What state is the eastern shore of the Caspian Sea? Caspian Sea (lake): recreation, photos and map, shores and countries where the Caspian Sea is located

, Terek, Kura

42° N. w.  51° east d. HGIO

Geographical location

The Caspian Sea is located at the junction of Europe and Asia. The length of the sea from north to south is approximately 1200 kilometers (36°34"-47°13" N), from west to east - from 195 to 435 kilometers, on average 310-320 kilometers (46°-56° in .d.).

According to physical and geographical conditions, the Caspian Sea is conventionally divided into three parts - the Northern Caspian (25% of the sea area), the Middle Caspian (36%) and the Southern Caspian (39%). The conditional border between the Northern and Middle Caspian runs along the line Chechen Island - Cape Tyub-Karagan, between the Middle and Southern Caspian - along the line Chilov Island - Cape Gan-Gulu.

Coast

The territory adjacent to the Caspian Sea is called the Caspian region.

Peninsulas

  • Absheron Peninsula, located on the western coast of the Caspian Sea on the territory of Azerbaijan, at the northeastern end of the Greater Caucasus, on its territory the cities of Baku and Sumgait are located
  • Mangyshlak, located on the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea, on the territory of Kazakhstan, on its territory is the city of Aktau

Islands

There are about 50 large and medium-sized islands in the Caspian Sea with a total area of ​​approximately 350 square kilometers.

Bays

  • Dead Kultuk (formerly Komsomolets, formerly Tsesarevich Bay)
  • Kenderli
  • Turkmenbashi (bay) (formerly Krasnovodsk)
  • Turkmen (bay)
  • Gizilagach (formerly Kirov Bay)
  • Astrakhan (bay)
  • Gizlar
  • Hyrcanus (formerly Astarabad)
  • Anzali (formerly Pahlavi)

Kara-Bogaz-Gol

On the eastern coast is the salt lake Kara-Bogaz-Gol, which until 1980 was a bay-lagoon of the Caspian Sea, connected to it by a narrow strait. In 1980, a dam was built separating Kara-Bogaz-Gol from the Caspian Sea, and in 1984 a culvert was built, after which the level of Kara-Bogaz-Gol dropped by several meters. In 1992, the strait was restored, through which water flows from the Caspian Sea to Kara-Bogaz-Gol and evaporates there. Every year, 8-10 cubic kilometers of water (according to other sources - 25 cubic kilometers) and about 15 million tons of salt flow into Kara-Bogaz-Gol from the Caspian Sea.

Rivers flowing into the Caspian Sea

130 rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, of which 9 rivers have a delta-shaped mouth. Large rivers flowing into the Caspian Sea are Volga, Terek, Sulak, Samur (Russia), Ural, Emba (Kazakhstan), Kura (Azerbaijan), Atrek (Turkmenistan), Sefidrud (Iran). Largest river, flowing into the Caspian Sea - the Volga, its average annual flow is 215-224 cubic kilometers. The Volga, Ural, Terek, Sulak and Emba provide up to 88-90% of the annual flow into the Caspian Sea.

Basin of the Caspian Sea

Coastal states

According to the Intergovernmental Economic Conference of the Caspian States:

The Caspian Sea washes the shores of five coastal states:

Cities on the Caspian Sea coast

On the Russian coast are the cities of Lagan, Makhachkala, Kaspiysk, Izberbash, Dagestanskie Ogni and the southernmost city of Russia, Derbent. Astrakhan is also considered a port city of the Caspian Sea, which, however, is not located on the shores of the Caspian Sea, but in the Volga delta, 60 kilometers from the northern coast of the Caspian Sea.

Physiography

Area, depth, volume of water

The area and volume of water in the Caspian Sea varies significantly depending on fluctuations in water levels. At a water level of −26.75 m, the area is approximately 371,000 square kilometers, the volume of water is 78,648 cubic kilometers, which is approximately 44% of the world's lake water reserves. The maximum depth of the Caspian Sea is in the South Caspian depression, 1025 meters from its surface level. In terms of maximum depth, the Caspian Sea is second only to Baikal (1620 m) and Tanganyika (1435 m). The average depth of the Caspian Sea, calculated from the bathygraphic curve, is 208 meters. At the same time, the northern part of the Caspian Sea is shallow, its maximum depth does not exceed 25 meters, and the average depth is 4 meters.

Water level fluctuations

Flora

The flora of the Caspian Sea and its coast is represented by 728 species. The predominant plants in the Caspian Sea are algae - blue-green, diatoms, red, brown, characeae and others, and flowering plants - zoster and ruppia. In origin, the flora is predominantly of Neogene age, however, some plants were brought into the Caspian Sea by humans deliberately, or on the bottoms of ships.

History of the Caspian Sea

Origin of the Caspian Sea

The Caspian Sea is of oceanic origin - its bed is composed of oceanic-type crust. 13 million years ago, the formed Alps separated the Sarmatian Sea from the Mediterranean. 3.4 - 1.8 million l. n. (Pliocene) there was the Akchagyl Sea, the sediments of which were studied by N. I. Andrusov. It was originally formed on the site of the dried-up Pontic Sea, from which Lake Balakhanskoe (in the southern Caspian Sea) remained. The Akchagyl Sea evolves into the Absheron Sea, which covers the Caspian Sea and floods the territories of Turkmenistan and the Lower Volga region. After atelier regression (- 100 m) approx. 17 thousand l. n. The early Khvalynian transgression began - up to + 50 m (the Manych-Kerch Strait was functioning), which was replaced by the Eltonian regression. OK. 13.4-13.1 thousand l. n. The Middle Khvalynian transgression began (0 m).

Anthropological and cultural history of the Caspian Sea

Shipping

Shipping is developed in the Caspian Sea. There are ferry crossings on the Caspian Sea, in particular, Baku - Turkmenbashi, Baku - Aktau, Makhachkala - Aktau. The Caspian Sea has a shipping connection with the Sea of ​​Azov through the Volga, Don and Volga-Don Canal rivers.

Fishing and seafood production

Fishing (sturgeon, bream, carp, pike perch, sprat), caviar production, as well as seal fishing. More than 90 percent of the world's sturgeon catch occurs in the Caspian Sea. In addition to industrial mining, illegal mining of sturgeon and their caviar flourishes in the Caspian Sea.

Recreational resources

Natural environment of the Caspian coast with sandy beaches, mineral waters and medicinal mud in the coastal zone creates good conditions for rest and treatment. At the same time, in terms of the degree of development of resorts and the tourism industry, the Caspian coast is noticeably inferior to the Black Sea coast of the Caucasus. At the same time, in recent years The tourism industry is actively developing on the coasts of Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkmenistan and Russian Dagestan. In Azerbaijan, the resort area in the Baku region is actively developing. A world-class resort has now been created in Amburan, another modern tourist complex is being built in the area of ​​the village of Nardaran, holidays in the sanatoriums of the villages of Bilgah and Zagulba are very popular. A resort area is also being developed in Nabran, in northern Azerbaijan. However, high prices, a generally low level of service and a lack of advertising lead to the fact that there are almost no foreign tourists. The development of the tourism industry in Turkmenistan is hampered by a long-term policy of isolation, in Iran - Sharia laws, due to which mass holidays of foreign tourists on the Caspian coast of Iran are impossible.

Environmental issues

Environmental issues The Caspian Sea is associated with water pollution as a result of oil production and transportation on the continental shelf, the flow of pollutants from the Volga and other rivers flowing into the Caspian Sea, the life of coastal cities, as well as the flooding of individual objects due to rising levels of the Caspian Sea. Predatory production of sturgeon and their caviar, rampant poaching lead to a decrease in the number of sturgeon and to forced restrictions on their production and export.

Legal status of the Caspian Sea

After the collapse of the USSR, the division of the Caspian Sea for a long time was and still remains the subject of unresolved disagreements related to the division of resources of the Caspian shelf - oil and gas, as well as biological resources. For a long time, negotiations were ongoing between the Caspian states on the status of the Caspian Sea - Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan insisted on dividing the Caspian along the median line,

Many geographical names, can mislead people who are not keen on geography. Could it be that an object designated as a sea on all maps is actually a lake? Let's figure it out.

The history of the appearance of the Caspian Sea?

14,000,000 years ago, the Sarmatian Sea existed on the planet. It included the modern Black, Caspian and Azov seas. About 6,000,000 years ago, due to the rise of the Caucasus Mountains and the decrease in water levels in the Mediterranean Sea, it divided, forming four different seas.

The Caspian is inhabited by many representatives of the fauna of Azov, which once again confirms that these reservoirs were once one whole. This is one of the reasons why the Caspian Sea is considered a lake.

The name of the sea comes from the ancient tribes of the Caspian Sea. They inhabited its shores in the first millennia BC and were engaged in horse breeding. But over the many hundreds of years of its existence, this sea has had many names. It was called Derbentsky, Saraisky, Girkansky, Sigai, Kukkuz. Even in our time, for residents of Iran and Azerbaijan, this lake is called Khazar.

Geographical location

Two parts of the world - Europe and Asia - are washed by the waters of the Caspian Sea. The coastline covers the following countries:

  • Turkmenistan
  • Russia
  • Azerbaijan
  • Kazakhstan

The length from north to south is about one thousand two hundred kilometers, the width from west to east is about three hundred kilometers. The average depth is about two hundred meters, greatest depth about a thousand kilometers. The total area of ​​the reservoir is more than 370,000 square kilometers and is divided into three climatic and geographical zones:

  1. Northern
  2. Average
  3. Southern Caspian

The water area includes six large peninsulas and about fifty islands. Their total area is four hundred square kilometers. The most large islands– Dzhambaisky, Ogurchinsky, Chechen, Tyuleniy, Konevsky, Zyudev and Absheron Islands. About one hundred and thirty rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, including the Volga, Ural, Atrek, Sefirud, Terek, Kura and many others.

Sea or lake?

The official name used in documentation and cartography is the Caspian Sea. But is this true?

In order to have the right to be called a sea, any body of water must be connected to the world's oceans. In the case of the Caspian Sea, this is not reality. The Caspian Sea is separated by almost 500 km of land from the nearest sea, the Black Sea. This is a completely enclosed body of water. The main differences between the seas:

  • The seas can be fed by waterways - rivers.
  • The external seas are directly connected to the ocean, that is, they have access to it.
  • Inland seas are connected to other seas or oceans by straits.

The Caspian received the right to be called a sea primarily because of its impressive size, which is more typical of seas rather than lakes. In area it surpasses even Azov. Also no small role was played by the fact that not a single lake washes the shores of five states at once.

It is worth noting that the structure of the Caspian Sea bottom is of the oceanic type. This happened due to the fact that it was once part of the ancient World Ocean.

Compared to other seas, the percentage of salt saturation in it is very weak and does not exceed 0.05%. The Caspian Sea is fed only by rivers flowing into it, like all lakes on the globe.

Like many seas, the Caspian is famous for its powerful storms. The height of the waves can reach eleven meters. Storms can occur at any time of the year, but they are most dangerous in autumn and winter.

In fact, the Caspian Sea is the most big lake in the world. Its waters are not subject to international maritime laws. The territory of waters is divided between countries on the basis of laws adopted for lakes, and not for seas.

The Caspian Sea has rich mineral resources such as oil and gas. Its waters are inhabited by more than one hundred and twenty species of fish. Among them are the most valuable sturgeons, such as stellate sturgeon, sturgeon, sterlet, beluga, and thorn. 90% of the world's sturgeon catch comes from the Caspian Sea.

Interesting features:

  • Scientists around the world have not yet come to a clear conclusion as to why the Caspian Sea is considered a lake. Some experts even suggest considering it a “lake-sea” or an “inland” sea, like the Dead Sea in Israel;
  • The deepest point of the Caspian Sea is more than one kilometer;
  • Historically, it is known that the total water level in the reservoir has changed more than once. The exact reasons for this are still not understood;
  • It is the only body of water separating Asia and Europe;
  • The largest water artery feeding the lake is the Volga River. It is this that carries the bulk of the water;
  • Thousands of years ago the Caspian Sea was part of the Black Sea;
  • In terms of the number of fish species, the Caspian Sea is inferior to some rivers;
  • The Caspian Sea is the main supplier of the most expensive delicacy - black caviar;
  • The water in the lake is completely renewed every two hundred and fifty years;
  • The territory of Japan is smaller than the area of ​​the Caspian Sea.

Ecological situation

Intervention into the ecology of the Caspian Sea regularly occurs due to the extraction of oil and natural resources. There are also interventions in the fauna of the reservoir, cases of poaching and illegal fishing of valuable fish species are frequent.

The water level in the Caspian Sea is falling every year. This is due to global warming, due to the influence of which the water temperature on the surface of the reservoir increased by one degree and the sea began to actively evaporate.

It is estimated that water levels have fallen by seven centimeters since 1996. By 2015, the level of the fall was about one and a half meters, and the water continues to fall.

If this continues, in a century the shallowest part of the lake may simply disappear. This will be the part that washes the borders of Russia and Kazakhstan. If global warming intensifies, the process may accelerate and this will happen much earlier.

It is known that long before the onset of global warming, the water level in the Caspian Sea underwent changes. The water kept rising and then falling. Scientists still cannot say exactly why this happened.

The Caspian Sea is the largest endorheic lake on Earth, located at the junction of Europe and Asia, called a sea due to the fact that its bed is composed of oceanic-type crust. The Caspian Sea is an endorheic lake, and the water in it is salty, from 0.05 ‰ near the mouth of the Volga to 11-13 ‰ in the southeast. The water level is subject to fluctuations, according to 2009 data it was 27.16 m below sea level. The Caspian Sea is located at the junction of two parts of the Eurasian continent - Europe and Asia. The length of the Caspian Sea from north to south is approximately 1200 kilometers, from west to east - from 195 to 435 kilometers, on average 310-320 kilometers. The Caspian Sea is conventionally divided according to physical and geographical conditions into 3 parts - the Northern Caspian, the Middle Caspian and the Southern Caspian. The conditional border between the Northern and Middle Caspian runs along the line of the island. Chechen - Cape Tyub-Karagansky, between the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea - along the line of the island. Residential - Cape Gan-Gulu. The area of ​​the Northern, Middle and Southern Caspian Sea is 25, 36, 39 percent, respectively.

Length coastline The Caspian Sea is estimated at approximately 6500-6700 kilometers, with islands - up to 7000 kilometers. The shores of the Caspian Sea in most of its territory are low-lying and smooth. In the northern part, the coastline is indented by water channels and islands of the Volga and Ural deltas, the banks are low and swampy, and the water surface in many places is covered with thickets. The east coast is dominated by limestone shores adjacent to semi-deserts and deserts. The most winding shores are on the western coast in the area of ​​the Absheron Peninsula and on the eastern coast in the area of ​​the Kazakh Gulf and Kara-Bogaz-Gol. The territory adjacent to the Caspian Sea is called the Caspian region.

Bottom relief The relief of the northern part of the Caspian Sea is a shallow undulating plain with banks and accumulative islands, the average depth of the Northern Caspian Sea is 4-8 meters, the maximum does not exceed 25 meters. The Mangyshlak threshold separates the Northern Caspian from the Middle Caspian. The Middle Caspian is quite deep, the water depth in the Derbent depression reaches 788 meters. The Absheron threshold separates the Middle and Southern Caspian Seas. The Southern Caspian Sea is considered deep-water; the water depth in the South Caspian depression reaches 1025 meters from the surface of the Caspian Sea. Shell sands are widespread on the Caspian shelf, deep-sea areas are covered with silty sediments, and in some areas there is an outcrop of bedrock. Temperature Water temperature is subject to significant latitudinal changes, most clearly expressed in winter, when the temperature varies from 0-0.5 °C at the ice edge in the north of the sea to 10-11 °C in the south, that is, the water temperature difference is about 10 °C . For shallow water areas with depths less than 25 m, the annual amplitude can reach 25-26 °C. On average, the water temperature off the west coast is 1-2 °C higher than that on the east, and in the open sea the water temperature is 2-4 °C higher than off the coasts.

Fauna and flora The fauna of the Caspian Sea is represented by 1809 species, of which 415 are vertebrates. 101 species of fish are registered in the Caspian Sea, where most of the world's sturgeon stocks are concentrated, as well as freshwater fish such as roach, carp, and pike perch. The Caspian Sea is the habitat of fish such as carp, mullet, sprat, kutum, bream, salmon, perch, and pike. The Caspian Sea is also home to a marine mammal - the Caspian seal. The flora of the Caspian Sea and its coast is represented by 728 species. The predominant plants in the Caspian Sea are algae - blue-green, diatoms, red, brown, characeae and others, and flowering plants - zoster and ruppia. In origin, the flora is predominantly of Neogene age, but some plants were brought into the Caspian Sea by humans deliberately or on the bottoms of ships.

Minerals Many oil and gas fields are being developed in the Caspian Sea. Proven oil resources in the Caspian Sea amount to about 10 billion tons, shared resources oil and gas condensate are estimated at 18-20 billion tons. Oil production in the Caspian Sea began in 1820, when the first oil well was drilled on the Absheron shelf. In the second half of the 19th century, oil production began on an industrial scale on the Absheron Peninsula, and then in other territories. In addition to oil and gas production, salt, limestone, stone, sand, and clay are also mined on the coast of the Caspian Sea and the Caspian shelf.

Yes, geography can sometimes wreak havoc on my brain. You look at the map and see the name – “Caspian Sea”. What will he think in such a situation? normal person- Yes, of course, it won’t occur to him that we are talking about a lake! So now I'll tell you, why the Caspian Sea is not a sea, but a lake, how did this happen and what is this strange whirlwind with names.

The sea is not the sea

Yes, the Caspian Sea is a geographical object, the essence of which does not really coincide with its name.

The fact is that by name it is a sea, but in fact it is a lake. They called it the sea because of large size and water salinity. After all, people didn’t want to delve into geographical nuances - the name appeared a long time ago.


Only in reality Caspian lake has no access to the ocean. And this is one of the most important conditions, according to which a body of water is called a sea. It turns out that without access to the ocean, the Caspian Sea is considered a lake. Large, salty and very similar to the sea - but still a lake.

So, I’ll list once again what a body of water must have in order for it to be considered a sea:


A lake is not a lake

The Caspian Sea-lake, however, is different from other lakes. It is indeed very large - so much so that it washes the territory fives different countries . In addition, it contains about fifty quite large islands.


Yes and water there salty. However, by naval standards it’s still not enough- which again inclines us towards the fact that this is a lake.

And the abundance of Caspian waters has been decreasing over the years. For a long time it Volga replenished, but in recent years she she's getting shallow- respectively, The water level in the Caspian Sea is also decreasing. So, perhaps, in a hundred or two years it will turn into a normal-sized lake if global warming does not stop.


All over the world, the Caspian Sea is unanimously considered a lake. Even his water territory shares not according to those international laws that were invented for marine areas, but on legislation relating to lakes.

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IN a huge number I read books about the Caspian Sea, its greatness and how its local peoples love and respect it. And indeed, I was very surprised to find myself one day on the shores of this sea. But after a while I began to hear that it was called a lake. I was wondering why this happens? And then I delved into literature in order to understand the situation.


Why is the Caspian a lake?

There is one main reason why people no longer consider this beautiful body of water to be a sea - the lack of access to the ocean. Usually the sea must have a strait connecting it with a larger part of a huge water reservoir - the world ocean. For example, we can recall the Sea of ​​Azov, with its Kerch Strait, or the next Black Sea, with the Bosporus Strait. A series of such straits and seas leads them to Atlantic Ocean.

But the Caspian Sea is a unique case. There is not a single drain from it. Even the Angara River flows from the great Baikal.

The only compelling argument that the Caspian is a sea is its salinity. But the numbers speak against this. The average percentage of water salinity here is 12.9%, while in other seas this figure is 35%.

Where does the Caspian Sea get its water from?

Five great rivers flow into this, the largest, as I understand it, lake on the planet:

  • Samur;
  • Volga;
  • Ural;
  • Terek;
  • Kura.

At the confluence of the rivers the water is almost fresh, but closer to the south the lake saturates it with its own reserves of salt.


Caspian Sea level fluctuations

Locals they told me that the Caspian is fickle. The water level is extremely variable. This is due to changes in river levels and internal sources of this sea-lake. Climate plays a big role. On at the moment The height of the Caspian Sea is steadily increasing, reaching almost 26 meters below ocean level. For comparison: 20 years ago this figure was almost two meters lower.

This has pros and cons. On the one hand, navigation improves, and on the other, pastures and fields are flooded.

Residents of the coast love the Caspian Sea, despite its unusual nature and stormy character. I really liked him too!

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Many names, not only toponyms, have always surprised me with their seeming groundlessness. Guinea pigs not porpoises or pigs, bats are not related to rodents, and the Caspian Sea is generally a lake.

I said “apparent” for a reason. Every name has a backstory. And often very interesting.


How the sea became a lake

The Caspian Sea is not undeservedly called a sea. Once upon a time it really was part of the ocean.

It even rests in the box earth's crust oceanic type.

The Caspian Sea is brackish, although the salinity of the water is variable. Near the mouth of the Volga flowing into it, the salinity of the water is minimal. The size of the Caspian Sea is in no way inferior to the sea. Its surface area: 371,000 km².


Main reason, according to which Caspian it is generally accepted lake, it's his isolation from the oceans. He has nothing to do with him.

But it was many years ago.

It all started with Sarmatian Sea, which existed more than 13 million years ago. It was loosely related to by sea Mediterranean, but later it lost this connection and began to desalinate. Then it briefly restored contact with the sea, but then lost it again.


Formed 6.5 – 5.2 million years ago Pontic Sea, already smaller in area. Which, moreover, soon divided into several unconnected reservoirs. The resulting Balakhanskoye Lake can be considered a grandmother Caspian. It gained and lost access to the sea several more times, raised and lowered the water level, changed in size, until finally it appeared Caspian Sea as we see it now.

What should the Caspian Sea be considered: a sea or a lake?

And the disputes here are not so much between geographers, but between politicians.

The Caspian Sea washes the territories immediately five states:

  • Kazakhstan;
  • Russia;
  • Turkmenistan;
  • Iran;
  • Azerbaijan.

But Caspian Sea- this is not only important transport hub, but also a storehouse of various natural resources , among which:

  • oil;
  • gas;
  • fish, incl. sturgeon.

And here comes the problem with legal status of the Caspian Sea. If you count it by sea, then when using it, states should focus on UN Convention on the Law of the Sea 1982. But the procedure for using international rivers and lakes, as a rule, is established by the riparian states themselves, concluding appropriate agreements.

Full agreement between the countries has not yet been achieved.

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I was resting somehow in the camp. It's no secret that almost every day competitions are held there to entertain children and youth. So here it is. Was here quiz. Question: “Which lake is the largest?” One guy of about fifteen was the first to raise his hand and answer: “Baikal.” The strangest thing was that his answer was counted as correct! How so? Isn't the Caspian Sea the most big lake? Now I will explain to you.


How to distinguish a sea from a lake

I'll list several signs by which a body of water is defined as a sea.

1. Rivers can flow into the sea.

2. The outer sea has direct access to the ocean.

3. If the sea is internal, then it is connected by straits with other seas or directly with the ocean.


Does the Caspian Sea fit sea parameters?

Need to check does the Caspian Sea have signs of a sea. into it really rivers flow in, but they flow into many bodies of water: seas, lakes, oceans, and other rivers. The Caspian Sea is surrounded from all sides by land. Is this really inland sea? Then it must connect to the Black or Azov Seas somehow strait. Strait Same No. Exactly due to the lack of access to the World Ocean, the Caspian Sea is considered a lake.

“But why was it called the sea then, if it is a lake?”- you ask. Answer very simple: because of his large size and salinity. In fact, The Caspian Sea is several times larger than the Azov Sea and almost equal in size to the Baltic Sea.

Great! The problem with the quiz has been resolved. Judge to hell!!!

Well then, I told, that the Caspian Sea In fact - lake. Now I want to you provide small selection interesting facts about this lake.


1. The Caspian Sea is below sea level (-28 m), which once again proves that this is a lake.

2. BC near the lake area lived nomadic Caspian tribes,in honor of which he was nicknamed Caspian.

3. This the deepest enclosed body of water on the planet.

4. Many people think that the name of the group “Caspian Cargo” is related to the Caspian Sea. In some ways they are right ( No). In fact the expression “Caspian cargo” can mean any illegal cargo.

5.Caspian Sea Fine suitable for tourism. During the USSR, a large number of sanatoriums were built here. Today or here you can see many hotels, water parks and beaches.

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The Caspian Sea is the largest lake on Earth, located at the junction of Europe and Asia and called the sea because of its size. The Caspian Sea is an endorheic lake, and the water in it is salty, from 0.05 ‰ near the mouth of the Volga to 11-13 ‰ in the southeast. The water level is subject to fluctuations, currently approximately −28 m below sea level. The area of ​​the Caspian Sea is currently approximately 371,000 km², the maximum depth is 1025 m.

The Caspian Sea is located at the junction of two parts of the Eurasian continent - Europe and Asia. The Caspian Sea is shaped like the Latin letter S, the length of the Caspian Sea from north to south is approximately 1200 kilometers (36°34′ - 47°13′ N), from west to east - from 195 to 435 kilometers, on average 310-320 kilometers (46° - 56° E).

The Caspian Sea is conventionally divided according to physical and geographical conditions into 3 parts - the Northern Caspian, the Middle Caspian and the Southern Caspian. The conditional border between the Northern and Middle Caspian Seas is along the line Chechen (island) - Tyub-Karagansky Cape, between the Middle and Southern Caspian Seas - along the line Zhilaya (island) - Gan-Gulu (cape). The area of ​​the Northern, Middle and Southern Caspian Sea is 25, 36, 39 percent, respectively.

Origin

According to one hypothesis, the Caspian Sea received its name in honor of the ancient tribes of horse breeders - the Caspians, who lived BC on the southwestern coast of the Caspian Sea. Throughout the history of its existence, the Caspian Sea had about 70 names among different tribes and peoples: the Hyrcanian Sea; Khvalynskoe Sea or Khvalisskoe Sea - Old Russian name, derived from the name of the inhabitants of Khorezm who traded in the Caspian Sea - hvalis; Khazar Sea - name in Arabic (Bahr-al-Khazar), Persian (Darya-e Khazar), Turkish and Azerbaijani (Khazar Denizi) languages; Abeskun Sea; Sarayskoye Sea; Derbent Sea; Sihai and other names. In Iran, the Caspian Sea is still called the Khazar or Mazandaran Sea (after the name of the people inhabiting the coastal province of Iran of the same name).

Data

The coastline of the Caspian Sea is estimated at approximately 6,500 - 6,700 kilometers, with islands - up to 7,000 kilometers. The shores of the Caspian Sea in most of its territory are low-lying and smooth. In the northern part, the coastline is indented by water streams and islands of the Volga and Ural deltas, the banks are low and swampy, and the water surface in many places is covered with thickets. The east coast is dominated by limestone shores adjacent to semi-deserts and deserts. The most winding shores are on the western coast in the area of ​​the Absheron Peninsula and on the eastern coast in the area of ​​the Kazakh Gulf and Kara-Bogaz-Gol.

Islands

Large peninsulas of the Caspian Sea: Agrakhan Peninsula, Absheron Peninsula, Buzachi, Mangyshlak, Miankale, Tub-Karagan.

There are about 50 large and medium-sized islands in the Caspian Sea with a total area of ​​approximately 350 square kilometers. The largest islands: Ashur-Ada, Garasu, Gum, Dash, Zira (island), Zyanbil, Kur Dashi, Khara-Zira, Sengi-Mugan, Chechen (island), Chygyl.

Bays

Large bays of the Caspian Sea: Agrakhan Bay, Komsomolets (bay) (formerly Dead Kultuk, formerly Tsesarevich Bay), Kaydak, Mangyshlak, Kazakh (bay), Turkmenbashi (bay) (formerly Krasnovodsk), Turkmen (bay), Gizylagach, Astrakhan ( Bay), Gizlar, Girkan (formerly Astarabad) and Anzali (formerly Pahlavi).

Nearby lakes

On the eastern coast is the salt lake Kara Bogaz Gol, which until 1980 was a bay-lagoon of the Caspian Sea, connected to it by a narrow strait. In 1980, a dam was built separating Kara-Bogaz-Gol from the Caspian Sea, and in 1984 a culvert was built, after which the level of Kara-Bogaz-Gol dropped by several meters. In 1992, the strait was restored, through which water flows from the Caspian Sea to Kara-Bogaz-Gol and evaporates there. Every year, 8-10 cubic kilometers of water (according to other sources - 25 thousand kilometers) and about 150 thousand tons of salt flow into Kara-Bogaz-Gol from the Caspian Sea.

Rivers

130 rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, of which 9 rivers have a delta-shaped mouth. Large rivers flowing into the Caspian Sea are the Volga, Terek (Russia), Ural, Emba (Kazakhstan), Kura (Azerbaijan), Samur (Russian border with Azerbaijan), Atrek (Turkmenistan) and others. The largest river flowing into the Caspian Sea is the Volga, its average annual flow is 215-224 cubic kilometers. The Volga, Ural, Terek and Emba provide up to 88 - 90% of the annual runoff of the Caspian Sea.

Pool

The area of ​​the Caspian Sea basin is approximately 3.1 - 3.5 million square kilometers, which is approximately 10 percent of the world's closed land area. water pools. The length of the Caspian Sea basin from north to south is about 2500 kilometers, from west to east - about 1000 kilometers. The Caspian Sea basin covers 9 states - Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia, Uzbekistan, Turkey and Turkmenistan.

Cities and states

The Caspian Sea washes the shores of five coastal states:

Russia (Dagestan, Kalmykia and Astrakhan region) - in the west and north-west, coastline length 695 kilometers
Kazakhstan - in the north, northeast and east, the length of the coastline is 2320 kilometers
Turkmenistan - in the southeast, the length of the coastline is 1200 kilometers
Iran - in the south, coastline length - 724 kilometers
Azerbaijan - in the southwest, the length of the coastline is 955 kilometers
The largest city and port on the Caspian Sea is Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, which is located in the southern part of the Absheron Peninsula and has a population of 2,070 thousand people (2003). Other major Azerbaijani Caspian cities are Sumgait, which is located in the northern part of the Absheron Peninsula, and Lankaran, which is located near the southern border of Azerbaijan. To the South-East of the Absheron Peninsula, the oil workers’ settlement Neftyanye Kamni is located, the structures of which are located on artificial islands, overpasses and technological sites.

Large Russian cities - the capital of Dagestan, Makhachkala, and the southernmost city of Russia, Derbent - are located on the western coast of the Caspian Sea. Astrakhan is also considered a port city of the Caspian Sea, which, however, is not located on the shores of the Caspian Sea, but in the Volga delta, 60 kilometers from the northern coast of the Caspian Sea.

On the eastern shore of the Caspian Sea there is a Kazakh city - the port of Aktau, in the north in the Ural delta, 20 km from the sea, the city of Atyrau is located, south of Kara-Bogaz-Gol on the northern shore of the Krasnovodsk Bay - the Turkmen city of Turkmenbashi, former Krasnovodsk. Several Caspian cities are located on the southern (Iranian) coast, the largest of them is Anzeli.

Dimensions

The area and volume of water of the Caspian Sea varies significantly depending on fluctuations in water levels. At a water level of −26.75 m, the area was approximately 392,600 square kilometers, the volume of water was 78,648 cubic kilometers, which is approximately 44 percent of the world's lake water reserves. The maximum depth of the Caspian Sea is in the South Caspian depression, 1025 meters from its surface level. In terms of maximum depth, the Caspian Sea is second only to Baikal (1620 m) and Tanganyika (1435 m). The average depth of the Caspian Sea, calculated from the bathygraphic curve, is 208 meters. At the same time, the northern part of the Caspian Sea is shallow, its maximum depth does not exceed 25 meters, and the average depth is 4 meters.

The water level in the Caspian Sea is subject to significant fluctuations. According to modern science, over the past 3 thousand years, the amplitude of changes in the water level of the Caspian Sea has been 15 meters. Instrumental measurements of the level of the Caspian Sea and systematic observations of its fluctuations have been carried out since 1837, during which time the most high level water level was registered in 1882 (-25.2 m), the lowest was in 1977 (-29.0 m), since 1978 the water level has increased and in 1995 reached −26.7 m, since 1996 again there was a downward trend. Scientists associate the reasons for changes in the water level of the Caspian Sea with climatic, geological and anthropogenic factors.

Climate

Water temperature is subject to significant latitudinal changes, most clearly expressed in winter, when the temperature varies from 0 - 0.5 °C at the ice edge in the north of the sea to 10 - 11 °C in the south, that is, the difference in water temperature is about 10 °C. For shallow water areas with depths less than 25 m, the annual amplitude can reach 25 - 26 °C. On average, the water temperature off the west coast is 1 - 2 °C higher than that on the east, and in the open sea the water temperature is 2 - 4 °C higher than on the coasts. According to the nature of the horizontal structure of the temperature field in annual cycle variability can be distinguished into three time periods in the upper 2-meter layer. From October to March, the water temperature increases in the southern and eastern regions, which is especially noticeable in the Middle Caspian. Two stable quasi-latitudinal zones can be distinguished, where temperature gradients are increased. This is, firstly, the border between the Northern and Middle Caspian, and, secondly, between the Middle and Southern. At the ice edge, in the northern frontal zone, the temperature in February-March increases from 0 to 5 °C, in the southern frontal zone, in the area of ​​the Absheron threshold, from 7 to 10 °C. During this period, the least cooled waters are in the center of the South Caspian Sea, which form a quasi-stationary core. In April-May, the area of ​​minimum temperatures moves to the Middle Caspian Sea, which is associated with faster heating of waters in the shallow northern part of the sea. True, at the beginning of the season in the northern part of the sea a large amount of heat is spent on melting ice, but already in May the temperature here rises to 16 - 17 °C. In the middle part the temperature at this time is 13 - 15 °C, and in the south it increases to 17 - 18 °C. Spring warming of water evens out horizontal gradients, and the temperature difference between coastal areas and the open sea does not exceed 0.5 °C. Warming of the surface layer, which begins in March, disrupts the uniformity of temperature distribution with depth. In June-September, horizontal uniformity in the temperature distribution in the surface layer is observed. In August, which is the month of greatest warming, the water temperature throughout the sea is 24 - 26 °C, and in the southern regions it rises to 28 °C. In August, the water temperature in shallow bays, for example, in Krasnovodsk, can reach 32 °C. The main feature of the water temperature field at this time is upwelling. It is observed annually along the entire eastern coast of the Middle Caspian and partially penetrates even into the Southern Caspian. The rise of cold deep waters occurs with varying intensity as a result of the influence of northwestern winds prevailing in the summer season. Wind this direction causes the outflow of warm surface waters from the coast and the rise of colder waters from the intermediate layers. Upwelling begins in June, but it reaches its greatest intensity in July-August. As a result, a decrease in temperature is observed on the surface of the water (7 - 15 °C). Horizontal temperature gradients reach 2.3 °C on the surface and 4.2 °C at a depth of 20 m. The upwelling center gradually shifts from 41 - 42° N. in June to 43 - 45° N. in September. Summer upwelling has great value for the Caspian Sea, radically changing the dynamic processes in the deep-sea area. In open areas of the sea, at the end of May - beginning of June, the formation of a temperature jump layer begins, which is most clearly expressed in August. Most often it is located between horizons of 20 and 30 m in the middle part of the sea and 30 and 40 m in the southern part. Vertical temperature gradients in the shock layer are very significant and can reach several degrees per meter. In the middle part of the sea, due to the surge off the eastern coast, the shock layer rises close to the surface. Since in the Caspian Sea there is no stable baroclinic layer with a large reserve of potential energy similar to the main thermocline of the World Ocean, then with the cessation of the prevailing winds causing upwelling and with the beginning of autumn-winter convection in October-November, a rapid restructuring of temperature fields to the winter regime occurs. In the open sea, the water temperature in the surface layer drops in the middle part to 12 - 13 °C, in the southern part to 16 - 17 °C. In the vertical structure, the shock layer is eroded due to convective mixing and disappears by the end of November.

Compound

The salt composition of the waters of the closed Caspian Sea differs from the oceanic one. There are significant differences in the ratios of concentrations of salt-forming ions, especially for waters in areas directly influenced by continental runoff. The process of metamorphism of sea waters under the influence of continental runoff leads to a decrease in the relative content of chlorides in the total amount of salts sea ​​waters, an increase in the relative amount of carbonates, sulfates, calcium, which are the main components in chemical composition river waters. The most conservative ions are potassium, sodium, chlorine and magnesium. The least conservative are calcium and bicarbonate ions. In the Caspian Sea, the content of calcium and magnesium cations is almost two times higher than in the Sea of ​​Azov, and the sulfate anion is three times higher. Water salinity changes especially sharply in the northern part of the sea: from 0.1 units. psu in the mouth areas of the Volga and Ural up to 10 - 11 units. psu on the border with the Middle Caspian. Mineralization in shallow salty bays-kultuks can reach 60 - 100 g/kg. In the Northern Caspian, during the entire ice-free period from April to November, a salinity front of a quasi-latitudinal location is observed. The greatest desalination, associated with the spread of river flow across the sea, is observed in June. The formation of the salinity field in the Northern Caspian Sea is greatly influenced by the wind field. In the middle and southern parts of the sea, salinity fluctuations are small. Basically it is 11.2 - 12.8 units. psu, increasing in the southern and eastern directions. With depth, salinity increases slightly (by 0.1 - 0.2 units psu). In the deep-sea part of the Caspian Sea, in the vertical profile of salinity, characteristic deflections of isohalines and local extrema are observed in the area of ​​the eastern continental slope, which indicate processes of bottom sliding of waters salinizing in the eastern shallow waters of the South Caspian. The magnitude of salinity also strongly depends on sea level and (which is interconnected) on the volume of continental runoff.

General information

The relief of the northern part of the Caspian Sea is a shallow undulating plain with banks and accumulative islands, the average depth of the Northern Caspian Sea is about 4 - 8 meters, the maximum does not exceed 25 meters. The Mangyshlak threshold separates the Northern Caspian from the Middle Caspian. The Middle Caspian is quite deep, the water depth in the Derbent depression reaches 788 meters. The Absheron threshold separates the Middle and Southern Caspian Seas. The Southern Caspian Sea is considered deep-water; the water depth in the South Caspian depression reaches 1025 meters from the surface of the Caspian Sea. Shell sands are widespread on the Caspian shelf, deep-sea areas are covered with silty sediments, and in some areas there is an outcrop of bedrock.

The climate of the Caspian Sea is continental in the northern part, temperate in the middle and subtropical in the southern part. In winter, the average monthly temperature of the Caspian Sea varies from −8 −10 in the northern part to +8 - +10 in the southern part, in summer - from +24 - +25 in the northern part to +26 - +27 in the southern part. The maximum temperature recorded on the east coast was 44 degrees.

The average annual precipitation is 200 millimeters per year, ranging from 90-100 millimeters in the arid eastern part to 1,700 millimeters along the southwestern subtropical coast. Evaporation of water from the surface of the Caspian Sea is about 1000 millimeters per year, the most intense evaporation in the area of ​​the Absheron Peninsula and in the eastern part of the South Caspian Sea is up to 1400 millimeters per year.

On the territory of the Caspian Sea, winds often blow, their average annual speed is 3-7 meters per second, and northern winds predominate in the wind rose. In the autumn and winter months, winds become stronger, with wind speeds often reaching 35-40 meters per second. The most windy areas are the Absheron Peninsula and the environs of Makhachkala - Derbent, where the highest wave was recorded - 11 meters.

Water circulation in the Caspian Sea is related to runoff and winds. Since most of the drainage occurs in the Northern Caspian Sea, northern currents predominate. An intense northern current carries water from the Northern Caspian along the western coast to the Absheron Peninsula, where the current divides into two branches, one of which moves further along the western coast, the other goes to the Eastern Caspian.

The fauna of the Caspian Sea is represented by 1809 species, of which 415 are vertebrates. 101 species of fish are registered in the Caspian world, where most of the world's sturgeon reserves are concentrated, as well as freshwater fish such as roach, carp, and pike perch. The Caspian Sea is the habitat of fish such as carp, mullet, sprat, kutum, bream, salmon, perch, and pike. The Caspian Sea is also home to a marine mammal - the Caspian seal. Since March 31, 2008, 363 dead seals have been found on the coast of the Caspian Sea in Kazakhstan.

The flora of the Caspian Sea and its coast is represented by 728 species. Among the plants in the Caspian Sea, the predominant algae are blue-green, diatoms, red, brown, characeae and others, and among the flowering plants - zoster and ruppia. In origin, the flora is predominantly of Neogene age, but some plants were brought into the Caspian Sea by humans deliberately or on the bottoms of ships.

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