| Keterisi Mineral Vaucluse Natural Monument | |
|---|---|
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| Location | Mtskheta-Mtianeti, Georgia | 
| Nearest city | village Keterisi | 
| Coordinates | 42°35′47″N 44°23′59″E / 42.59639°N 44.39972°E | 
| Area | 0.01 km2 (0.0039 sq mi) | 
| Website | Keterisi Mineral Vaucluse | 
Keterisi Mineral Vaucluse Natural Monument (Georgian: ქეთერისის მინერალური ვოკლუზი) is a cluster of powerful mineral water artesian aquifers pouring out at the foot of the Greater Caucasus, known as Narzan vaucluse: these mineral springs provide 25-30 million liters of hydrocarbonate-calcium water per day,[1] which corresponds to 300-350 liters per second. From these sources originates stream, which creates water cascades in the village of Keterisi.[2][3][4]
It is part of Kazbegi Protected Areas[5] along with Kazbegi National Park and five Natural Monuments:
- Sakhizari Cliff,
 - Abano Mineral Lake,
 - Truso Travertine,
 - Jvari Pass Travertine,
 - Keterisi Mineral Vaucluse.
 
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Keterisi Mineral Vaucluse.
- ↑ Bolashvili, Nana; Neidze, Vazha (19 October 2022). The Physical Geography of Georgia (1 ed.). Springer Cham. p. 210. ISBN 978-3-030-90752-5.
 - ↑ Keterisi Mineral Vaucluse in Georgia
 - ↑ Keterisi Mineral Vaucluse Natural Monument
 - ↑ Keterisi Mineral Natural Monument (photo)
 - ↑ Kazbegi Support Programme for Protected Areas in the Caucasus - Georgia (SPPA-Georgia)
 
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