3.40598000°S 102.598089000°E / -3.40598000; 102.598089000 • elevation 1,300 m (4,300 ft)
Mouth • location
Bangka Strait , South China Sea , South Sumatra • coordinates
2°19′51.7224″S 104°55′19.9668″E / 2.331034000°S 104.922213000°E / -2.331034000; 104.922213000 • elevation
0 m (0 ft) Length 759 km (472 mi)[ 1] Basin size 56,931 km2 (21,981 sq mi)[ 2]
59,942 km2 (23,144 sq mi)[ 3] Width • minimum 250 m (820 ft) (Palembang )[ 4] • average 540 m (1,770 ft) (Palembang )[ 4] • maximum 1,350 m (4,430 ft) (Palembang )[ 4] Depth • average 8 m (26 ft)(Palembang )[ 5] Discharge • location Musi Delta, Bangka Strait • average (Period: 1992–2016)3,054 m3 /s (107,900 cu ft/s)[ 2]
(Period: 2016–2020)3,066 m3 /s (108,300 cu ft/s)[ 6]
(Period: 1971–2000)3,211.2 m3 /s (113,400 cu ft/s)[ 1]
(Period: 2009–2013)3,961 m3 /s (139,900 cu ft/s)[ 7]
Discharge • location Palembang , (Confluence of Komering , 78 km upstream of mouth; Basin size: 53,500 km2 (20,700 sq mi) • average (Period: 1971–2000)2,953.7 m3 /s (104,310 cu ft/s)[ 1]
2,700 m3 /s (95,000 cu ft/s) • minimum 1,400 m3 /s (49,000 cu ft/s)[ 3] • maximum 4,200 m3 /s (150,000 cu ft/s)[ 3]
Discharge • location Sekayu (Basin size: 21,146.3 km2 (8,164.6 sq mi)) • average (Period: 1971–2000)1,205.4 m3 /s (42,570 cu ft/s)[ 1]
Discharge • location Tebing Tinggi (Basin size: 3,329.7 km2 (1,285.6 sq mi) • average (Period: 1971–2000)183.6 m3 /s (6,480 cu ft/s)[ 1]
Progression South China Sea River system Musi River Tributaries • left Kungku, Klingi, Lakitan, Rawas , Harileko, Sebalik • right Keru, Nibung, Lintang, Kikim, Semangus, Keruh, Langgaran, Medak, Simpang, Dua, Penukal, Lematang , Belida , Kramasan, Ogan , Komering
The Musi River (Indonesian : Sungai Musi ) is a river in Southern Sumatra , Indonesia .[ 8] It flows from south-west to north-east, from the Barisan Mountains range that form the backbone of Sumatra, in Kepahiang Regency , Bengkulu Province, to the Bangka Strait that forms an extension of the South China Sea . The Musi is about 750 kilometers long, and drains most of South Sumatra province. After flowing through Palembang , the provincial capital, it joins with several other rivers, including the Banyuasin River , to form a delta near the town of Sungsang. The river, dredged to a depth of about 8 meters,[ 5] is navigable by large ships as far as Palembang, which is the site of major port facilities used primarily for the export of petroleum , rubber and palm oil .
This river system, especially around the city of Palembang, was the heart of eponymous 7th to 13th century Srivijayan empire. The river mouth was the site of the SilkAir Flight 185 plane crash which killed all 104 passengers and crew on board in 1997.[ 9]
Geography
The river flows in the southern area of Sumatra , which has a predominantly tropical rainforest climate (designated as Af in the Köppen-Geiger climate classification).[ 10] The annual average temperature in the area is 24 °C. The warmest month is July, when the average temperature is around 26 °C, and the coldest is February, at 22 °C.[ 11] The average annual rainfall is 2579 mm. The wettest month is April, with an average of 344 mm rainfall, and the driest is September, with 99 mm of rain.[ 12]
Tributaries
The main tributaries from the mouth:[ 1]
Left
tributary
Right
tributary
Length
(km)
Basin size
(km2 )
Average discharge
(m3 /s)
Musi
759
59,942
3,211.2
Sebalik
282.6
14.6
Komering
328
9,908
458.7
Ogan
313
8,233
432.9
Kramasan
241.6
11.6
Belida
462.7
23.1
Lematang
348
7,340
396.1
Penukal
959.5
52.8
Harileko
334
3,746
186.7
Dua
317
17.5
Simpang
368
20.7
Medak
72
395.3
25.7
Langgaran
226
12.8
Keruh
554.2
31.9
Rawas
208
5,841
333.9
Lakitan
140
2,763
161.2
Semangus
183
1,933
125.3
Kelingi
98
1,898
126.9
Kungku
667.1
38.6
Kikim
1,524.1
86.8
Lintang
572
31.9
Keru
315.3
18.1
Gallery
The Musi River and Palembang
The Musi River by Palembang
The Ampera Bridge on Musi River, Palembang
watershed of the Musi River
See also
References
^ a b c d e f "Sumatra" .
^ a b Müller-Dum, Denise; Warneke, Thorsten; Rixen, Tim; Müller, Moritz; Baum, Antje; Christodoulou, Aliki; Oakes, Joanne; Eyre, Bradley D.; Notholt, Justus (2019). "Impact of peatlands on carbon dioxide (CO2 ) emissions from the Rajang River and Estuary, Malaysia" . Biogeosciences . 16 (1): 17– 32. Bibcode :2019BGeo...16...17M . doi :10.5194/bg-16-17-2019 . S2CID 203167471 .
^ a b c STUDY FOR MUSI RIVER BASIN (PDF) .
^ a b c Achmad, Syarifudin (2017). "The influence of Musi River sedimentation to the aquatic environment" . Matec Web of Conferences . 101 : 04026. doi :10.1051/matecconf/201710104026 .
^ a b Irwan; Purboyo; Fadjrin Wira Perdana; Doharman Lumban Tungkup; Surnata (2023). "EVALUATION OF THE PORT FACILITIES OF SUNGAI 16 PIER AND ACCESS ROAD TO PASAR LPT TERMINAL 16 ILIR PALEMBANG CITY OF SOUTH SUMATRA PROVINCE" . Journal of Namibian Studies: History Politics Culture . 34 : 2226– 2241. doi :10.59670/jns.v34i.1498 .
^ "Floating marine debris along Indonesian coasts" (PDF) .
^ Francisca, Wit; Tim, Rixen; Antje, Baum; Widodo, S. Pranowo; Andreas, A. Hutahaean (2018). "The Invisible Carbon Footprint as a hidden impact of peatland degradation inducing marine carbonate dissolution in Sumatra, Indonesia" . Scientific Reports . 8 : 17403. Bibcode :2018NatSR...817403W . doi :10.1038/s41598-018-35769-7 . PMC 6258705 .
^ Air Musi - Geonames.org.
^ Archives, L. A. Times (1997-12-20). "Jet Carrying 104 Explodes Over Indonesia" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 2024-07-14 .
^ Peel, M C; Finlayson, B L; McMahon, T A (2007). "Updated world map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification" . Hydrology and Earth System Sciences . 11 (5): 1633– 1644. Bibcode :2007HESS...11.1633P . doi :10.5194/hess-11-1633-2007 . Retrieved 30 January 2016 .
^ "NASA Earth Observations Data Set Index" . NASA. 30 January 2016.
^ "NASA Earth Observations: Rainfall (1 month - TRMM)" . NASA/Tropical Rainfall Monitoring Mission. 30 January 2016.
External links
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2°20′37″S 104°55′21″E / 2.34361°S 104.92250°E / -2.34361; 104.92250