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Ob (river)

The Ob (Russian: Обь, IPA: [opʲ]: Ob') is a major river in Russia. It is in western Siberia; and together with Irtysh forms the world's seventh-longest river system, at 5,410 kilometres (3,360 mi). It forms at the confluence of the Biya and Katun which have their origins in the Altai Mountains. It is the westernmost of the three great Siberian rivers that flow into the Arctic Ocean (the other two being the Yenisei and the Lena). Its flow is north-westward, then northward.

Ob
The Ob in Novosibirsk
Map of the Ob River watershed
Native nameОбь (Russian)
Location
CountryRussia
RegionAltai Krai, Novosibirsk Oblast, Tomsk Oblast, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, Yamalia
CitiesBiysk, Barnaul, Novosibirsk, Nizhnevartovsk, Surgut
Physical characteristics
SourceKatun
 • locationBelukha Mountain, Altai Republic
 • coordinates49°45′0″N 86°34′0″E / 49.75000°N 86.56667°E / 49.75000; 86.56667
 • elevation2,300 m (7,500 ft)
2nd sourceBiya
 • locationLake Teletskoye, Altai Republic
 • coordinates51°47′11″N 87°14′49″E / 51.78639°N 87.24694°E / 51.78639; 87.24694
 • elevation434 m (1,424 ft)
3rd sourceMost distant source: Ob-Irtysh system
 • locationnear Mang-tai-ch’ia-ta-fan pass, Altai Mountains, Xinjiang, 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)
Source confluenceNear Biysk
 • locationAltai Krai
 • coordinates52°25′54″N 85°01′26″E / 52.43167°N 85.02389°E / 52.43167; 85.02389
 • elevation195 m (640 ft)
MouthGulf of Ob
 • location
Ob Delta, Yamalia
 • coordinates
66°32′02″N 71°23′41″E / 66.53389°N 71.39472°E / 66.53389; 71.39472Coordinates: 66°32′02″N 71°23′41″E / 66.53389°N 71.39472°E / 66.53389; 71.39472
 • elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length3,700 km (2,300 mi)
Basin size2,972,497 km2 (1,147,688 sq mi) to 2,994,238 km2 (1,156,082 sq mi)
Width 
 • minimum140 m (460 ft)
 • average3,000 m (9,800 ft)
 • maximum19,000 m (62,000 ft)[1]
Depth 
 • average9 m (30 ft)
 • maximum40 m (130 ft)[1]
Discharge 
 • locationSalekhard[2] (Basin size: 2,917,508 km2 (1,126,456 sq mi)[3])
 • average(Period of data: 1971-2015)12,889 m3/s (455,200 cu ft/s)[3]

(Period of data: 1930-1984)12,475.1 m3/s (440,550 cu ft/s)[4]

(Period of data: 1999-2008)427 km3/a (13,500 m3/s)[5]
 • minimum2,360 m3/s (83,000 cu ft/s)[4]
 • maximum40,200 m3/s (1,420,000 cu ft/s)[4]
Discharge 
 • locationOb Estuary, Gulf of Ob (Kara Sea), Russia
 • average(Period of data: 1940-2017)402 km3/a (12,700 m3/s)[5] (Period of data: 1984-2018)414 km3/a (13,100 m3/s)}[5]
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftKatun, Anuy, Charysh, Aley, Parabel, Vasyugan, Irtysh, Severnaya Sosva
 • rightBiya, Berd, Inya, Tom, Chulym, Ket, Tym, Vakh, Pim, Kazym

The main city on its banks is Novosibirsk, the largest city in Siberia, and the third-largest city in Russia. It is where the Trans-Siberian Railway crosses the river.

The Gulf of Ob is the world's longest estuary.

Names

The internationally known name of the river is based on the Russian name Обь (Obʹ ). Possibly from Proto-Indo-Iranian *Hā́p-, "river, water" (compare Vedic áp-, Persian āb, Tajik ob, and Pashto obə, "water"). Katz (1990)[6] proposes Komi ob 'river' as the immediate source of derivation for the Russian name. Katz's proposal of a common Finno-Ugric root, borrowed early on from a pre-Indo-Iranian source related to Sanskrit ambhas- 'water' is deemed improbable by Rédei (1992),[7] who prefers to analyse this as a later loan from a descendant of the non-nasal root form *Hā́p-.

The Ob is known to the Khanty people as the As (the source of the name "Ostyak"), Yag, Kolta and Yema; to the Nenets people as the Kolta or Kuay; and to the Siberian Tatars as the Umar or Omass.

Geography

 
Map including the mouth of the Ob River

The Ob forms 25 km (16 mi) southwest of Biysk in Altai Krai at the confluence of the Biya and Katun rivers. Both these streams have their origin in the Altai Mountains, which gradually give way to the Ob Plateau.[8] The Biya has its sources in Lake Teletskoye and the 700 kilometres (430 mi) long Katun in a glacier on Mount Byelukha.

The Ob itself is in Russia. Its tributaries extend into northern Kazakhstan, a western corner of China and a tiny upland parcel of the western tip of Mongolia, where the wider borders match the drainage basin almost precisely. The river splits into more than one arm after the large Irtysh flows into it at about 69° E. Originating in China, the Irtysh is the furthest source of the Ob. From their respective sources to the confluence, the Irtysh measures 4,248 kilometers (2,640 mi) and the Ob 2,538 km (1,577 mi). Other noteworthy tributaries are: from the east, the Tom, Chulym, Ket, Tym and Vakh rivers; and, from the west and south, the Vasyugan, Irtysh (with the Ishim and Tobol rivers), and Severnaya Sosva.

The Ob zigzags west and north until it reaches 55° N, where it curves to the northwest, south of the Siberian Uvaly, at the western end of which it bends northwards, wheeling finally eastwards into the Gulf of Ob, a 1,000-kilometre-long (620-mile) bay of the Kara Sea, separating the Yamal Peninsula from the Gyda Peninsula.

The combined Ob-Irtysh system, the fourth-longest river system of Asia (after Yenisei, and China's Yangzi and Yellow rivers), is 5,410 kilometres (3,360 mi) long, and the area of its basin 2,990,000 square kilometres (1,150,000 sq mi). The river basin of the Ob consists mostly of steppe, taiga, swamps, tundra, and semi-desert topography. The floodplains of the Ob are characterised by many tributaries and lakes. The Ob is icebound at southern Barnaul from early in November to near the end of April, and at northern Salekhard, 150 km (93 mi) above its mouth, from the end of October to the beginning of June. The Ob River crosses several climatic zones. The upper Ob valley, in the south, supports grapes, melons and watermelons, whereas the lower reaches of the Ob are Arctic tundra. The most temperate climates on the Ob are at Biysk, Barnaul, and Novosibirsk.

 
Yenisei and Ob (right) flow into Kara Sea

Human use

 
The Ob River in Barnaul
 
A section of the Ob River

The Ob provides irrigation, drinking water, hydroelectric energy, and fishing (the river hosts more than 50 species of fish). There are several hydroelectric power plants along the Ob river, the largest being Novosibirskaya GES.[9]

The navigable waters within the Ob basin reach a total length of 15,000 km (9,300 mi). The importance of navigation in the Ob basin for transport was particularly great before the completion of the Trans-Siberian Railway, since, despite the general south-to-north direction of the flow of Ob and most of its tributaries, the width of the Ob basin provided for (somewhat indirect) transport in the east–west direction as well.

Until the early 20th century, a particularly important western river-port was Tyumen, located on the Tura, a tributary of the Tobol. Reached by an extension of the Yekaterinburg-Perm railway in 1885, and thus obtaining a rail link to the Kama and Volga rivers in the heart of Russia, Tyumen became an important railhead for some years until the railway extended further east. In the eastern reaches of the Ob basin, Tomsk on the Tom functioned as an important terminus.

Tyumen had its first steamboat in 1836, and steamboats have navigated the middle reaches of the Ob since 1845. In 1916, there were 49 steamers on the Ob; 10 on the Yenisei.

In an attempt to extend the Ob navigable system even further, a system of canals, utilising the Ket, 900 km (560 mi) long in all, was built in the late 19th-century to connect the Ob with the Yenisei, but soon abandoned as being uncompetitive with the railway.

The Trans-Siberian Railway, once completed, provided for more direct, year-round transport in the east–west direction. But the Ob river-system still remained important for connecting the huge expanses of Tyumen Oblast and Tomsk Oblast with the major cities along the Trans-Siberian route, such as Novosibirsk or Omsk. In the second half of the 20th century, construction of rail links to Labytnangi, Tobolsk, and the oil and gas cities of Surgut, and Nizhnevartovsk provided more railheads, but did not diminish the importance of the waterways for reaching places still not served by the rail.

A dam built near Novosibirsk in 1956 created the then-largest artificial lake in Siberia, called Novosibirsk Reservoir. From the 1960s through 1980s, Soviet engineers and administrators contemplated a gigantic project to divert some of the waters of Ob and Irtysh to Kazakhstan and the Soviet Central Asian republics, replenishing the Aral Sea as well. The project never left the drawing board, abandoned in 1986 for economic and environmental considerations.[10][11]

Pollution

Tributaries

The Irtysh is the major tributary of the Ob. The larger tributaries along its course are:

In addition, the Nadym and the Pur River flow into the Gulf of Ob and the Taz into the Taz Estuary, a side arm of the Gulf of Ob.

Cities

Cities along the river include:

Bridges

From a confluence to a source:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Ob River".
  2. ^ . River Discharge Database. Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment. 2010-02-13. Archived from the original on 2010-06-12. Retrieved 2010-11-06.
  3. ^ a b "Archived copy". from the original on 2021-11-26. Retrieved 2021-11-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ a b c . River Discharge Database. Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment. 2010-02-13. Archived from the original on 2010-06-12. Retrieved 2010-11-06.
  5. ^ a b c "River Discharge".
  6. ^ Katz, Hartmut. Zum Flußnamen Ob. — Specimena Sibirica III, pp. 93–95. Wien.
  7. ^ Rédei, Károly. Szófejtések. — Nyelvtudományi Közlemenyek 93, pp. 125–135.
  8. ^ Приобское плато 2022-07-02 at the Wayback Machine; Great Soviet Encyclopedia in 30 vols. — Ch. ed. A.M. Prokhorov. - 3rd ed. - M. Soviet Encyclopedia, 1969-1978. (in Russian)
  9. ^ "Location of Novosibirskaya GES". Google Maps. from the original on 9 September 2022. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  10. ^ Douglas R. Weiner, "A Little Corner of Freedom: Russian Nature Protection from Stalin to Gorbachev" 2017-01-09 at the Wayback Machine. University of California Press, 1999. ISBN 0-520-23213-5. p. 415
  11. ^ Michael H. Glantz, "Creeping Environmental Problems and Sustainable Development in the Aral Sea..." 2017-01-09 at the Wayback Machine. ISBN 0-521-62086-4. p. 174
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Ob". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

External links

  • The Top Ten: Longest Rivers of the World

river, other, uses, disambiguation, russian, Обь, opʲ, major, river, russia, western, siberia, together, with, irtysh, forms, world, seventh, longest, river, system, kilometres, forms, confluence, biya, katun, which, have, their, origins, altai, mountains, wes. For other uses see Ob disambiguation The Ob Russian Ob IPA opʲ Ob is a major river in Russia It is in western Siberia and together with Irtysh forms the world s seventh longest river system at 5 410 kilometres 3 360 mi It forms at the confluence of the Biya and Katun which have their origins in the Altai Mountains It is the westernmost of the three great Siberian rivers that flow into the Arctic Ocean the other two being the Yenisei and the Lena Its flow is north westward then northward ObThe Ob in NovosibirskMap of the Ob River watershedNative nameOb Russian LocationCountryRussiaRegionAltai Krai Novosibirsk Oblast Tomsk Oblast Khanty Mansi Autonomous Okrug YamaliaCitiesBiysk Barnaul Novosibirsk Nizhnevartovsk SurgutPhysical characteristicsSourceKatun locationBelukha Mountain Altai Republic coordinates49 45 0 N 86 34 0 E 49 75000 N 86 56667 E 49 75000 86 56667 elevation2 300 m 7 500 ft 2nd sourceBiya locationLake Teletskoye Altai Republic coordinates51 47 11 N 87 14 49 E 51 78639 N 87 24694 E 51 78639 87 24694 elevation434 m 1 424 ft 3rd sourceMost distant source Ob Irtysh system locationnear Mang tai ch ia ta fan pass Altai Mountains Xinjiang 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 Source confluenceNear Biysk locationAltai Krai coordinates52 25 54 N 85 01 26 E 52 43167 N 85 02389 E 52 43167 85 02389 elevation195 m 640 ft MouthGulf of Ob locationOb Delta Yamalia coordinates66 32 02 N 71 23 41 E 66 53389 N 71 39472 E 66 53389 71 39472 Coordinates 66 32 02 N 71 23 41 E 66 53389 N 71 39472 E 66 53389 71 39472 elevation0 m 0 ft Length3 700 km 2 300 mi Basin size2 972 497 km2 1 147 688 sq mi to 2 994 238 km2 1 156 082 sq mi Width minimum140 m 460 ft average3 000 m 9 800 ft maximum19 000 m 62 000 ft 1 Depth average9 m 30 ft maximum40 m 130 ft 1 Discharge locationSalekhard 2 Basin size 2 917 508 km2 1 126 456 sq mi 3 average Period of data 1971 2015 12 889 m3 s 455 200 cu ft s 3 Period of data 1930 1984 12 475 1 m3 s 440 550 cu ft s 4 Period of data 1999 2008 427 km3 a 13 500 m3 s 5 minimum2 360 m3 s 83 000 cu ft s 4 maximum40 200 m3 s 1 420 000 cu ft s 4 Discharge locationOb Estuary Gulf of Ob Kara Sea Russia average Period of data 1940 2017 402 km3 a 12 700 m3 s 5 Period of data 1984 2018 414 km3 a 13 100 m3 s 5 Basin featuresTributaries leftKatun Anuy Charysh Aley Parabel Vasyugan Irtysh Severnaya Sosva rightBiya Berd Inya Tom Chulym Ket Tym Vakh Pim KazymThe main city on its banks is Novosibirsk the largest city in Siberia and the third largest city in Russia It is where the Trans Siberian Railway crosses the river The Gulf of Ob is the world s longest estuary Contents 1 Names 2 Geography 3 Human use 4 Pollution 5 Tributaries 6 Cities 7 Bridges 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksNames EditThe internationally known name of the river is based on the Russian name Ob Obʹ Possibly from Proto Indo Iranian Ha p river water compare Vedic ap Persian ab Tajik ob and Pashto obe water Katz 1990 6 proposes Komi ob river as the immediate source of derivation for the Russian name Katz s proposal of a common Finno Ugric root borrowed early on from a pre Indo Iranian source related to Sanskrit ambhas water is deemed improbable by Redei 1992 7 who prefers to analyse this as a later loan from a descendant of the non nasal root form Ha p The Ob is known to the Khanty people as the As the source of the name Ostyak Yag Kolta and Yema to the Nenets people as the Kolta or Kuay and to the Siberian Tatars as the Umar or Omass Geography Edit Map including the mouth of the Ob River The Ob forms 25 km 16 mi southwest of Biysk in Altai Krai at the confluence of the Biya and Katun rivers Both these streams have their origin in the Altai Mountains which gradually give way to the Ob Plateau 8 The Biya has its sources in Lake Teletskoye and the 700 kilometres 430 mi long Katun in a glacier on Mount Byelukha The Ob itself is in Russia Its tributaries extend into northern Kazakhstan a western corner of China and a tiny upland parcel of the western tip of Mongolia where the wider borders match the drainage basin almost precisely The river splits into more than one arm after the large Irtysh flows into it at about 69 E Originating in China the Irtysh is the furthest source of the Ob From their respective sources to the confluence the Irtysh measures 4 248 kilometers 2 640 mi and the Ob 2 538 km 1 577 mi Other noteworthy tributaries are from the east the Tom Chulym Ket Tym and Vakh rivers and from the west and south the Vasyugan Irtysh with the Ishim and Tobol rivers and Severnaya Sosva The Ob zigzags west and north until it reaches 55 N where it curves to the northwest south of the Siberian Uvaly at the western end of which it bends northwards wheeling finally eastwards into the Gulf of Ob a 1 000 kilometre long 620 mile bay of the Kara Sea separating the Yamal Peninsula from the Gyda Peninsula The combined Ob Irtysh system the fourth longest river system of Asia after Yenisei and China s Yangzi and Yellow rivers is 5 410 kilometres 3 360 mi long and the area of its basin 2 990 000 square kilometres 1 150 000 sq mi The river basin of the Ob consists mostly of steppe taiga swamps tundra and semi desert topography The floodplains of the Ob are characterised by many tributaries and lakes The Ob is icebound at southern Barnaul from early in November to near the end of April and at northern Salekhard 150 km 93 mi above its mouth from the end of October to the beginning of June The Ob River crosses several climatic zones The upper Ob valley in the south supports grapes melons and watermelons whereas the lower reaches of the Ob are Arctic tundra The most temperate climates on the Ob are at Biysk Barnaul and Novosibirsk Yenisei and Ob right flow into Kara SeaHuman use Edit The Ob River in Barnaul A section of the Ob River The Ob provides irrigation drinking water hydroelectric energy and fishing the river hosts more than 50 species of fish There are several hydroelectric power plants along the Ob river the largest being Novosibirskaya GES 9 The navigable waters within the Ob basin reach a total length of 15 000 km 9 300 mi The importance of navigation in the Ob basin for transport was particularly great before the completion of the Trans Siberian Railway since despite the general south to north direction of the flow of Ob and most of its tributaries the width of the Ob basin provided for somewhat indirect transport in the east west direction as well Until the early 20th century a particularly important western river port was Tyumen located on the Tura a tributary of the Tobol Reached by an extension of the Yekaterinburg Perm railway in 1885 and thus obtaining a rail link to the Kama and Volga rivers in the heart of Russia Tyumen became an important railhead for some years until the railway extended further east In the eastern reaches of the Ob basin Tomsk on the Tom functioned as an important terminus Tyumen had its first steamboat in 1836 and steamboats have navigated the middle reaches of the Ob since 1845 In 1916 there were 49 steamers on the Ob 10 on the Yenisei In an attempt to extend the Ob navigable system even further a system of canals utilising the Ket 900 km 560 mi long in all was built in the late 19th century to connect the Ob with the Yenisei but soon abandoned as being uncompetitive with the railway The Trans Siberian Railway once completed provided for more direct year round transport in the east west direction But the Ob river system still remained important for connecting the huge expanses of Tyumen Oblast and Tomsk Oblast with the major cities along the Trans Siberian route such as Novosibirsk or Omsk In the second half of the 20th century construction of rail links to Labytnangi Tobolsk and the oil and gas cities of Surgut and Nizhnevartovsk provided more railheads but did not diminish the importance of the waterways for reaching places still not served by the rail A dam built near Novosibirsk in 1956 created the then largest artificial lake in Siberia called Novosibirsk Reservoir From the 1960s through 1980s Soviet engineers and administrators contemplated a gigantic project to divert some of the waters of Ob and Irtysh to Kazakhstan and the Soviet Central Asian republics replenishing the Aral Sea as well The project never left the drawing board abandoned in 1986 for economic and environmental considerations 10 11 Pollution EditTributaries EditThe Irtysh is the major tributary of the Ob The larger tributaries along its course are from the left from the rightKatun Peschanaya Anuy Charysh Aley Barnaulka Kasmala Shegarka Chaya Parabel Vasyugan Bolshoy Yugan Bolshoy Salym Irtysh Severnaya Sosva Shchuchya Synya Sob Bolshaya Rechka Biya Chumysh Berd Inya Tom Chulym Ket Tym Kievsky Yogan Vakh Vatinsky Yogan Tromyogan Pim Lyamin Kazym PoluyIn addition the Nadym and the Pur River flow into the Gulf of Ob and the Taz into the Taz Estuary a side arm of the Gulf of Ob Cities EditCities along the river include Barnaul Kamen na Obi Novosibirsk Russia s third largest city and Siberia s largest by population Kolpashevo Langepas Megion Nizhnevartovsk Surgut Khanty Mansiysk Beryozovo Labytnangi SalekhardBridges EditFrom a confluence to a source Surgut Bridge Railway bridge in Surgut Shegarsky bridge The bridge of northern bypass of Novosibirsk Dimitrov bridge in Novosibirsk First railway bridge across the Ob Trans Siberian Railway Communal October bridge in Novosibirsk Metro bridge in Novosibirsk longest Metro Bridge in the world Bugrinsky Bridge Komsomol railway bridge in Novosibirsk The bridge above the lock of Novosibirskaya HPP Railway bridge in Kamen na Obi Communal bridge railway automobile in Barnaul New bridge in BarnaulSee also Edit Siberia portalList of rivers of RussiaReferences Edit a b Ob River Ob River at Salekhard River Discharge Database Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment 2010 02 13 Archived from the original on 2010 06 12 Retrieved 2010 11 06 a b Archived copy Archived from the original on 2021 11 26 Retrieved 2021 11 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c Ob River at Salekhard River Discharge Database Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment 2010 02 13 Archived from the original on 2010 06 12 Retrieved 2010 11 06 a b c River Discharge Katz Hartmut Zum Flussnamen Ob Specimena Sibirica III pp 93 95 Wien Redei Karoly Szofejtesek Nyelvtudomanyi Kozlemenyek 93 pp 125 135 Priobskoe plato Archived 2022 07 02 at the Wayback Machine Great Soviet Encyclopedia in 30 vols Ch ed A M Prokhorov 3rd ed M Soviet Encyclopedia 1969 1978 in Russian Location of Novosibirskaya GES Google Maps Archived from the original on 9 September 2022 Retrieved 1 July 2017 Douglas R Weiner A Little Corner of Freedom Russian Nature Protection from Stalin to Gorbachev Archived 2017 01 09 at the Wayback Machine University of California Press 1999 ISBN 0 520 23213 5 p 415 Michael H Glantz Creeping Environmental Problems and Sustainable Development in the Aral Sea Archived 2017 01 09 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0 521 62086 4 p 174 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ob Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed Cambridge University Press External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ob River The Top Ten Longest Rivers of the World Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ob river amp oldid 1123955031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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