Which shores are washed by the Caspian Sea? Caspian Sea: description, depth, width, interesting facts

01.03.2022

One of the brightest bodies of water in the world is Caspian lake, which is located at the junction of Asia and Europe, and its shores and waters belong to 5 countries. The Caspian Sea is an attractive and inexpensive place for recreation and treatment. Beautiful nature and the early opening of the swimming seasons make holidays on the Caspian coast more tempting.

The Caspian Lake is the largest of all lakes on the planet. It is often called the Caspian Sea because of its impressive dimensions and slightly salty water. It is located at the junction of Asia and Europe on the territory of 5 countries: Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Russian Federation Azerbaijan and Iran.

Despite the fact that the tourism infrastructure is inferior in level of development to the Black Sea, the Caspian coast is in demand among tourists. This is facilitated by the rapid warming of the reservoir due to its shallow depth; often the swimming season can begin at the end of April and end in October. The average water temperature in summer is 20-22 °C.

Advantages of holidays on the Caspian Lake:

  • clean sea sand;
  • picturesque nature;
  • sea ​​healing climate;
  • mineral springs;
  • healing mud;
  • the presence of sanatoriums of various orientations;
  • excellent fishing, especially in Astrakhan;
  • active entertainment for every taste (diving, rafting, windsurfing, etc.);
  • low cost of housing and entertainment with developed infrastructure;
  • being on the territory of the Russian Federation, which saves a lot of time on paperwork;
  • great service;
  • warm water for six months;
  • the opportunity to save thousands of rubles on vacation, housing and food without denying yourself anything.

You can get to the Caspian Sea in different ways, but you should decide in which area coastal city plan a vacation.

In the Russian Federation there are several resort towns on the Caspian Lake:

Astrakhan is very popular among fishermen and amateurs active rest associated with water, because in its vicinity there are many rivers, and the Caspian Lake is just an hour away by car.

Ancient city Derbent also enjoys special love among tourists, because it is surrounded by such attractions as picturesque mountains, ancient fossils and legendary caves, overgrown with legends, and other interesting places to visit.

Such Dagestan resort cities as Izberbash, Kaspiysk, Makhachkala and Kalmyk Lagan are not deprived of attention. Many tourists come to the Caspian Lake and stay in the Azerbaijani cities (Baku, Lenkoran, Sumgait), the Turkmen resorts of Turkmentbashi and Avaza, and the Kazakh Aktau and Atyrau.

Origin of the Caspian Lake and its name

Over 5 million years ago, the ancient sea was divided into several smaller ones, including the Caspian and Black Sea. After this separation, the reservoirs repeatedly merged into one whole and were fragmented, but approximately 1.75-2 million years ago the reservoir was finally cut off from the waters of the World Ocean.

The modern name of the Caspian Lake is new. And according to one hypothesis, it came from the name of the Caspian tribe, who lived in its southwest in the first millennium BC.

Throughout the entire period of its existence, the Caspian Lake had more than 70 different names among various tribal peoples, including:

  1. Abeskunskoe - after the name of the island and the city, which were located before their flooding by a reservoir in the 14th century in a low-lying plain formed by the Kura Kura River.
  2. Saraiskoe.
  3. Khazar or Mazandaran - an Iranian name in honor of the province of the same name of the country, located on the coast, is used in Iran to this day.
  4. Dzhurdzhansky (Hirkansky) - the ancient Greek name of the reservoir, comes from the region of Hyrcania and the city of Gorgan, now belonging to Iran.
  5. Derbentskoye is named after the ancient coastal town of the same name in Dagestan.
  6. Sihai.
  7. Khvaliyskoye is an ancient Russian name, derived from the name of the Khvalis people who lived in the north of the Caspian Sea.

Study and development of the Caspian Lake

Finds on the western coast of Dagestan indicate that people lived in this territory already 2 million ago. At the confluence of the river. Darvagchay (Dagestan) remains have been excavated at sites older than 600 thousand years. Excavations at south coast indicate human habitation in this territory 75 thousand years ago. All these studies show that the climate and living conditions were suitable for humans.

The founder of geography and writer Hecataeus of Miletus (VI-V centuries BC) in his work “Description of the Earth” described the Caspian Sea as the Hyrcanian Sea. In the 5th century BC, the ancient Greek historian was one of the first to suggest that the Caspian is not connected with other seas or oceans, although scientists of those times argued that the reservoir was the northern bay of the World Ocean, which washed all known lands.

Aristotle in the 4th century BC was sure that the Hyrcanian reservoir was connected with the Black Sea by underground waters. Macedonsky studied the relationship of the Caspian Sea with other large bodies of water throughout his travels. In 323 BC, he sent the sailor and geographer Patroclus to explore the shores of the Caspian Sea.

The navigator reached the Kara-Bogaz Bay and considered it a river that connects the Caspian Lake with the ocean. The famous ancient Greek geographer and historian Strabo, in one of his 17 chronicles (books) “Geography”, represented the Caspian Lake stretched in the east-west direction.

Arab scientists of the 9th-13th centuries made a significant contribution to the study of the Caspian Sea, recording in their works information about coastal cities and states, islands, flowing rivers and oil that was produced in Azerbaijan (Baku).

The expansion of the geography of trade relations made it possible for European, Persian and Turkish travelers to receive a lot of information about the Caspian Sea. And the famous Marco Polo (XIII century) also described a huge reservoir.

A very detailed, although sometimes erroneous, map of the Caspian Sea was compiled in the 17th century by the famous scientist and traveler, the German Adam Olearius. Peter I repeatedly traveled towards the Caspian Lake, and based on the data he provided, Russian hydrographers compiled very detailed maps of the Caspian Sea.

Since the 17th century, exploration of the Caspian Sea and its coastal environs has become systematic and versatile. Peter the Great in 1714 sent a research expedition under the leadership of Bekovich-Cherkassky. A few years later, research was continued by Verdun and Soimonov, and a little later by Tokmachev, Voinovich and other scientists.

At the beginning of the 19th century, an instrumental survey of the coast was carried out by I.F. Kolodkin; several decades later, a geographical survey was carried out by an expedition led by N.A. Ivashintsev. For half a century, starting from 1866, regular hydrological and hydrobiological expeditions were carried out under the leadership of N.M. Knipovich.

During the first years of Soviet power, the Caspian Sea was actively explored by geologists, mainly in search of oil product deposits, studying the water balance and fluctuations in water height in the lake.

History of the Caspian Lake

The Caspian Lake is located on the site of one of the giant reservoirs of antiquity. The origin of the Caspian Lake is inextricably linked with the ancient Sea of ​​Tetris, which more than 50-55 million years ago united the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, located on the territory of the present Caspian, Azov, Black and Mediterranean seas.

After long, complex tectonic movements, Tetris was first cut off from Pacific Ocean, and a little later the Atlantic.

About 5-6.5 million years ago, the giant reservoir broke into small basins, which included the Caspian and Black Sea.

After that, they repeatedly united and moved apart.

1.8-2 million years ago the Caspian Sea was finally cut off from the waters of the World Ocean and it was this time that is considered the beginning of its origin.

Throughout its history, the lake has changed its shoreline many times until it acquired its current appearance.

Physiographic characteristics of the Caspian Lake

The water surface of the lake is noticeably lower than the level of the World Ocean and amounts to -27.5...-28.5 m. The area of ​​the Caspian Sea varies depending on the level and water and is in the range of 380-390 km2, the total volume is 73.7-74.1 km3 .

The Caspian Sea is geographically divided into several parts with their own characteristics:

  1. Northern Caspian— it accounts for 24% of the total area of ​​the reservoir. This part is shallow, and its average depth does not exceed 6 m, the maximum reaches 25 m, the volume of water is less than 1%.
  2. Middle Caspian– 36% of the total area of ​​the lake falls on it. This part of the lake is a kind of basin with a maximum depth of almost 800 m and an average depth of 190 m. It contains a third of the total volume of water.
  3. Southern Caspian– occupies 40% of the total area of ​​the lake and accounts for the deepest part of the reservoir. It contains 2/3 of the volume of all water - 66%. The average depth is 340 m, and the deepest depression is 1025 m.

Length coastline almost reaches the 7 thousand km mark. The maximum length of the lake is slightly more than 1 thousand km, and the widest point is 435 km. The minimum width is considered to be a segment of 195 km. The average width is considered to be 317 km.

Map of the depth of the Caspian lake

The shores vary greatly in their landscape. The northern coast is flat and low, around it there is semi-desert in the lowlands, and desert in the higher elevations. The southern coastline is partly lowland and partly mountainous and consists of the Elbrus ridge. The Caucasus Mountains come close to the western part.

Eastern line The coast is a calcareous plateau of desert and semi-desert type. The outlines of the coast vary greatly depending on the water level, which fluctuates periodically.

Climate

The water temperature of the Caspian Sea fluctuates significantly depending on latitude. This amplitude is most noticeable in winter, when the water under the ice in the northern part has a temperature of 0.-0.5 °C above zero, while in the south at this time it is 10-11 °C.

According to average data, the temperature in the western part of the lake is up to 2 °C higher than in the eastern part, and when moving away from the shore it increases by 2-4 °C compared to the coastal zone. In summer, the water in the lake warms up to 23-29 °C, and in shallow water in the northern part it can reach 34-40 °C. Below 100 m, the temperature stabilizes at 4-7 °C.

The Caspian Lake is located in three climatic zones: continental (north of the reservoir), temperate (middle) and subtropical (South Caspian). In winter, the average temperature ranges from -8 to -11 °C in the north and up to +8 to +11 °C in the south of the lake.

In summer, the northern part warms up to 24-25 °C with a positive mark, in the south the temperature rises to 26-27 °C. The highest temperature of +44 °C was recorded in the east of the reservoir.

The average annual precipitation is about 200 mm. Moreover, on the arid eastern coast at least 90-100 mm falls; in the southwest these figures can reach 1700 mm. The average annual wind speed is in the range of 3-8 m/s, mainly winds from the north prevail. In autumn and winter, their speed increases and can reach 35-39 m/s.

When the thermometer shows high sub-zero values ​​on the northern part of the lake, trees and flowers bloom on the southern coast. In winter, the surface of the lake is unstable and stormy winds prevail. In winter, only the northern shallow waters freeze; during severe winter frosts, the Northern Caspian and the coastal waters of the Middle Caspian are covered with ice.

Flora and fauna

The flora of the Caspian Sea and its coastal environs consists of more than 720 plant species. The lake is mainly dominated by algae (diatoms, brown algae, etc.), and angiosperms - rupee and zoster. Most of the vegetation of the Caspian Lake originates from the Neogene period, but some entered the reservoir on the bottoms of ships or deliberately, with the help of humans.

Among the animal representatives of the Caspian Sea and its environs, there are more than 1,800 species, of which more than 400 are vertebrates, and more than 90 species are fish (sturgeon, carp, bream, mullet, beluga, etc.). Mammals are represented only by the Caspian seal, which is the smallest of the seal family and lives exclusively in the Caspian Lake.

The lake is home to the largest school of sturgeon in the world, and a lot of pike perch, carp and roach live in the sea waters. Up to 80% of the total world sturgeon catch and more than 90% of the world black caviar fishery come from the Caspian Lake.

The main migration route of birds between Europe and Asia passes over the Caspian Sea (in the spring - in the southern direction, and in the autumn - in the north). During seasonal migrations, over 11.5 million birds fly over the lake, about 5 million individuals remain for the winter. The lake itself is home to over 850 species of animals, of which almost 80 are vertebrates. More than 500 species of plants are present in the lake.

Islands

The Caspian Lake contains more than 50 large and medium-sized islands with a total area of ​​about 350 square meters. km.

State to which the island belongs Island name

Azerbaijan

Jasper
Oil Rocks
pelicanium
Zenbil
Sengi Mugan
Boyuk-Zira
Baku archipelago
Kichik Zira
Kurinsky
Chilov
Ignat Dashi
Inner Stone
Khyarya Zira
Kara Su
Dash Zira
Novoivanovsky
Chikil
Kurinskaya braid
Gil
Baburiy
Iran Ashur-Ada

Kazakhstan

Seal Islands
Average
Südev
Konevsky Oseredok
Somyonok
Babiy
Somovy
Turkmenistan Ogurchinsky
Bolshoi Zyudostinsky
Marine Ivan-Guard
Clean Jars
Maly Zyudostinsky
little birdie
Egg
Maly Setnoy
Jumpers
Sandy
Bazaar
Konevsky
Green
Sea Privet
Batkachny
Nordic
Maly Zhemchuzhny
Big Setnoy
Blinov
Upper Oseredok
Khokhlatsky
Südev
Lower
Small
Likhachev
Seal
Seventh
Marine Chapura
Chechen

Flowing rivers

More than 130 rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, 9 of which have a delta-shaped mouth. 95% of water enters the Caspian Sea from rivers. Most of them flow into the lake in the northern and western parts of the reservoir; there are no flowing rivers in the east.

The largest and most significant rivers of the Caspian basin:


Approximately 88% of the total flow comes from rivers such as the Volga, Terek, Ural and Emba, which flow into the northern Caspian Sea. 7% of the flow falls on rivers such as the Kura, Sulak, Samur and other smaller ones flowing into the western part of the Caspian Sea. About 5% of the flow of the Sefidrud, Kheraz and Gorgan rivers enters the Iranian part of the reservoir.

Ecological state

The condition of the Caspian Lake and surrounding areas causes concern among environmentalists.

Main causes environmental problems associated with a person and his activities:

  • production and transportation of oil and gas products;
  • influx of pollutants from river runoff waters;
  • poaching;
  • waste from coastal cities;
  • rapid jumps in water levels in the Caspian Sea due to irrigation of lands with the waters of inflowing rivers and the use of hydroelectric power stations.

How is the Caspian Lake used?

The Caspian Lake has been actively used by humans for many centuries.

Main directions of economic activity:


Recreational resources of the Caspian Lake

The climate and nature of the Caspian coastal region with its clean beaches from sand, healing mud and healing springs provides great potential and excellent conditions for sanatorium treatment and tourist recreation.

The development of the resort and tourism infrastructure, although noticeably inferior to the similar industry on the Black Sea coast, is actively expanding and the quality of service is improving. The most noticeable surge in development in last years celebrated in the Republic of Dagestan, Iran, Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan.

Holidays on the Caspian coast in the Russian Federation and former CIS countries are low in cost and, on average, the quality in some places is inferior to that on the Black Sea, but in actively developing places the level is quite high.

Popular recreation areas with developed infrastructure:

  • Baku;
  • Amburan;
  • Makhachkala;
  • Bilgah;
  • Derbent.
  • Nabran;
  • Lankaran;
  • Nardaran.

The development of the Turkmen resort and tourism industry is hampered by internal policies that isolate the state from the majority of tourists. And in Iran, mass recreation is difficult due to strict Sharia laws.

There are 3 protected areas on the coast:


The Caspian Lake is located at the junction of Europe and Asia and is largest lake in the world.

There are many interesting facts about the reservoir:

  1. Its size is larger than Japan, but in area less Germany.
  2. In terms of depth, the Caspian Sea is in third place, second only to Tanganyika and Baikal.
  3. Every 2.5 centuries the waters are completely renewed.
  4. Albino beluga sturgeon, whose caviar is the most expensive in the world, is caught on the Iranian coast. It is distinguished by a white tint and is packaged in unusual jars made of real gold.
  5. The largest beluga weighed more than 1200 kg and was caught in the 20s. XX century on the Russian coast. In its dimensions it is comparable to a large shark.
  6. Throughout the history of the lake, it has had more than 70 different names.
  7. Scientists are still debating whether to consider the Caspian Lake a sea, arguing that its area exceeds the size of some seas, and the bottom is created according to the oceanic type. But at the same time, the reservoir is endorheic and is not connected to the ocean or other seas.
  8. The smallest coastline of the five countries belongs to the Russian Federation.
  9. More than 80% of the water enters the lake from the river. Volga.

The Caspian Lake is rich in flora and fauna, distinguished by warm waters and a long swimming season. It is best known for its depth and size, production of oil, gas and sturgeon, the reserves of which exceed those known throughout the world.

The lake is 95% supplied with runoff water from rivers. On its coast there are many resorts and sanatoriums, whose attractiveness can be appreciated, and at affordable prices.

Article format: Mila Friedan

Video about the Caspian Sea

Film about the Caspian Sea:

Not all of the countries located on the shores of the Caspian Sea can be listed.

Countries on the Caspian Sea

Caspian Sea is the largest inland body of water on our planet by area. It also has no churn. The Caspian Sea is classified in different ways: as the world's largest lake and as a full-fledged sea. Its surface area is 371,000 km 2 (143,200 mi 2) and its volume is 78,200 km 3. Maximum depth 1025 m. Sea salinity is about 1.2% (12 g/l). The water level in the sea constantly fluctuates due to tectonic movements and high air temperatures. Today it is 28 m below sea level.

Even the ancient inhabitants who inhabited the coast of the Caspian Sea perceived it as a real ocean. It seemed to them limitless and very large. The word “Caspian” comes from the language of these peoples.

What countries are located on the shores of the Caspian Sea?

Sea waters wash the shores of 5 coastal states. This:

  • Russia. The coastal zone covers Kalmykia, Dagestan and the Astrakhan region in the northwest and west. The length of the coastline is 695 km.
  • Kazakhstan. The coastal zone covers the east, north and northeast of the state. The length of the coastline is 2320 km.
  • Turkmenistan. The coastal zone covers the southeast of the country. The length of the coastline is 1200 km.
  • Iran. The coastal zone covers the southern part of the state. The length of the coastline is 724 km.
  • Azerbaijan. The coastal zone covers the southwest of the country. The length of the coastline is 955 km.

In addition, this body of water is the main object of the International Society, since it has huge reserves of natural gas and oil. The Caspian Sea is only 700 miles long, but it contains six basins with hydrocarbon reserves. Most of them have not been mastered by humans.

On Sunday, August 12, in Aktau, Kazakhstan, the presidents of Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia and Turkmenistan signed the Convention on the Legal Status of the Caspian Sea. Previously, its status was regulated by Soviet-Iranian treaties, in which the Caspian Sea was defined as a closed (inland) sea, and each Caspian state had sovereign rights to a 10-mile zone and equal rights to the rest of the sea.

Now, according to the new convention, each country is assigned its own territorial waters (zones 15 miles wide). In addition, the provisions of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea will not apply to the Caspian Sea, the seabed will be delimited into sectors, as is done by neighboring seas, and sovereignty over the water column will be established on the basis of the principle that it is a lake.

Why is the Caspian considered neither a lake nor a sea?

To be considered a sea, the Caspian Sea must have access to the ocean; this is one of the most important conditions for which a body of water can be called a sea. But the Caspian Sea has no access to the ocean, so it is considered a closed body of water not connected to the World Ocean.

The second feature that distinguishes sea waters from lake waters is their high salinity. The water in the Caspian Sea is indeed salty, but in its salt composition it occupies an intermediate position between the river and the ocean. In addition, in the Caspian Sea, salinity increases towards the south. The Volga delta contains 0.3‰ salts, and in the eastern regions of the Southern and Middle Caspian Sea the salinity reaches 13-14‰. And if we talk about the salinity of the World Ocean, it averages 34.7 ‰.

Due to its specific geographical and hydrological characteristics, the reservoir received a special legal status. The summit participants decided that the Caspian Sea is an inland body of water that does not have a direct connection with the World Ocean, and therefore cannot be considered a sea, and at the same time, due to its size, water composition and bottom features, cannot be considered a lake.

What has been achieved since the signing of the Convention?

The new treaty expands opportunities for cooperation between countries and also involves limiting any military presence of third countries. According to political scientist, director of the Institute of Modern States Alexey Martynov, the main achievement of the last summit is that its participants managed to stop any talk about the possible construction of military bases and NATO infrastructure facilities in the Caspian Sea.

“The most important thing that has been achieved is to record that the Caspian Sea will be demilitarized for everyone Caspian states. There will be no other military personnel there except those representing the countries that signed the Caspian Agreement. This is a fundamental and main question that was important to fix. Everything else, what is divided proportionally into zones of influence, zones of extraction of biological resources, zones of extraction of shelf resources, was not so important. As we remember, in the last twenty years the military has been actively seeking to enter the region. The United States even wanted to build its own military base there,” says Martynov.

In addition to the distribution of each country's shares in the oil and gas fields of the Caspian basin, the Convention also provides for the construction of pipelines. As stated in the document, the rules for laying them provide for the consent of only neighboring countries, and not all countries of the Caspian Sea. After signing the agreement, Turkmenistan, in particular, stated that it was ready to lay pipelines along the bottom of the Caspian Sea, which would allow it to export its gas through Azerbaijan to Europe. The consent of Russia, which previously insisted that the project could only be implemented with the permission of all five Caspian states, is now no longer required. They plan to subsequently connect the gas pipeline to the Trans-Anatolian gas pipeline, through which natural gas will flow through the territory of Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey to Greece.

“Turkmenistan is not a foreign country to us, but our partner, a country that we consider very important for us in the post-Soviet space. We cannot be against them receiving an additional impetus for development through such pipeline projects. Gas has long been coming from Turkmenistan and other countries through another pipeline system, somewhere it is even mixed with Russian gas, and there is nothing wrong with that. If this project works, everyone will benefit, including Russia. Under no circumstances should the project be considered as some kind of competition. The European market is so large and insatiable, I mean the energy market, that there is enough room for everyone,” says Martynov.

Today, almost all Turkmen gas is supplied to China, where Russia also intends to supply blue fuel. For this purpose, in particular, a large-scale project for the construction of the Power of Siberia gas pipeline is being implemented. Thus, the geography of gas supplies for both countries can expand - Turkmenistan will gain access to the European market, and Russia will be able to increase its gas supplies to China.

The Caspian Sea is located between Asia and Europe. This is the largest salt sea-lake, located on the territory of Kazakhstan, Russia, Azerbaijan, Iran and Turkmenistan. Currently, its level is 28 meters below the level of the World Ocean. The depth of the Caspian Sea is quite large. The area of ​​the reservoir is 371 thousand square kilometers.

Story

About five million years ago, the sea divided into small bodies of water, including the Black and Caspian seas. After these events they united and separated. About two million years ago, the Caspian Lake was cut off from the World Ocean. This period is considered the beginning of its formation. Throughout history, the reservoir has changed its contours several times, and the depth of the Caspian Sea has also changed.

Now the Caspian is the largest inland body of water, containing about 44% of the planet’s lake waters. Despite the changes taking place, the depth of the Caspian Sea did not change very much.

Once it was called Khvalian and Khazar, and the tribes of horse breeders gave it another name - Caspian. This is the name of the tribe living on the southwestern shore of the reservoir. In total, during its existence the lake had more than seventy names, here are some of them:

  1. Abeskunskoe.
  2. Derbent.
  3. Saraiskoe.
  4. Xihai.
  5. Dzhurdzhanskoe.
  6. Hyrcanian.

Depth and relief

Relief and features hydrological regime They divide the sea-lake into northern, middle and southern parts. Over the entire area of ​​the Caspian Sea, the depth is on average 180-200 m, but the relief in different parts is different.

The northern part of the reservoir is shallow. Here the depth of the Caspian Sea-lake is approximately 25 meters. In the middle part of the Caspian there are very deep depressions, continental slopes, and shelves. Here the average depth is 192 meters, and in the Derbent depression - about 788 meters.

The greatest depth of the Caspian Sea is in the South Caspian depression (1025 meters). Its bottom is flat, and in the northern part of the depression there are several ridges. It is here that the maximum depth of the Caspian Sea is noted.

Coastline Features

Its length is seven thousand kilometers. The northern part of the coastline is lowland, the southern and western are mountains, and the eastern are hills. The spurs of Elbrus and the Caucasus Mountains approach the shores of the sea.

The Caspian has large bays: Kazakh, Kizlyar, Mangyshlak, Kara-Bogaz-Gol, Krasnovodsk.

If you go on a cruise from north to south, the length of the route will be 1200 kilometers. In this direction, the reservoir has an elongated shape, and from west to east the width of the sea is different. At its narrowest point it is 195 kilometers, and at its widest it is 435 kilometers. The average width of the reservoir is 315 km.

The sea has several peninsulas: Mangyshlak, Buzachi, Miankale and others. There are also several islands here. The largest are Chygyl, Kur-Dashi, Gum, Dash, and Tyuleni Islands.

Pond food

About one hundred and thirty rivers flow into the Caspian Sea. Most of them flow in the north and west. Main river flowing into the sea is the Volga. Approximately ninety percent of the volume of runoff comes from three large rivers: the Volga (80%), Kura (6%) and Ural (5%). Five percent are from Terek, Sulak and Samur, and the remaining four are brought by small rivers and streams of Iran.

Caspian resources

The reservoir has amazing beauty, a variety of ecosystems and a rich supply of natural resources. When there are frosts in its northern part, magnolias and apricots bloom in the south.

Relict flora and fauna have been preserved in the Caspian Sea, including the largest school of sturgeon fish. As it evolved, the marine flora changed more than once, adapting to salinity and desalination. As a result, these waters became rich in freshwater species, but few in marine species.

After the Volga-Don Canal was built, new species of algae appeared in the reservoir, which were previously found in the Black and Azov Seas. Now in the Caspian Sea there are 854 species of animals, of which 79 are vertebrates, and over 500 species of plants. This unique sea-lake produces up to 80% of the catch of all sturgeon in the world and approximately 95% of black caviar.

Five species of sturgeon are found in the Caspian Sea: stellate sturgeon, thorn, sterlet, beluga and sturgeon. Beluga is the largest representative of the species. Its weight can reach a ton, and its length can be five meters. In addition to sturgeon, herring, salmon, kutum, roach, asp and other types of fish are caught in the sea.

Of the mammals in the Caspian Sea, only the local seal is found, which is not found in other bodies of water in the world. It is considered the smallest on the planet. Its weight is about a hundred kilograms, and its length is 160 centimeters. The Caspian region is a major route for bird migration between Asia, the Middle East and Europe. Every year, approximately 12 million birds fly over the sea during migration (south in spring and north in autumn). In addition, another 5 million remain in these places for the winter.

The greatest wealth of the Caspian Sea is its huge reserves of oil and gas. Geological exploration in the region has discovered large deposits of these minerals. Their potential puts local reserves in second place in the world after

, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Iran, Azerbaijan

Geographical position

Caspian Sea - view from space.

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 (36°34"-47°13" N), from west to east - from 195 to 435 kilometers, on average 310-320 kilometers (46°-56° c. d.).

The Caspian Sea is conventionally divided according to physical and geographical conditions into 3 parts - Northern Caspian, Middle Caspian and 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.

Coast of the Caspian Sea

Coast of the Caspian Sea in Turkmenistan

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

Peninsulas of the Caspian Sea

  • Ashur-Ada
  • Garasu
  • Zyanbil
  • Khara-Zira
  • Sengi-Mugan
  • Chygyl

Bays of the Caspian Sea

  • Russia (Dagestan, Kalmykia and Astrakhan region) - in the west and northwest, the length of the coastline is about 1930 kilometers
  • Kazakhstan - in the north, northeast and east, the length of the coastline is about 2320 kilometers
  • Turkmenistan - in the southeast, the length of the coastline is about 650 kilometers
  • Iran - in the south, the length of the coastline is about 1000 kilometers
  • Azerbaijan - in the southwest, the length of the coastline is about 800 kilometers

Cities on the Caspian Sea coast

On the Russian coast there are cities - Lagan, Makhachkala, Kaspiysk, Izberbash and the most Southern City Russia Derbent. port city The Caspian Sea is also considered Astrakhan, which, however, is not located on the shores of the Caspian Sea, but in the Volga delta, 60 kilometers from north coast 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

Vegetable world

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.

History of the Caspian Sea

Origin of the Caspian Sea

Anthropological and cultural history of the Caspian Sea

Finds in the Khuto Cave off the southern coast of the Caspian Sea indicate that man lived in these areas approximately 75 thousand years ago. The first mentions of the Caspian Sea and the tribes living on its coast are found in Herodotus. Around the V-II centuries. BC e. Saka tribes lived on the Caspian coast. Later, during the period of settlement of the Turks, in the period of the 4th-5th centuries. n. e. Talysh tribes (Talysh) lived here. According to ancient Armenian and Iranian manuscripts, Russians sailed the Caspian Sea from the 9th-10th centuries.

Research of the Caspian Sea

Research of the Caspian Sea was started by Peter the Great, when, on his order, an expedition was organized in 1714-1715 under the leadership of A. Bekovich-Cherkassky. In the 1720s, hydrographic research was continued by the expedition of Karl von Werden and F.I. Soimonov, and later by I.V. Tokmachev, M.I. Voinovich and other researchers. At the beginning of the 19th century, instrumental surveys of the shores were carried out by I. F. Kolodkin, in the mid-19th century. - instrumental geographical survey under the direction of N. A. Ivashintsev. Since 1866, for more than 50 years, expeditionary research on the hydrology and hydrobiology of the Caspian Sea was carried out under the leadership of N. M. Knipovich. In 1897, the Astrakhan Research Station was founded. In the first decades of Soviet power, geological research by I.M. Gubkin and other Soviet geologists was actively carried out in the Caspian Sea, mainly aimed at searching for oil, as well as research into the water balance and level fluctuations of the Caspian Sea.

Economy of the Caspian Sea

Mining of oil and gas

Many oil and gas fields are being developed in the Caspian Sea. Proven oil resources in the Caspian Sea are about 10 billion tons, total oil and gas condensate resources 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 near Baku. In the second half of the 19th century, oil production began on an industrial scale on the Absheron Peninsula, and then in other territories.

Shipping

Shipping is developed in the Caspian Sea. On the Caspian Sea there are ferry crossings, in particular, Baku - Turkmenbashi, Baku - Aktau, Makhachkala - Aktau. The Caspian Sea has a shipping connection with 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 fishing of sturgeon and their caviar flourishes in the Caspian Sea.

Recreational resources

Natural environment of the Caspian coast with sandy beaches, mineral waters and healing mud in the coastal zone creates good conditions for relaxation and treatment. At the same time, according to the degree of development of resorts and the tourism industry Caspian coast noticeably loses to the Black Sea coast of the Caucasus. At the same time, in recent years, the tourism industry has been actively developing on the coasts of Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkmenistan and Russian Dagestan. Azerbaijan is actively developing resort area in the Baku region. At the moment, a world-class resort has been created in Amburan, another modern tourist complex is being built in the area of ​​​​the village of Nardaran, and 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 lack of advertising lead to the fact that Caspian resorts 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.

Ecological problems

Environmental problems of the Caspian Sea are 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 activity 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.

International status of the Caspian Sea

Legal status of the Caspian Sea

After the collapse of the USSR, the division of the Caspian Sea has long been and still remains the subject of unresolved disagreements related to the division of Caspian shelf resources - 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, Iran insisted on dividing the Caspian by one-fifth between all Caspian states.

In relation to the Caspian Sea, the key is the physical-geographical circumstance that it is a closed inland body of water that does not have a natural connection with the World Ocean. Accordingly, the norms and concepts of international maritime law, in particular, the provisions of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea of ​​1982, should not be automatically applied to the Caspian Sea. Based on this, in relation to the Caspian Sea it would be unlawful to apply such concepts as “territorial sea”, “exclusive economic zone", "continental shelf", etc.

The current legal regime of the Caspian Sea was established by the Soviet-Iranian treaties of 1921 and 1940. These treaties provide for freedom of navigation throughout the sea, freedom of fishing with the exception of ten-mile national fishing zones and a ban on vessels flying the flag of non-Caspian states sailing in its waters.

Negotiations on the legal status of the Caspian Sea are currently ongoing.

Delineation of sections of the Caspian seabed for subsoil use

The Russian Federation concluded an agreement with Kazakhstan on delimiting the bottom of the northern part of the Caspian Sea in order to exercise sovereign rights to subsoil use (dated July 6, 1998 and the Protocol thereto dated May 13, 2002), an agreement with Azerbaijan on delimiting adjacent areas of the bottom of the northern part of the Caspian Sea (dated September 23, 2002), as well as the trilateral Russian-Azerbaijani-Kazakh agreement on the junction point of the demarcation lines of adjacent sections of the Caspian Sea bottom (dated May 14, 2003), which established geographical coordinates dividing lines limiting the areas of the seabed within which the parties exercise their sovereign rights in the field of exploration and production of mineral resources.