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Irtysh

The Irtysh (Old Turkic: 𐰼𐱅𐰾:𐰇𐰏𐰕𐰏, romanized: Ertis ügüzüg,[1] Mongolian: Эрчис мөрөн, Erchis mörön,[2] "erchleh", "twirl"; Russian: Иртыш; Kazakh: Ертіс, Ertis, ه‌رتىس; Chinese: 额尔齐斯河, pinyin: É'ěrqísī hé, Xiao'erjing: عَعَرٿِسِ حْ; Uyghur: إيرتيش, Әртиш, Ertish; Tatar: Иртеш, İrteş, ﻴﺋرتئش, Siberian Tatar: Эйәртеш, Eya’rtes’) is a river in Russia, China, and Kazakhstan. It is the chief tributary of the Ob and is also the longest tributary river in the world.

Irtysh
Irtysh watershed
Location
CountryMongolia, China, Kazakhstan, Russia
CitiesOskemen, Semey, Pavlodar, Omsk, Tobolsk, Khanty-Mansiysk
Physical characteristics
SourceAltai Mountains
 • locationAltay Prefecture, China
 • coordinates47°52′39″N 89°58′12″E / 47.87750°N 89.97000°E / 47.87750; 89.97000
 • elevation2,960 m (9,710 ft)
MouthOb
 • location
Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia
 • coordinates
61°04′52″N 68°49′49″E / 61.08111°N 68.83028°E / 61.08111; 68.83028
 • elevation
20 m (66 ft)
Length4,248 km (2,640 mi)
Basin size1,643,000 km2 (634,000 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • average2,150 m3/s (76,000 cu ft/s) (near Tobolsk)
Basin features
ProgressionObKara Sea

The river's source lies in the Mongolian Altai in Dzungaria (the northern part of Xinjiang, China) close to the border with Mongolia.

The Irtysh's main tributaries include the Tobol, Demyanka and the Ishim. The Ob-Irtysh system forms a major drainage basin in Asia, encompassing most of Western Siberia and the Altai Mountains.

Geography edit

 
Map including the lower reaches of the Irtysh River
 
The Irtysh in Omsk
 
The Irtysh near Pavlodar in Kazakhstan

From its origins as the Kara-Irtysh (Vast Irtysh, kara means Vast in Turkic languages but also black. But in the context and geographic terms usually refers vast) in the Mongolian Altay mountains in Xinjiang, China, the Irtysh flows northwest through Lake Zaysan in Kazakhstan, meeting the Ishim and Tobol rivers before merging with the Ob near Khanty-Mansiysk in western Siberia, Russia after 4,248 kilometres (2,640 mi).

The name Black Irtysh (Kara-Irtysh in Kazakh, or Cherny Irtysh in Russian) is applied by some authors, especially in Russia and Kazakhstan, to the upper course of the river, from its source entering Lake Zaysan. The term White Irtysh, in opposition to the Black Irtysh, was occasionally used in the past to refer to the Irtysh below lake Zaysan;[3] now this usage is largely obsolete.

Main tributaries edit

The largest tributaries of the Irtysh are, from source to mouth:

Economic use edit

In Kazakhstan and Russia, tankers, passenger and Cargo ships navigate the river during the ice-free season, between April and October. Omsk, home to the headquarters of the state-owned Irtysh River Shipping Company, functions as the largest river port in Western Siberia.

On the Kazakhstan section of the river there are presently three major hydroelectric plants, namely at Bukhtarma, Ust-Kamenogorsk and Shulbinsk. The world's deepest lock, with a drop of 42 metres (138 ft), allows river traffic to by-pass the dam at Ust-Kamenogorsk.[4] Plans exist for the construction of several more dams.

 
Tobolsk river wharves in 1912

Three dams have been constructed on the Chinese section of the Irtysh as well: the Keketuohai (可可托海) Dam (47°10′51″N 89°42′35″E / 47.18083°N 89.70972°E / 47.18083; 89.70972), the Kalasuke (喀腊塑克) Dam (47°08′14″N 88°53′15″E / 47.13722°N 88.88750°E / 47.13722; 88.88750),[5][6] and the Project 635 Dam. There are also the Burqin Chonghu'er Dam and the Burqin Shankou Dam on the Irtysh's right tributary, the Burqin River and the Jilebulake Dam and Haba River Shankou Dam on another right tributary, the Haba River.

The Northern river reversal proposals, widely discussed by the USSR planners and scientists in the 1960s and 1970s, would send some of the Irtysh's (and possibly Ob's) water to the water-deficient regions of central Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. Some versions of this project would have seen the direction of flow of the Irtysh reversed in its section between the mouth of the Tobol (at Tobolsk) and the confluence of the Irtysh with the Ob at Khanty-Mansiysk, thus creating an "Anti-Irtysh".[7] While these gigantic interbasin transfer schemes were not implemented, a smaller Irtysh–Karaganda Canal was built between 1962 and 1974 to supply water to the dry Kazakh steppes and to one of the country's main industrial center, Karaganda. In 2002, pipelines were constructed to supply water from the canal to the Ishim and Kazakhstan's capital, Nur-Sultan.

In China, a short canal was constructed in 1987 (water intake at 47°26′31″N 87°34′11″E / 47.44194°N 87.56972°E / 47.44194; 87.56972) to divert some of the Irtysh water to the endorrheic Lake Ulungur, whose level had been falling precipitously due to the increasing irrigation use of the lake's main affluent, the Ulungur River.[8] In the last years of the 20th century and the early 2000s, a much more major project, the Irtysh–Karamay–Urümqi Canal was completed. Increased water use in China has caused significant concerns among Kazakh and Russian environmentalists.[9][10] According to a report published by Kazakhstan fishery researchers in 2013, the total Irtysh water use in China is about 3 cubic kilometres (0.7 cu mi) per year; as a result, only about 2/3 of what would be the river's "natural" flow (6 km3 out of 9 km3) reach the Kazakh border.[11]

Cities edit

 
An aerial view of the Irtysh in Omsk

Major cities along the Irtysh, from source to mouth, include:

Bridges edit

 
The Sixty Years of Victory Bridge in Omsk. (The name commemorates the 60th anniversary of the V-E Day)

Seven railway bridges span the Irtysh. They are located in the following cities:

As the Kuytun–Beitun Railway in China's Xinjiang is being extended toward Altay City, a railway bridge over the Irtysh at Beitun will need to be constructed as well.

Numerous highway bridges over the Irtysh exist in China, Kazakhstan, and Russia.

The last bridge downstream on the Irtysh, a highway bridge opened in 2004, can be found at Khanty-Mansiysk, right before the river's confluence with Ob.

History edit

 
Irtysh River landscape in Burqin County, China

A number of Mongol and Turkic peoples occupied the river banks for many centuries. In 657, Tang Dynasty general Su Dingfang defeated Ashina Helu, qaghan of the Western Turkic Khaganate, at the Battle of Irtysh River, ending the Tang campaign against the Western Turks.[12] Helu's defeat ended the Khaganate, strengthened Tang control of Xinjiang, and led to Tang suzerainty over the western Turks.[13]

In the 15th and 16th centuries the lower and middle courses of the Irtysh lay within the Tatar Khanate of Sibir; its capital, Qashliq (also known as Sibir) was located on the Irtysh a few kilometres upstream from the mouth of the Tobol (where today's Tobolsk is situated).

The Khanate of Sibir was conquered by the Russians in the 1580s. The Russians started building fortresses and towns next to the sites of former Tatar towns; one of the first Russian towns in Siberia (after Tyumen) was Tobolsk, founded in 1587 at the fall of the Tobol into the Irtysh, downstream from the former Qashliq.[14] Farther east, Tara was founded in 1594, roughly at the border of the taiga belt (to the north) and the steppe to the south.[15]

In the 17th century the Dzungar Khanate, formed by the Mongol Oirat people, became Russia's southern neighbor, and controlled the upper Irtysh.[16] As a result of Russia's confrontation with the Dzungars in the Peter the Great's era,[17] the Russians founded the cities of Omsk in 1716, Semipalatinsk in 1718, Ust-Kamenogorsk in 1720, and Petropavlovsk in 1752.

The Chinese Qing Empire conquered Dzungaria in the 1750s. This prompted an increase in the Russian authorities' attention to their borderland; in 1756, the Orenburg Governor Ivan Neplyuyev even proposed the annexation of the Lake Zaysan region, but this project was forestalled by Chinese successes.[18] Concerns were raised in Russia (1759) about the (theoretical) possibility of a Chinese fleet sailing from Lake Zaysan down the Irtysh and into Western Siberia. A Russian expedition visited Lake Zaysan in 1764, and concluded that such a riverine invasion would not be likely. Nonetheless, a chain of Russian pickets was established on the Bukhtarma River, north of Lake Zaysan.[19] Thus the border between the two empires in the Irtysh basin became roughly delineated, with a (sparse) chain of guard posts on both sides.

The situation in the borderlands in the mid-19th century is described in a report by A. Abramof (ru; 1865). Even though the Zaysan region was recognized by both parties as part of the Qing empire, it had been annually used, by fishing expeditions sent by the Siberian Cossack Host. The summer expeditions started in 1803, and in 1822–25 their range was expanded through the entire Lake Zaysan and to the mouth of the Black Irtysh. Through the mid-19th century, the Qing presence on the upper Irtysh was mostly limited to the annual visit of the Qing amban from Chuguchak to one of the Cossacks' fishing stations (Batavski Piket).[20]

The border between the Russian and the Qing empires in the Irtysh basin was established along the line fairly similar to China's modern border with Russia and Kazakhstan by the Convention of Peking of 1860.[21] The actual border line pursuant to the convention was drawn by the Protocol of Chuguchak (1864), leaving Lake Zaysan on the Russian side.[22][23] The Qing empire's military presence in the Irtysh basin crumbled during the 1862–77 Dungan Revolt. After the fall of the rebellion and the reconquest of Xinjiang by Zuo Zongtang, the border between the Russian and the Qing empires in the Irtysh basin was further slightly readjusted, in Russia's favor, by the Treaty of Saint Petersburg (1881).

Cultural references edit

The Irtysh River serves as a backdrop in the epilogue of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's 1866 novel Crime and Punishment. In Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's The GULAG Archipelago, the chapter "The White Kitten" details Georgi Tenno's escape from a camp along this river.

Other uses edit

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ [1] Bitig Kz: ´“Name of the “Irtysh” river.´, 20 September 2020
  2. ^ The Secret History of the Mongols
  3. ^ Abramof 1865, p. 65, and the map before p. 65.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2010-02-07.
  5. ^ "Xinjiang Kalasuke 140MW Hydroelectric Project".
  6. ^ 考察调研组专家考察在建的喀腊塑克水利枢纽工程 (A group of experts visits the Kalasuke Dam), 2010-08-05
  7. ^ Skornyakova, V. A.; Timasheva, I. Ye. (1980), "The possible environmental impact of the anti-Irtysh and problems of rational nature management", Soviet Geography, 21 (10): 638–644, doi:10.1080/00385417.1980.10640361
  8. ^ Petr, T., ed. (1999), Fish and Fisheries at Higher Altitudes: Asia, Issue 385 of FAO fisheries technical paper, ISSN 0429-9345, Food & Agriculture Org., p. 257, ISBN 978-9251043097 (An English translation of the original paper published in the Vestnik Moskovskogo Universiteta in 1979).
  9. ^ KAZAKHSTAN: ENVIRONMENTALISTS SAY CHINA MISUSING CROSS-BORDER RIVERS 2017-11-07 at the Wayback Machine. By Gulnoza Saidazimova, 7/16/2006.
  10. ^ Sievers, Eric W. (2002), (PDF), Texas International Law Journal, 37 (1), archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-09-21, retrieved 2013-09-19
  11. ^ Kulikov, Evgeny Vyacheslavovich (Куликов Евгений Вячеславович) (2013-08-23), , archived from the original on 2013-09-25, retrieved 2013-09-21
  12. ^ Jonathan Karem Skaff (2009). Nicola Di Cosmo (ed.). Military Culture in Imperial China. Harvard University Press. pp. 181–185. ISBN 978-0-674-03109-8.
  13. ^ James A. Millward (2007). Eurasian Crossroads: A History of Xinjiang. Columbia University Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-231-13924-3.
  14. ^ Forsyth, James (1994), A History of the Peoples of Siberia: Russia's North Asian Colony 1581-1990, Cambridge University Press, p. 34, ISBN 9780521477710
  15. ^ March, G. Patrick (1996), Eastern Destiny: Russia in Asia and the North Pacific, ABC-CLIO, p. 31, ISBN 978-0275956486
  16. ^ Forsyth 1994, pp. 37, 125–127
  17. ^ Forsyth 1994, p. 128
  18. ^ Abramof 1865, p. 65
  19. ^ Abramof 1865, p. 66
  20. ^ Abramof 1865, pp. 62–63; see also the border shown on the map before p. 65.
  21. ^ Articles 2 and 3 in the Russian text of the treaty
  22. ^ (See the map)
  23. ^ "The Lost Frontier – Treaty Maps that Changed Qing's Northwestern Boundaries_The Changing Borders". npm.gov.tw.

General literature edit

  • Great Soviet Encyclopedia
  • Abramof, A. (1865), translated by John Michell, "The lake Nor-Zaysan and its neighborhood", Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London, 35: 58–69, doi:10.2307/3698078, JSTOR 3698078

External links edit

  •   Media related to Irtysh River at Wikimedia Commons

irtysh, turkic, 𐰼𐱅𐰾, 𐰇𐰏𐰕𐰏, romanized, ertis, ügüzüg, mongolian, Эрчис, мөрөн, erchis, mörön, erchleh, twirl, russian, Иртыш, kazakh, Ертіс, ertis, رتىس, chinese, 额尔齐斯河, pinyin, ěrqísī, xiao, erjing, رٿ, uyghur, إيرتيش, Әртиш, ertish, tatar, Иртеш, irteş, ﻴﺋرتئ. The Irtysh Old Turkic 𐰼𐱅𐰾 𐰇𐰏𐰕𐰏 romanized Ertis uguzug 1 Mongolian Erchis moron Erchis moron 2 erchleh twirl Russian Irtysh Kazakh Ertis Ertis ه رتىس Chinese 额尔齐斯河 pinyin E erqisi he Xiao erjing ع ع رٿ س ح Uyghur إيرتيش Әrtish Ertish Tatar Irtesh Irtes ﻴﺋرتئش Siberian Tatar Ejәrtesh Eya rtes is a river in Russia China and Kazakhstan It is the chief tributary of the Ob and is also the longest tributary river in the world IrtyshIrtysh watershedLocationCountryMongolia China Kazakhstan RussiaCitiesOskemen Semey Pavlodar Omsk Tobolsk Khanty MansiyskPhysical characteristicsSourceAltai Mountains locationAltay Prefecture China coordinates47 52 39 N 89 58 12 E 47 87750 N 89 97000 E 47 87750 89 97000 elevation2 960 m 9 710 ft MouthOb locationKhanty Mansiysk Russia coordinates61 04 52 N 68 49 49 E 61 08111 N 68 83028 E 61 08111 68 83028 elevation20 m 66 ft Length4 248 km 2 640 mi Basin size1 643 000 km2 634 000 sq mi Discharge average2 150 m3 s 76 000 cu ft s near Tobolsk Basin featuresProgressionOb Kara SeaThe river s source lies in the Mongolian Altai in Dzungaria the northern part of Xinjiang China close to the border with Mongolia The Irtysh s main tributaries include the Tobol Demyanka and the Ishim The Ob Irtysh system forms a major drainage basin in Asia encompassing most of Western Siberia and the Altai Mountains Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Main tributaries 2 Economic use 3 Cities 4 Bridges 5 History 6 Cultural references 7 Other uses 8 See also 9 Citations 10 General literature 11 External linksGeography edit nbsp Map including the lower reaches of the Irtysh River nbsp The Irtysh in Omsk nbsp The Irtysh near Pavlodar in KazakhstanFrom its origins as the Kara Irtysh Vast Irtysh kara means Vast in Turkic languages but also black But in the context and geographic terms usually refers vast in the Mongolian Altay mountains in Xinjiang China the Irtysh flows northwest through Lake Zaysan in Kazakhstan meeting the Ishim and Tobol rivers before merging with the Ob near Khanty Mansiysk in western Siberia Russia after 4 248 kilometres 2 640 mi The name Black Irtysh Kara Irtysh in Kazakh or Cherny Irtysh in Russian is applied by some authors especially in Russia and Kazakhstan to the upper course of the river from its source entering Lake Zaysan The term White Irtysh in opposition to the Black Irtysh was occasionally used in the past to refer to the Irtysh below lake Zaysan 3 now this usage is largely obsolete Main tributaries edit The largest tributaries of the Irtysh are from source to mouth Kelan right Burqin right Kalzhyr right Kurshim right Naryn right Bukhtarma right Ulba right Uba right Chagan left Om right Tara right Uy right Osha left Shish right Ishim left Tobol left Noska left Demyanka right Konda left Economic use editIn Kazakhstan and Russia tankers passenger and Cargo ships navigate the river during the ice free season between April and October Omsk home to the headquarters of the state owned Irtysh River Shipping Company functions as the largest river port in Western Siberia On the Kazakhstan section of the river there are presently three major hydroelectric plants namely at Bukhtarma Ust Kamenogorsk and Shulbinsk The world s deepest lock with a drop of 42 metres 138 ft allows river traffic to by pass the dam at Ust Kamenogorsk 4 Plans exist for the construction of several more dams nbsp Tobolsk river wharves in 1912Three dams have been constructed on the Chinese section of the Irtysh as well the Keketuohai 可可托海 Dam 47 10 51 N 89 42 35 E 47 18083 N 89 70972 E 47 18083 89 70972 the Kalasuke 喀腊塑克 Dam 47 08 14 N 88 53 15 E 47 13722 N 88 88750 E 47 13722 88 88750 5 6 and the Project 635 Dam There are also the Burqin Chonghu er Dam and the Burqin Shankou Dam on the Irtysh s right tributary the Burqin River and the Jilebulake Dam and Haba River Shankou Dam on another right tributary the Haba River The Northern river reversal proposals widely discussed by the USSR planners and scientists in the 1960s and 1970s would send some of the Irtysh s and possibly Ob s water to the water deficient regions of central Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan Some versions of this project would have seen the direction of flow of the Irtysh reversed in its section between the mouth of the Tobol at Tobolsk and the confluence of the Irtysh with the Ob at Khanty Mansiysk thus creating an Anti Irtysh 7 While these gigantic interbasin transfer schemes were not implemented a smaller Irtysh Karaganda Canal was built between 1962 and 1974 to supply water to the dry Kazakh steppes and to one of the country s main industrial center Karaganda In 2002 pipelines were constructed to supply water from the canal to the Ishim and Kazakhstan s capital Nur Sultan In China a short canal was constructed in 1987 water intake at 47 26 31 N 87 34 11 E 47 44194 N 87 56972 E 47 44194 87 56972 to divert some of the Irtysh water to the endorrheic Lake Ulungur whose level had been falling precipitously due to the increasing irrigation use of the lake s main affluent the Ulungur River 8 In the last years of the 20th century and the early 2000s a much more major project the Irtysh Karamay Urumqi Canal was completed Increased water use in China has caused significant concerns among Kazakh and Russian environmentalists 9 10 According to a report published by Kazakhstan fishery researchers in 2013 the total Irtysh water use in China is about 3 cubic kilometres 0 7 cu mi per year as a result only about 2 3 of what would be the river s natural flow 6 km3 out of 9 km3 reach the Kazakh border 11 Cities edit nbsp An aerial view of the Irtysh in OmskMajor cities along the Irtysh from source to mouth include in China Fuyun Beitun Burqin in Kazakhstan Oskemen Semey Aksu Pavlodar in Russia Omsk Tara Tobolsk Khanty MansiyskBridges edit nbsp The Sixty Years of Victory Bridge in Omsk The name commemorates the 60th anniversary of the V E Day Seven railway bridges span the Irtysh They are located in the following cities About 15 km downstream from Serebryansk on the dead end branch line from Oskemen to Zyryanovsk Oskemen Semey on the Turkestan Siberia Railway Pavlodar on the South Siberian rail line Nur Sultan to Barnaul near Cherlak on the Middle Siberian rail line Srednesibirskaya magistral Omsk on the Trans Siberian Railway Opened in 1896 this is the oldest bridge on the river Tobolsk on the Tyumen Surgut lineAs the Kuytun Beitun Railway in China s Xinjiang is being extended toward Altay City a railway bridge over the Irtysh at Beitun will need to be constructed as well Numerous highway bridges over the Irtysh exist in China Kazakhstan and Russia The last bridge downstream on the Irtysh a highway bridge opened in 2004 can be found at Khanty Mansiysk right before the river s confluence with Ob History edit nbsp Irtysh River landscape in Burqin County ChinaA number of Mongol and Turkic peoples occupied the river banks for many centuries In 657 Tang Dynasty general Su Dingfang defeated Ashina Helu qaghan of the Western Turkic Khaganate at the Battle of Irtysh River ending the Tang campaign against the Western Turks 12 Helu s defeat ended the Khaganate strengthened Tang control of Xinjiang and led to Tang suzerainty over the western Turks 13 In the 15th and 16th centuries the lower and middle courses of the Irtysh lay within the Tatar Khanate of Sibir its capital Qashliq also known as Sibir was located on the Irtysh a few kilometres upstream from the mouth of the Tobol where today s Tobolsk is situated The Khanate of Sibir was conquered by the Russians in the 1580s The Russians started building fortresses and towns next to the sites of former Tatar towns one of the first Russian towns in Siberia after Tyumen was Tobolsk founded in 1587 at the fall of the Tobol into the Irtysh downstream from the former Qashliq 14 Farther east Tara was founded in 1594 roughly at the border of the taiga belt to the north and the steppe to the south 15 In the 17th century the Dzungar Khanate formed by the Mongol Oirat people became Russia s southern neighbor and controlled the upper Irtysh 16 As a result of Russia s confrontation with the Dzungars in the Peter the Great s era 17 the Russians founded the cities of Omsk in 1716 Semipalatinsk in 1718 Ust Kamenogorsk in 1720 and Petropavlovsk in 1752 The Chinese Qing Empire conquered Dzungaria in the 1750s This prompted an increase in the Russian authorities attention to their borderland in 1756 the Orenburg Governor Ivan Neplyuyev even proposed the annexation of the Lake Zaysan region but this project was forestalled by Chinese successes 18 Concerns were raised in Russia 1759 about the theoretical possibility of a Chinese fleet sailing from Lake Zaysan down the Irtysh and into Western Siberia A Russian expedition visited Lake Zaysan in 1764 and concluded that such a riverine invasion would not be likely Nonetheless a chain of Russian pickets was established on the Bukhtarma River north of Lake Zaysan 19 Thus the border between the two empires in the Irtysh basin became roughly delineated with a sparse chain of guard posts on both sides The situation in the borderlands in the mid 19th century is described in a report by A Abramof ru 1865 Even though the Zaysan region was recognized by both parties as part of the Qing empire it had been annually used by fishing expeditions sent by the Siberian Cossack Host The summer expeditions started in 1803 and in 1822 25 their range was expanded through the entire Lake Zaysan and to the mouth of the Black Irtysh Through the mid 19th century the Qing presence on the upper Irtysh was mostly limited to the annual visit of the Qing amban from Chuguchak to one of the Cossacks fishing stations Batavski Piket 20 The border between the Russian and the Qing empires in the Irtysh basin was established along the line fairly similar to China s modern border with Russia and Kazakhstan by the Convention of Peking of 1860 21 The actual border line pursuant to the convention was drawn by the Protocol of Chuguchak 1864 leaving Lake Zaysan on the Russian side 22 23 The Qing empire s military presence in the Irtysh basin crumbled during the 1862 77 Dungan Revolt After the fall of the rebellion and the reconquest of Xinjiang by Zuo Zongtang the border between the Russian and the Qing empires in the Irtysh basin was further slightly readjusted in Russia s favor by the Treaty of Saint Petersburg 1881 Cultural references editThe Irtysh River serves as a backdrop in the epilogue of Fyodor Dostoyevsky s 1866 novel Crime and Punishment In Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn s The GULAG Archipelago the chapter The White Kitten details Georgi Tenno s escape from a camp along this river Other uses editFC Irtysh Omsk a soccer team in Omsk Russia FC Irtysh Pavlodar a soccer team in Pavlodar Kazakhstan Irtysh Irtysh a Russian military hospital ship used at the Bering Strait Swim 2013 See also editGeography of China Geography of Kazakhstan Geography of RussiaCitations edit 1 Bitig Kz Name of the Irtysh river 20 September 2020 The Secret History of the Mongols Abramof 1865 p 65 and the map before p 65 Waterways World Latest Archived from the original on 2011 07 26 Retrieved 2010 02 07 Xinjiang Kalasuke 140MW Hydroelectric Project 考察调研组专家考察在建的喀腊塑克水利枢纽工程 A group of experts visits the Kalasuke Dam 2010 08 05 Skornyakova V A Timasheva I Ye 1980 The possible environmental impact of the anti Irtysh and problems of rational nature management Soviet Geography 21 10 638 644 doi 10 1080 00385417 1980 10640361 Petr T ed 1999 Fish and Fisheries at Higher Altitudes Asia Issue 385 of FAO fisheries technical paper ISSN 0429 9345 Food amp Agriculture Org p 257 ISBN 978 9251043097 An English translation of the original paper published in the Vestnik Moskovskogo Universiteta in 1979 KAZAKHSTAN ENVIRONMENTALISTS SAY CHINA MISUSING CROSS BORDER RIVERS Archived 2017 11 07 at the Wayback Machine By Gulnoza Saidazimova 7 16 2006 Sievers Eric W 2002 Transboundary Jurisdiction and Watercourse Law China Kazakhstan and the Irtysh PDF Texas International Law Journal 37 1 archived from the original PDF on 2013 09 21 retrieved 2013 09 19 Kulikov Evgeny Vyacheslavovich Kulikov Evgenij Vyacheslavovich 2013 08 23 Adapting of fisheries management to the changing Irtysh water basin hydrological regime archived from the original on 2013 09 25 retrieved 2013 09 21 Jonathan Karem Skaff 2009 Nicola Di Cosmo ed Military Culture in Imperial China Harvard University Press pp 181 185 ISBN 978 0 674 03109 8 James A Millward 2007 Eurasian Crossroads A History of Xinjiang Columbia University Press p 33 ISBN 978 0 231 13924 3 Forsyth James 1994 A History of the Peoples of Siberia Russia s North Asian Colony 1581 1990 Cambridge University Press p 34 ISBN 9780521477710 March G Patrick 1996 Eastern Destiny Russia in Asia and the North Pacific ABC CLIO p 31 ISBN 978 0275956486 Forsyth 1994 pp 37 125 127 Forsyth 1994 p 128 Abramof 1865 p 65 Abramof 1865 p 66 Abramof 1865 pp 62 63 see also the border shown on the map before p 65 Articles 2 and 3 in the Russian text of the treaty See the map The Lost Frontier Treaty Maps that Changed Qing s Northwestern Boundaries The Changing Borders npm gov tw General literature editGreat Soviet Encyclopedia Abramof A 1865 translated by John Michell The lake Nor Zaysan and its neighborhood Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London 35 58 69 doi 10 2307 3698078 JSTOR 3698078External links edit nbsp Media related to Irtysh River at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Irtysh amp oldid 1177926599, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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