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Siberia

Siberia (/sˈbɪəriə/ sy-BEER-ee-ə; Russian: Сибирь, tr. Sibir', IPA: [sʲɪˈbʲirʲ] (listen)) is an extensive geographical region, constituting all of North Asia, from the Ural Mountains in the west to the Pacific Ocean in the east.[2] It has been a part of Russia since the latter half of the 16th century, after the Russians conquered lands east of the Ural Mountains. Siberia is vast and sparsely populated, covering an area of over 13.1 million square kilometres (5,100,000 sq mi), but home to merely one-fifth of Russia's population. Novosibirsk, Krasnoyarsk, and Omsk are the largest cities in the region.[citation needed]

Siberia
Сибирь

       Siberian Federal District
       Historical Russian Siberia
       North Asia (greatest extent of Siberia)

Coordinates: 60°0′N 105°0′E / 60.000°N 105.000°E / 60.000; 105.000Coordinates: 60°0′N 105°0′E / 60.000°N 105.000°E / 60.000; 105.000
ContinentAsia
CountryRussia
Parts
Area
 • Total13,100,000 km2 (5,100,000 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)
 • Total37.3 million[1]
DemonymSiberians

Because Siberia is a geographic and historic region and not a political entity, there is no single precise definition of its territorial borders. Traditionally, Siberia extends eastwards from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, and includes most of the drainage basin of the Arctic Ocean. The river Yenisey divides Siberia into two parts, Western and Eastern. Siberia stretches southwards from the Arctic Ocean to the hills of north-central Kazakhstan and to the northern parts of Mongolia and China.[2][3] The central part of Siberia (West and East Siberian economic regions) was considered the core part of the region in the Soviet Union. Beyond the core, Siberia's western part includes some territories of the Ural region, and the far eastern part has been historically called the Russian Far East.[2]

Siberia is known worldwide primarily for its long, harsh winters, with a January average of −25 °C (−13 °F).[4] It is geographically situated in Asia; however, having been colonized and incorporated into Russia, it is culturally and politically a part of Europe.[5] European cultural influences, specifically Russian, predominate throughout the region, due to it having had Russian emigration from Europe since the 16th century, forming the Siberian Russian sub-ethnic group.[5] Over 85% of the region's population is of European descent.[6][7]

Etymology

The origin of the name is unknown. Some sources say that "Siberia" originates from the Siberian Tatar word for "sleeping land" (Sib ir).[8] The modern usage of the name was recorded in the Russian language after the Russian conquest of Siberian Khanate. A further variant claims that the region was named after the Sibe people.[9] The Polish historian Chyliczkowski has proposed that the name derives from the proto-Slavic word for "north" (север, sever),[10] same as Severia. Anatole Baikaloff has dismissed this explanation. He said that the neighbouring Chinese, Turks, and Mongolians, who have similar names for the region, would not have known Russian. He suggests that the name might be a combination of two words with Turkic origin, "su" (water) and "bir" (wild land).[11] Another account sees the name as the ancient tribal ethnonym of the Sirtya [ru] (also "Syopyr" (sʲɵpᵻr)), a Paleoasiatic ethnic group assimilated by the Nenets.

History

Prehistory

 
Horseman hunting, with characteristic Xiongnu horse trappings, Southern Siberia, 280–180 BCE. Hermitage Museum.[12][13][14]

The Siberian Traps were formed by one of the largest-known volcanic events of the last 251 million years of Earth's geological history. Their activity continued for a million years and some scientists consider it a possible cause of the "Great Dying" about 250 million years ago,[15] – estimated to have killed 90% of species existing at the time.[16]

The region has paleontological significance, as it contains bodies of prehistoric animals from the Pleistocene Epoch, preserved in ice or in permafrost. Specimens of Goldfuss cave lion cubs, Yuka the mammoth and another woolly mammoth from Oymyakon, a woolly rhinoceros from the Kolyma, and bison and horses from Yukagir have been found.[17] Remote Wrangel Island and the Taymyr Peninsula are believed to have been the last places on Earth to support woolly mammoths as isolated populations until their extinction around 2000 BC.[18]

At least three species of human lived in Southern Siberia around 40,000 years ago: H. sapiens, H. neanderthalensis, and the Denisovans.[19] In 2010 DNA evidence identified the last as a separate species.[20]

Late Paleolithic southern Siberians appear to be related to paleolithic Europeans and the paleolithic Jōmon people of Japan.[21] Ancient DNA analysis has revealed that the oldest fossil known to carry the derived KITLG allele, which is responsible for blond hair in modern Europeans, is a 17,000 year old Ancient North Eurasian specimen from Siberia.[22] Ancient North Eurasian populations genetically similar to Mal'ta–Buret' culture and Afontova Gora were an important genetic contributor to Native Americans, Europeans, Ancient Central Asians, South Asians, and some East Asian groups (such as the Ainu people). Evidence from full genomic studies suggests that the first people in the Americas diverged from Ancient East Asians about 36,000 years ago and expanded northwards into Siberia, where they encountered and interacted with Ancient North Eurasians, giving rise to both Paleosiberian peoples and Ancient Native Americans, which later migrated towards the Beringian region, became isolated from other populations, and subsequently populated the Americas.[23][24]

Early history

 
Chukchi, one of many indigenous peoples of Siberia. Representation of a Chukchi family by Louis Choris (1816)

During past millennia different groups of nomads – such as the Enets, the Nenets, the Huns, the Xiongnu, the Scythians, and the Yugur inhabited various parts of Siberia. The Afanasievo and Tashtyk cultures of the Yenisey valley and Altay Mountains are associated with the Indo-European migrations across Eurasia.[25] The proto-Mongol Khitan people also occupied parts of the region. In the 13th century, during the period of the Mongol Empire, the Mongols conquered a large part of this area.[26]

With the breakup of the Golden Horde, the autonomous Khanate of Sibir formed in the late-15th century. Turkic-speaking Yakut migrated north from the Lake Baikal region under pressure from the Mongol tribes during the 13th to 15th century.[27] Siberia remained a sparsely populated area. Historian John F. Richards wrote: "... it is doubtful that the total early modern Siberian population exceeded 300,000 persons".[28]

The growing power of Russia in the West began to undermine the Siberian Khanate in the 16th century. First, groups of traders and Cossacks began to enter the area. The Russian Army was directed to establish forts farther and farther east to protect new Russian settlers who migrated from Europe. Towns such as Mangazeya, Tara, Yeniseysk, and Tobolsk developed, the last becoming the de facto capital of Siberia from 1590. At this time, Sibir was the name of a fortress at Qashliq, near Tobolsk. Gerardus Mercator, in a map published in 1595, marks Sibier both as the name of a settlement and of the surrounding territory along a left tributary of the Ob.[29] Other sources[which?] contend that the Sibe, an indigenous Tungusic people, offered fierce resistance to Russian expansion beyond the Urals. Some suggest that the term "Siberia" is a russification of their ethnonym.[9]

Russian Empire

 
Coat of arms of Siberia, which was a part of the Russian Imperial Coat of Arms until 1917
 
Map of the Siberian Route in the 18th century (green) and the early 19th century (red)

By the mid-17th century, Russia had established areas of control that extended to the Pacific Ocean. Some 230,000 Russians had settled in Siberia by 1709.[30] Siberia became one of the destinations for sending internal exiles. Exile was the main Russian punitive practice with more than 800,000 people exiled during the nineteenth century.[31][32]

The first great modern change in Siberia was the Trans-Siberian Railway, constructed during 1891–1916. It linked Siberia more closely to the rapidly industrialising Russia of Nicholas II (r. 1894–1917). Around seven million Russians moved to Siberia from Europe between 1801 and 1914.[33] Between 1859 and 1917 more than half a million people migrated to the Russian Far East.[34] Siberia has extensive natural resources: during the 20th century, large-scale exploitation of these took place, and industrial towns cropped up throughout the region.[35]

At 7:15 a.m. on 30 June 1908 the Tunguska Event felled millions of trees near the Podkamennaya Tunguska (Stony Tunguska) in central Siberia. Most scientists believe this resulted from the air burst of a meteor or a comet. Even though no crater has ever been found, the landscape in the (sparsely inhabited) area still bears the scars of this event.[36]

Soviet Union

 
Siberian Cossack family in Novosibirsk

In the early decades of the Soviet Union (especially in the 1930s and 1940s), the government used the Gulag state agency to administer a system of penal labour camps, replacing the previous katorga system.[37] According to semi-official Soviet estimates, which did not become public until after the fall of the Soviet government in 1991, from 1929 to 1953 more than 14 million people passed through these camps and prisons, many of them in Siberia. Another seven to eight million people were internally deported to remote areas of the Soviet Union (including entire nationalities or ethnicities in several cases).[38]

Half a million (516,841) prisoners died in camps from 1941 to 1943[39] during World War II.[citation needed] At other periods, mortality was comparatively lower.[40] The size, scope, and scale of the Gulag slave-labour camps remain subjects of much research and debate. Many Gulag camps operated in extremely remote areas of northeastern Siberia. The best-known clusters included Sevvostlag (the North-East Camps) along the Kolyma and Norillag near Norilsk, where 69,000 prisoners lived in 1952.[41] Major industrial cities of Northern Siberia, such as Norilsk and Magadan, developed from camps built by prisoners and run by former prisoners.[42]

Geography

 
View from Haiyrakan mountain, Tuva
 
Altai, Lake Kutsherla in the Altai Mountains
 
The peninsula of Svyatoy Nos, Lake Baikal
 
The river Vasyugan in the southern West Siberian Plain

Siberia spans an area of 13.1 million square kilometres (5,100,000 sq mi), covering the vast majority of Russia's total territory, and almost 9% of Earth's land surface (148,940,000 km2, 57,510,000 sq mi). It geographically falls in Asia, but is culturally and politically considered European, since it is a part of Russia.[5] Major geographical zones within Siberia include the West Siberian Plain and the Central Siberian Plateau.

Eastern and central Sakha comprises numerous north–south mountain ranges of various ages. These mountains extend up to almost 3,000 metres (9,800 ft), but above a few hundred metres they are almost completely devoid of vegetation. The Verkhoyansk Range was extensively glaciated in the Pleistocene, but the climate was too dry for glaciation to extend to low elevations. At these low elevations are numerous valleys, many of them deep and covered with larch forest, except in the extreme north where the tundra dominates. Soils are mainly turbels (a type of gelisol). The active layer tends to be less than one metre deep, except near rivers.

The highest point in Siberia is the active volcano Klyuchevskaya Sopka, on the Kamchatka Peninsula. Its peak reaches 4,750 metres (15,580 ft).

Mountain ranges

Geomorphological regions

Lakes and rivers

Grasslands

Geology

The West Siberian Plain, consisting mostly of Cenozoic alluvial deposits, is somewhat flat. In the mid-Pleistocene, many deposits on this plain resulted from ice dams which produced a large glacial lake. This mid- to late-Pleistocene lake blocked the northward flow of the Ob and Yenisey rivers, resulting in a redirection southwest into the Caspian and Aral seas via the Turgai Valley.[44] The area is very swampy, and soils are mostly peaty histosols and, in the treeless northern part, histels. In the south of the plain, where permafrost is largely absent, rich grasslands that are an extension of the Kazakh Steppe formed the original vegetation, most of which is no longer visible.[why?]

The Central Siberian Plateau is an ancient craton (sometimes named Angaraland) that formed an independent continent before the Permian (see the Siberian continent). It is exceptionally rich in minerals, containing large deposits of gold, diamonds, and ores of manganese, lead, zinc, nickel, cobalt, and molybdenum. Much of the area includes the Siberian Traps—a large igneous province. A massive eruptive period approximately coincided with the Permian–Triassic extinction event. The volcanic event is said[by whom?] to be the largest known volcanic eruption in Earth's history. Only the extreme northwest was glaciated during the Quaternary, but almost all is under exceptionally deep permafrost, and the only tree that can thrive, despite the warm summers, is the deciduous Siberian Larch (Larix sibirica) with its very shallow roots. Outside the extreme northwest, the taiga is dominant, covering a significant fraction of the entirety of Siberia.[45] Soils here are mainly turbels, giving way to spodosols where the active layer becomes thicker and the ice-content lower.

The Lena-Tunguska petroleum province includes the Central Siberian platform (some authors refer to it as the "Eastern Siberian platform"), bounded on the northeast and east by the Late Carboniferous through Jurassic Verkhoyansk foldbelt, on the northwest by the Paleozoic Taymr foldbelt, and on the southeast, south and southwest by the Middle Silurian to Middle Devonian Baykalian foldbelt.[46]: 228  A regional geologic reconnaissance study begun in 1932 and followed by surface and subsurface mapping revealed the Markova-Angara Arch (anticline). This led to the discovery of the Markovo Oil Field in 1962 with the Markovo—1 well, which produced from the Early Cambrian Osa Horizon bar-sandstone at a depth of 2,156 metres (7,073 ft).[46]: 243  The Sredne-Botuobin Gas Field was discovered in 1970, producing from the Osa and the Proterozoic Parfenovo Horizon.[46]: 244  The Yaraktin Oil Field was discovered in 1971, producing from the Vendian Yaraktin Horizon at depths of up to 1,750 metres (5,740 ft), which lies below Permian to Lower Jurassic basalt traps.[46]: 244 

Climate

 
Siberian taiga
 

     polar desert      tundra      alpine tundra      taiga      montane forest
     temperate broadleaf forest      temperate steppe      dry steppe

Vegetation in Siberia mostly consists of taiga, with a tundra belt on the northern fringe, and a temperate forest zone in the south.

The climate of Siberia varies dramatically, but it typically has short summers and long, brutally cold winters. On the north coast, north of the Arctic Circle, there is a very short (about one month long) summer.

Almost all the population lives in the south, along the route of the Trans-Siberian Railway. The climate in this southernmost part is humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb) with cold winters but fairly warm summers lasting at least four months. The annual average temperature is about 0.5 °C (32.9 °F). January averages about −20 °C (−4 °F) and July about +19 °C (66 °F), while daytime temperatures in summer typically exceed 20 °C (68 °F).[47][48] With a reliable growing season, an abundance of sunshine and exceedingly fertile chernozem soils, southern Siberia is good enough for profitable agriculture, as was demonstrated in the early 20th century.

By far the most commonly occurring climate in Siberia is continental subarctic (Koppen Dfc or Dwc), with the annual average temperature about −5 °C (23 °F) and an average for January of −25 °C (−13 °F) and an average for July of +17 °C (63 °F),[49] although this varies considerably, with a July average about 10 °C (50 °F) in the taiga–tundra ecotone. The business-oriented website and blog Business Insider lists Verkhoyansk and Oymyakon, in Siberia's Sakha Republic, as being in competition for the title of the Northern Hemisphere's Pole of Cold. Oymyakon is a village which recorded a temperature of −67.7 °C (−89.9 °F) on 6 February 1933. Verkhoyansk, a town further north and further inland, recorded a temperature of −69.8 °C (−93.6 °F) for three consecutive nights: 5, 6 and 7 February 1933. Each town is alternately considered the Northern Hemisphere's Pole of Cold – the coldest inhabited point in the Northern hemisphere. Each town also frequently reaches 30 °C (86 °F) in the summer, giving them, and much of the rest of Russian Siberia, the world's greatest temperature-variation between summer's highs and winter's lows, often well over 94–100+ °C (169–180+ °F) between the seasons.[50][failed verification]

Southwesterly winds bring warm air from Central Asia and the Middle East. The climate in West Siberia (Omsk, or Novosibirsk) is several degrees warmer than in the East (Irkutsk, or Chita) where in the north an extreme winter subarctic climate (Köppen Dfd or Dwd) prevails. But summer temperatures in other regions can reach +38 °C (100 °F). In general, Sakha is the coldest Siberian region, and the basin of the Yana has the lowest temperatures of all, with permafrost reaching 1,493 metres (4,898 ft). Nevertheless, Imperial Russian plans of settlement never viewed cold as an impediment. In the winter, southern Siberia sits near the center of the semi-permanent Siberian High, so winds are usually light in the winter.

Precipitation in Siberia is generally low, exceeding 500 millimetres (20 in) only in Kamchatka, where moist winds flow from the Sea of Okhotsk onto high mountains – producing the region's only major glaciers, though volcanic eruptions and low summer temperatures allow only limited forests to grow. Precipitation is high also in most of Primorye in the extreme south, where monsoonal influences can produce quite heavy summer rainfall.

Climate data for Novosibirsk, Siberia's largest city
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) −12.2
(10.0)
−10.3
(13.5)
−2.6
(27.3)
8.1
(46.6)
17.5
(63.5)
24.0
(75.2)
25.7
(78.3)
22.2
(72.0)
16.6
(61.9)
6.8
(44.2)
−2.9
(26.8)
−8.9
(16.0)
7.0
(44.6)
Daily mean °C (°F) −16.2
(2.8)
−14.7
(5.5)
−7.2
(19.0)
3.2
(37.8)
11.6
(52.9)
18.2
(64.8)
20.2
(68.4)
17.0
(62.6)
11.5
(52.7)
3.4
(38.1)
−6
(21)
−12.7
(9.1)
2.4
(36.3)
Average low °C (°F) −20.1
(−4.2)
−19.1
(−2.4)
−11.8
(10.8)
−1.7
(28.9)
5.6
(42.1)
12.3
(54.1)
14.7
(58.5)
11.7
(53.1)
6.4
(43.5)
0.0
(32.0)
−9.1
(15.6)
−16.4
(2.5)
−2.3
(27.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 19
(0.7)
14
(0.6)
15
(0.6)
24
(0.9)
36
(1.4)
58
(2.3)
72
(2.8)
66
(2.6)
44
(1.7)
38
(1.5)
32
(1.3)
24
(0.9)
442
(17.4)
Source: [51]

Global warming

Researchers, including Sergei Kirpotin at Tomsk State University and Judith Marquand at Oxford University, warn that Western Siberia has begun to thaw as a result of global warming. The frozen peat bogs in this region may hold billions of tons of methane gas, which may be released into the atmosphere. Methane is a greenhouse gas 22 times more powerful than carbon dioxide.[52] In 2008 a research expedition for the American Geophysical Union detected levels of methane up to 100 times above normal in the atmosphere above the Siberian Arctic, likely the result of methane clathrates being released through holes in a frozen "lid" of seabed permafrost around the outfall of the Lena and the area between the Laptev Sea and East Siberian Sea.[53][54]

Since 1988, experimentation at Pleistocene Park has proposed to restore the grasslands of prehistoric times by conducting research on the effects of large herbivores on permafrost, suggesting that animals, rather than climate, maintained the past ecosystem. The nature reserve park also conducts climatic research on the changes expected from the reintroduction of grazing animals or large herbivores, hypothesizing that a transition from tundra to grassland would lead to a net change in energy emission to absorption ratios.[55]

According to Vasily Kryuchkov, approximately 31,000 square kilometers of the Russian Arctic has subjected to severe environmental disturbance.

Fauna

Birds

 
Capercaillies occupy much of the Siberian taiga.

Order Galliformes

Family Tetraonidae

 
A muskox on Bolshoy Begichev Island in Laptev Sea

Family Phasianidae

Mammals

 

Order Artiodactyla

Order Carnivora

Family Canidae

Family Felidae

Family Mustelidae

Family Ursidae

Flora

 
Siberian larch Larix sibirica trees in summer. Kuznetsk Alatau Nature Reserve, Kemerovo Oblast

Politics

Notable sovereign states in Siberia

Borders and administrative division

 
Map of the most populated area of Siberia with clickable city names (SVG)

The term "Siberia" has both a long history and wide significance, and association. The understanding, and association of "Siberia" have gradually changed during the ages. Historically, Siberia was defined as the whole part of Russia and North Kazakhstan to the east of Ural Mountains, including the Russian Far East. According to this definition, Siberia extended eastward from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific coast, and southward from the Arctic Ocean to the border of Central Asia and the national borders of both Mongolia and China.[71]

Soviet-era sources (Great Soviet Encyclopedia and others)[3] and modern Russian ones[72] usually define Siberia as a region extending eastward from the Ural Mountains to the watershed between Pacific and Arctic drainage basins, and southward from the Arctic Ocean to the hills of north-central Kazakhstan and the national borders of both Mongolia and China. By this definition, Siberia includes the federal subjects of the Siberian Federal District, and some of the Ural Federal District, as well as Sakha (Yakutia) Republic, which is a part of the Far Eastern Federal District. Geographically, this definition includes subdivisions of several other subjects of Urals and Far Eastern federal districts, but they are not included administratively. This definition excludes Sverdlovsk Oblast and Chelyabinsk Oblast, both of which are included in some wider definitions of Siberia.

Other sources may use either a somewhat wider definition that states the Pacific coast, not the watershed, is the eastern boundary (thus including the whole Russian Far East), as well as all Northern Kazakhstan is its subregion in the south-west[2] or a somewhat narrower one that limits Siberia to the Siberian Federal District (thus excluding all subjects of other districts).[73] In Russian, 'Siberia' is commonly used as a substitute for the name of the federal district by those who live in the district itself, but less commonly used to denote the federal district by people residing outside of it. Due to the different interpretations of Siberia, starting from Tyumen, to Chita, the territory generally defined as 'Siberia', some people will define themselves as 'Siberian', while others not.

A number of factors in recent years, including the fomenting of 'Siberian separatism' have made the definition of the territory of Siberia a potentially controversial subject.[74] In the eastern extent of Siberia there are territories which are not clearly defined as either Siberia or the Far East, making the question of 'what is Siberia?' one with no clear answer, and what is a 'Siberian', one of self-identification.[75]

 
Novosibirsk is the largest city in Siberia
 
Amur waterfront in Khabarovsk
 
Yakutsk is the capital of the Sakha Republic

Major cities

The most populous city of Siberia, as well as the third most populous city of Russia, is the city of Novosibirsk. Present-day Novosibirsk is an important business, science, manufacturing and cultural center of the Asian part of Russia.

Omsk played an important role in the Russian Civil War serving as a provisional Russian capital, as well in the expansion into and governing of Central Asia. In addition to its cultural status, it has become a major oil-refining, education, transport and agriculture hub.

Other historic cities of Siberia include Tobolsk (the first capital and the only kremlin in Siberia), Tomsk (formerly a wealthy merchant's town) and Irkutsk (former seat of Eastern Siberia's governor general, near lake Baikal).

Other major cities include: Barnaul, Kemerovo, Krasnoyarsk, Novokuznetsk, Tyumen.

Wider definitions of geographic Siberia also include the cities of: Chelyabinsk and Yekaterinburg in the Urals, Khabarovsk and Vladivostok in the Russian Far East, and even Petropavlovsk in Kazakhstan and Harbin in China.

Economy

 
Russian oil and gas pipelines in use before international sanctions and boycotts following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

Novosibirsk is the largest by population and the most important city for the Siberian economy; with an extra boost since 2000 when it was designated a regional center for the executive bureaucracy (Siberian Federal District). Omsk is a historic and currently the second largest city in the region, and since 1950s hosting Russia's largest oil refinery.

Siberia is extraordinarily rich in minerals, containing ores of almost all economically valuable metals. It has some of the world's largest deposits of nickel, gold, lead, coal, molybdenum, gypsum, diamonds, diopside, silver and zinc, as well as extensive unexploited resources of oil and natural gas.[76] Around 70% of Russia's developed oil fields are in the Khanty-Mansiysk region.[77] Russia contains about 40% of the world's known resources of nickel at the Norilsk deposit in Siberia. Norilsk Nickel is the world's biggest nickel and palladium producer.[78]

Siberian agriculture is severely restricted by the short growing season of most of the region. However, in the southwest where soils consist of exceedingly fertile black earths and the climate is a little more moderate, there is extensive cropping of wheat, barley, rye and potatoes, along with the grazing of large numbers of sheep and cattle. Elsewhere food production, owing to the poor fertility of the podzolic soils and the extremely short growing seasons, is restricted to the herding of reindeer in the tundra—which has been practiced by natives for over 10,000 years.[citation needed] Siberia has the world's largest forests. Timber remains an important source of revenue, even though many forests in the east have been logged much more rapidly than they are able to recover. The Sea of Okhotsk is one of the two or three richest fisheries in the world owing to its cold currents and very large tidal ranges, and thus Siberia produces over 10% of the world's annual fish catch, although fishing has declined somewhat since the collapse of the USSR in 1991.[79]

Reported in 2009, the development of renewable energy in Russia is held back by the lack of a conducive government policy framework,[80][needs update] As of 2011, Siberia still offers special opportunities for off-grid renewable energy developments. Remote parts of Siberia are too costly to connect to central electricity and gas grids, and have therefore historically been supplied with costly diesel, sometimes flown in by helicopter. In such cases renewable energy is often cheaper.[81]

In 2020 the gross regional product of Siberia was 26.7 trillion  or around US$400 billion.[82]

Sport

The Yenisey Krasnoyarsk basketball team has played in the VTB United League since 2011–12.

Russia's third most popular sport, bandy,[83] is important in Siberia. In the 2015–16 Russian Bandy Super League season Yenisey from Krasnoyarsk became champions for the third year in a row by beating Baykal-Energiya from Irkutsk in the final.[84][85] Two or three more teams (depending on the definition of Siberia) play in the Super League, the 2016–17 champions SKA-Neftyanik from Khabarovsk as well as Kuzbass from Kemerovo and Sibselmash from Novosibirsk. In 2007 Kemerovo got Russia's first indoor arena specifically built for bandy.[86] Now Khabarovsk has the world's largest indoor arena specifically built for bandy, Arena Yerofey.[87] It was venue for Division A of the 2018 World Championship. In time for the 2020 World Championship, an indoor arena will be ready for use in Irkutsk. That one will also have a speed skating oval.[88]

The 2019 Winter Universiade was hosted by Krasnoyarsk.

Demographics

Population of Siberia[89][90]
Ethnicity Population %
Slavic 18,235,471 86.2%
Turkic 1,704,665 8.1%
Mongol 454,312 2.1%
Uralic 131,430 0.6%
Other 637,992 3.0%
 
Tomsk, one of the oldest Siberian cities, was founded in 1604.

According to the Russian Census of 2010, the Siberian and Far Eastern Federal Districts, located entirely east of the Ural Mountains, together have a population of about 25.6 million. Tyumen and Kurgan Oblasts, which are geographically in Siberia but administratively part of the Urals Federal District, together have a population of about 4.3 million. Thus, the whole region of Siberia (in the broadest usage of the term) is home to approximately 30 million people.[91] It has a population density of about three people per square kilometre.

The largest ethnic group in Siberia is Slavic-origin Russians, including their sub-ethnic group Siberians, and russified Ukrainians.[92] Slavic and other Indo-European ethnicities make up the vast majority (over 85%) of the Siberian population. There are also other groups of indigenous Siberian and non-indigenous ethnic origin. A minority of the current population are descendants of Mongol or Turkic people (mainly Buryats, Yakuts, Tuvans, Altai and Khakas) or northern indigenous people. Slavic-origin Russians outnumber all of the indigenous peoples combined, except in the Republics of Tuva and Sakha.

According to the 2002 census there are 500,000 Tatars in Siberia, but of these, 300,000 are Volga Tatars who also settled in Siberia during periods of colonization and are thus also non-indigenous Siberians, in contrast to the 200,000 Siberian Tatars which are indigenous to Siberia.[93] Of the indigenous Siberians, the Mongol-speaking Buryats, numbering approximately 500,000, are the most numerous group in Siberia, and they are mainly concentrated in their homeland, the Buryat Republic.[94] According to the 2010 census there were 478,085 indigenous Turkic-speaking Yakuts.[95] Other ethnic groups indigenous to Siberia include Kets, Evenks, Chukchis, Koryaks, Yupiks, and Yukaghirs.

About seventy percent of Siberia's people live in cities, mainly in apartments.[96] Many people also live in rural areas, in simple, spacious, log houses. Novosibirsk[97] is the largest city in Siberia, with a population of about 1.6 million. Tobolsk, Tomsk, Tyumen, Krasnoyarsk, Irkutsk, and Omsk are the older, historical centers.

Religion

There are a variety of beliefs throughout Siberia, including Orthodox Christianity, other denominations of Christianity, Tibetan Buddhism and Islam.[98] The Siberian Federal District alone has an estimation of 250,000 Muslims. An estimated 70,000 Jews live in Siberia,[99] some in the Jewish Autonomous Region.[100] The predominant religious group is the Russian Orthodox Church.

Tradition regards Siberia the archetypal home of shamanism, and polytheism is popular.[101] These native sacred practices are considered by the tribes to be very ancient. There are records of Siberian tribal healing practices dating back to the 13th century.[102] The vast territory of Siberia has many different local traditions of gods. These include: Ak Ana, Anapel, Bugady Musun, Kara Khan, Khaltesh-Anki, Kini'je, Ku'urkil, Nga, Nu'tenut, Num-Torum, Pon, Pugu, Todote, Toko'yoto, Tomam, Xaya Iccita and Zonget. Places with sacred areas include Olkhon, an island in Lake Baikal.

Transport

Many cities in northern Siberia, such as Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, cannot be reached by road, as there are virtually none connecting from other major cities in Russia or Asia. Siberia can be reached through the Trans-Siberian Railway. The Trans-Siberian Railway operates from Moscow in the west to Vladivostok in the east. Cities that are located far from the railway are reached by air or by the separate Baikal–Amur Railway (BAM).

Culture

Cuisine

Stroganina is a raw fish dish of the indigenous people of northern Arctic Siberia made from raw, thin, long-sliced frozen fish.[103] It is a popular dish with native Siberians.[104] Siberia is also known for its pelmeni dumpling; which in the winter are traditionally frozen and stored outdoors. In addition, there are various berry, nut and mushroom dishes making use of the riches of abundant nature.

See also

References

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siberia, confused, with, serbia, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, ɪər, beer, russian, Сибирь, sibir, sʲɪˈbʲirʲ, listen, extensive, geographical, region, constituting, north, asia, from, ural, mountains, west, pacific, ocean, east, . Not to be confused with Serbia Siberian redirects here For other uses see Siberia disambiguation and Siberian disambiguation Siberia s aɪ ˈ b ɪer i e sy BEER ee e Russian Sibir tr Sibir IPA sʲɪˈbʲirʲ listen is an extensive geographical region constituting all of North Asia from the Ural Mountains in the west to the Pacific Ocean in the east 2 It has been a part of Russia since the latter half of the 16th century after the Russians conquered lands east of the Ural Mountains Siberia is vast and sparsely populated covering an area of over 13 1 million square kilometres 5 100 000 sq mi but home to merely one fifth of Russia s population Novosibirsk Krasnoyarsk and Omsk are the largest cities in the region citation needed Siberia SibirGeographical region Siberian Federal District Historical Russian Siberia North Asia greatest extent of Siberia Coordinates 60 0 N 105 0 E 60 000 N 105 000 E 60 000 105 000 Coordinates 60 0 N 105 0 E 60 000 N 105 000 E 60 000 105 000ContinentAsiaCountryRussiaPartsWestern SiberiaCentral SiberiaRussian Far EastArea Total13 100 000 km2 5 100 000 sq mi Population 2022 Total37 3 million 1 DemonymSiberiansBecause Siberia is a geographic and historic region and not a political entity there is no single precise definition of its territorial borders Traditionally Siberia extends eastwards from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific Ocean and includes most of the drainage basin of the Arctic Ocean The river Yenisey divides Siberia into two parts Western and Eastern Siberia stretches southwards from the Arctic Ocean to the hills of north central Kazakhstan and to the northern parts of Mongolia and China 2 3 The central part of Siberia West and East Siberian economic regions was considered the core part of the region in the Soviet Union Beyond the core Siberia s western part includes some territories of the Ural region and the far eastern part has been historically called the Russian Far East 2 Siberia is known worldwide primarily for its long harsh winters with a January average of 25 C 13 F 4 It is geographically situated in Asia however having been colonized and incorporated into Russia it is culturally and politically a part of Europe 5 European cultural influences specifically Russian predominate throughout the region due to it having had Russian emigration from Europe since the 16th century forming the Siberian Russian sub ethnic group 5 Over 85 of the region s population is of European descent 6 7 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Early history 2 3 Russian Empire 2 4 Soviet Union 3 Geography 3 1 Mountain ranges 3 2 Geomorphological regions 3 3 Lakes and rivers 3 4 Grasslands 3 5 Geology 3 6 Climate 3 6 1 Global warming 4 Fauna 4 1 Birds 4 2 Order Galliformes 4 2 1 Family Tetraonidae 4 2 2 Family Phasianidae 4 3 Mammals 4 4 Order Artiodactyla 4 5 Order Carnivora 4 5 1 Family Canidae 4 5 2 Family Felidae 4 5 3 Family Mustelidae 4 5 4 Family Ursidae 5 Flora 6 Politics 6 1 Notable sovereign states in Siberia 7 Borders and administrative division 7 1 Major cities 8 Economy 9 Sport 10 Demographics 11 Religion 12 Transport 13 Culture 13 1 Cuisine 14 See also 15 References 16 BibliographyEtymology EditThe origin of the name is unknown Some sources say that Siberia originates from the Siberian Tatar word for sleeping land Sib ir 8 The modern usage of the name was recorded in the Russian language after the Russian conquest of Siberian Khanate A further variant claims that the region was named after the Sibe people 9 The Polish historian Chyliczkowski has proposed that the name derives from the proto Slavic word for north sever sever 10 same as Severia Anatole Baikaloff has dismissed this explanation He said that the neighbouring Chinese Turks and Mongolians who have similar names for the region would not have known Russian He suggests that the name might be a combination of two words with Turkic origin su water and bir wild land 11 Another account sees the name as the ancient tribal ethnonym of the Sirtya ru also Syopyr sʲɵpᵻr a Paleoasiatic ethnic group assimilated by the Nenets History EditMain articles Prehistory of Siberia History of Siberia and List of Russian explorers Prehistory Edit Horseman hunting with characteristic Xiongnu horse trappings Southern Siberia 280 180 BCE Hermitage Museum 12 13 14 The Siberian Traps were formed by one of the largest known volcanic events of the last 251 million years of Earth s geological history Their activity continued for a million years and some scientists consider it a possible cause of the Great Dying about 250 million years ago 15 estimated to have killed 90 of species existing at the time 16 The region has paleontological significance as it contains bodies of prehistoric animals from the Pleistocene Epoch preserved in ice or in permafrost Specimens of Goldfuss cave lion cubs Yuka the mammoth and another woolly mammoth from Oymyakon a woolly rhinoceros from the Kolyma and bison and horses from Yukagir have been found 17 Remote Wrangel Island and the Taymyr Peninsula are believed to have been the last places on Earth to support woolly mammoths as isolated populations until their extinction around 2000 BC 18 At least three species of human lived in Southern Siberia around 40 000 years ago H sapiens H neanderthalensis and the Denisovans 19 In 2010 DNA evidence identified the last as a separate species 20 Late Paleolithic southern Siberians appear to be related to paleolithic Europeans and the paleolithic Jōmon people of Japan 21 Ancient DNA analysis has revealed that the oldest fossil known to carry the derived KITLG allele which is responsible for blond hair in modern Europeans is a 17 000 year old Ancient North Eurasian specimen from Siberia 22 Ancient North Eurasian populations genetically similar to Mal ta Buret culture and Afontova Gora were an important genetic contributor to Native Americans Europeans Ancient Central Asians South Asians and some East Asian groups such as the Ainu people Evidence from full genomic studies suggests that the first people in the Americas diverged from Ancient East Asians about 36 000 years ago and expanded northwards into Siberia where they encountered and interacted with Ancient North Eurasians giving rise to both Paleosiberian peoples and Ancient Native Americans which later migrated towards the Beringian region became isolated from other populations and subsequently populated the Americas 23 24 Early history Edit Chukchi one of many indigenous peoples of Siberia Representation of a Chukchi family by Louis Choris 1816 During past millennia different groups of nomads such as the Enets the Nenets the Huns the Xiongnu the Scythians and the Yugur inhabited various parts of Siberia The Afanasievo and Tashtyk cultures of the Yenisey valley and Altay Mountains are associated with the Indo European migrations across Eurasia 25 The proto Mongol Khitan people also occupied parts of the region In the 13th century during the period of the Mongol Empire the Mongols conquered a large part of this area 26 With the breakup of the Golden Horde the autonomous Khanate of Sibir formed in the late 15th century Turkic speaking Yakut migrated north from the Lake Baikal region under pressure from the Mongol tribes during the 13th to 15th century 27 Siberia remained a sparsely populated area Historian John F Richards wrote it is doubtful that the total early modern Siberian population exceeded 300 000 persons 28 Further information Russian conquest of Siberia The growing power of Russia in the West began to undermine the Siberian Khanate in the 16th century First groups of traders and Cossacks began to enter the area The Russian Army was directed to establish forts farther and farther east to protect new Russian settlers who migrated from Europe Towns such as Mangazeya Tara Yeniseysk and Tobolsk developed the last becoming the de facto capital of Siberia from 1590 At this time Sibir was the name of a fortress at Qashliq near Tobolsk Gerardus Mercator in a map published in 1595 marks Sibier both as the name of a settlement and of the surrounding territory along a left tributary of the Ob 29 Other sources which contend that the Sibe an indigenous Tungusic people offered fierce resistance to Russian expansion beyond the Urals Some suggest that the term Siberia is a russification of their ethnonym 9 Russian Empire Edit Coat of arms of Siberia which was a part of the Russian Imperial Coat of Arms until 1917 Map of the Siberian Route in the 18th century green and the early 19th century red By the mid 17th century Russia had established areas of control that extended to the Pacific Ocean Some 230 000 Russians had settled in Siberia by 1709 30 Siberia became one of the destinations for sending internal exiles Exile was the main Russian punitive practice with more than 800 000 people exiled during the nineteenth century 31 32 The first great modern change in Siberia was the Trans Siberian Railway constructed during 1891 1916 It linked Siberia more closely to the rapidly industrialising Russia of Nicholas II r 1894 1917 Around seven million Russians moved to Siberia from Europe between 1801 and 1914 33 Between 1859 and 1917 more than half a million people migrated to the Russian Far East 34 Siberia has extensive natural resources during the 20th century large scale exploitation of these took place and industrial towns cropped up throughout the region 35 At 7 15 a m on 30 June 1908 the Tunguska Event felled millions of trees near the Podkamennaya Tunguska Stony Tunguska in central Siberia Most scientists believe this resulted from the air burst of a meteor or a comet Even though no crater has ever been found the landscape in the sparsely inhabited area still bears the scars of this event 36 Soviet Union Edit Siberian Cossack family in Novosibirsk In the early decades of the Soviet Union especially in the 1930s and 1940s the government used the Gulag state agency to administer a system of penal labour camps replacing the previous katorga system 37 According to semi official Soviet estimates which did not become public until after the fall of the Soviet government in 1991 from 1929 to 1953 more than 14 million people passed through these camps and prisons many of them in Siberia Another seven to eight million people were internally deported to remote areas of the Soviet Union including entire nationalities or ethnicities in several cases 38 Half a million 516 841 prisoners died in camps from 1941 to 1943 39 during World War II citation needed At other periods mortality was comparatively lower 40 The size scope and scale of the Gulag slave labour camps remain subjects of much research and debate Many Gulag camps operated in extremely remote areas of northeastern Siberia The best known clusters included Sevvostlag the North East Camps along the Kolyma and Norillag near Norilsk where 69 000 prisoners lived in 1952 41 Major industrial cities of Northern Siberia such as Norilsk and Magadan developed from camps built by prisoners and run by former prisoners 42 Geography EditFurther information Geography of Russia and North Asia Geography Gulf of Ob Novaya Zemlya Kara Sea Yenisey Ob Taymyr Peninsula Severnaya Zemlya Arctic Ocean Central Siberian Plateau Siberian Federal District Lena Sakha Republic Laptev Sea New Siberian Islands Kolyma Verkhoyansk Range Urals Federal District Kazakhstan Ob Irtysh Altai Tian Shan Syr Darya Taklamakan Himalayas Pamir Hindukush Tibetan Lake Baikal Mongolia Gobi North China Plain Yangtze Plain Plateau Stanovoy Range Manchuria Korea Sakhalin Amur Sea of Okhotsk Japan Pacific OceanPhysical map of Northern Asia the map also contains parts of Central and East Asia View from Haiyrakan mountain Tuva Altai Lake Kutsherla in the Altai Mountains The peninsula of Svyatoy Nos Lake Baikal The river Vasyugan in the southern West Siberian Plain Koryaksky volcano towering over Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky on the Kamchatka Peninsula Siberia spans an area of 13 1 million square kilometres 5 100 000 sq mi covering the vast majority of Russia s total territory and almost 9 of Earth s land surface 148 940 000 km2 57 510 000 sq mi It geographically falls in Asia but is culturally and politically considered European since it is a part of Russia 5 Major geographical zones within Siberia include the West Siberian Plain and the Central Siberian Plateau Eastern and central Sakha comprises numerous north south mountain ranges of various ages These mountains extend up to almost 3 000 metres 9 800 ft but above a few hundred metres they are almost completely devoid of vegetation The Verkhoyansk Range was extensively glaciated in the Pleistocene but the climate was too dry for glaciation to extend to low elevations At these low elevations are numerous valleys many of them deep and covered with larch forest except in the extreme north where the tundra dominates Soils are mainly turbels a type of gelisol The active layer tends to be less than one metre deep except near rivers The highest point in Siberia is the active volcano Klyuchevskaya Sopka on the Kamchatka Peninsula Its peak reaches 4 750 metres 15 580 ft Mountain ranges Edit Altai Mountains Anadyr Highlands Baikal Mountains Khamar Daban Chersky Range Chukotka Mountains Dzhugdzhur Mountains Kolyma Mountains Koryak Mountains Sayan Mountains Tannu Ola Mountains Ural Mountains Verkhoyansk Mountains Yablonoi Mountains Geomorphological regions Edit See also Great Russian Regions Central Siberian Plateau Central Yakutian Lowland East Siberian Lowland East Siberian Mountains North Siberian Lowland South Siberian Mountains West Siberian Lowland Lakes and rivers Edit Main article Rivers in Russia Alazeya Anabar Angara Indigirka Irtysh Kolyma Lake Baikal Lena Nizhnyaya Tunguska Novosibirsk Reservoir Ob Podkamennaya Tunguska Popigay Upper Angara Uvs Nuur Yana Yenisey Grasslands Edit Ukok Plateau part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site 43 Geology Edit The West Siberian Plain consisting mostly of Cenozoic alluvial deposits is somewhat flat In the mid Pleistocene many deposits on this plain resulted from ice dams which produced a large glacial lake This mid to late Pleistocene lake blocked the northward flow of the Ob and Yenisey rivers resulting in a redirection southwest into the Caspian and Aral seas via the Turgai Valley 44 The area is very swampy and soils are mostly peaty histosols and in the treeless northern part histels In the south of the plain where permafrost is largely absent rich grasslands that are an extension of the Kazakh Steppe formed the original vegetation most of which is no longer visible why Belukha Mountain Verkhoyansk Range The Central Siberian Plateau is an ancient craton sometimes named Angaraland that formed an independent continent before the Permian see the Siberian continent It is exceptionally rich in minerals containing large deposits of gold diamonds and ores of manganese lead zinc nickel cobalt and molybdenum Much of the area includes the Siberian Traps a large igneous province A massive eruptive period approximately coincided with the Permian Triassic extinction event The volcanic event is said by whom to be the largest known volcanic eruption in Earth s history Only the extreme northwest was glaciated during the Quaternary but almost all is under exceptionally deep permafrost and the only tree that can thrive despite the warm summers is the deciduous Siberian Larch Larix sibirica with its very shallow roots Outside the extreme northwest the taiga is dominant covering a significant fraction of the entirety of Siberia 45 Soils here are mainly turbels giving way to spodosols where the active layer becomes thicker and the ice content lower The Lena Tunguska petroleum province includes the Central Siberian platform some authors refer to it as the Eastern Siberian platform bounded on the northeast and east by the Late Carboniferous through Jurassic Verkhoyansk foldbelt on the northwest by the Paleozoic Taymr foldbelt and on the southeast south and southwest by the Middle Silurian to Middle Devonian Baykalian foldbelt 46 228 A regional geologic reconnaissance study begun in 1932 and followed by surface and subsurface mapping revealed the Markova Angara Arch anticline This led to the discovery of the Markovo Oil Field in 1962 with the Markovo 1 well which produced from the Early Cambrian Osa Horizon bar sandstone at a depth of 2 156 metres 7 073 ft 46 243 The Sredne Botuobin Gas Field was discovered in 1970 producing from the Osa and the Proterozoic Parfenovo Horizon 46 244 The Yaraktin Oil Field was discovered in 1971 producing from the Vendian Yaraktin Horizon at depths of up to 1 750 metres 5 740 ft which lies below Permian to Lower Jurassic basalt traps 46 244 Climate Edit Main article Climate of Russia Siberian taiga polar desert tundra alpine tundra taiga montane forest temperate broadleaf forest temperate steppe dry steppeVegetation in Siberia mostly consists of taiga with a tundra belt on the northern fringe and a temperate forest zone in the south The climate of Siberia varies dramatically but it typically has short summers and long brutally cold winters On the north coast north of the Arctic Circle there is a very short about one month long summer Almost all the population lives in the south along the route of the Trans Siberian Railway The climate in this southernmost part is humid continental climate Koppen Dfb with cold winters but fairly warm summers lasting at least four months The annual average temperature is about 0 5 C 32 9 F January averages about 20 C 4 F and July about 19 C 66 F while daytime temperatures in summer typically exceed 20 C 68 F 47 48 With a reliable growing season an abundance of sunshine and exceedingly fertile chernozem soils southern Siberia is good enough for profitable agriculture as was demonstrated in the early 20th century By far the most commonly occurring climate in Siberia is continental subarctic Koppen Dfc or Dwc with the annual average temperature about 5 C 23 F and an average for January of 25 C 13 F and an average for July of 17 C 63 F 49 although this varies considerably with a July average about 10 C 50 F in the taiga tundra ecotone The business oriented website and blog Business Insider lists Verkhoyansk and Oymyakon in Siberia s Sakha Republic as being in competition for the title of the Northern Hemisphere s Pole of Cold Oymyakon is a village which recorded a temperature of 67 7 C 89 9 F on 6 February 1933 Verkhoyansk a town further north and further inland recorded a temperature of 69 8 C 93 6 F for three consecutive nights 5 6 and 7 February 1933 Each town is alternately considered the Northern Hemisphere s Pole of Cold the coldest inhabited point in the Northern hemisphere Each town also frequently reaches 30 C 86 F in the summer giving them and much of the rest of Russian Siberia the world s greatest temperature variation between summer s highs and winter s lows often well over 94 100 C 169 180 F between the seasons 50 failed verification Southwesterly winds bring warm air from Central Asia and the Middle East The climate in West Siberia Omsk or Novosibirsk is several degrees warmer than in the East Irkutsk or Chita where in the north an extreme winter subarctic climate Koppen Dfd or Dwd prevails But summer temperatures in other regions can reach 38 C 100 F In general Sakha is the coldest Siberian region and the basin of the Yana has the lowest temperatures of all with permafrost reaching 1 493 metres 4 898 ft Nevertheless Imperial Russian plans of settlement never viewed cold as an impediment In the winter southern Siberia sits near the center of the semi permanent Siberian High so winds are usually light in the winter Precipitation in Siberia is generally low exceeding 500 millimetres 20 in only in Kamchatka where moist winds flow from the Sea of Okhotsk onto high mountains producing the region s only major glaciers though volcanic eruptions and low summer temperatures allow only limited forests to grow Precipitation is high also in most of Primorye in the extreme south where monsoonal influences can produce quite heavy summer rainfall Climate data for Novosibirsk Siberia s largest cityMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 12 2 10 0 10 3 13 5 2 6 27 3 8 1 46 6 17 5 63 5 24 0 75 2 25 7 78 3 22 2 72 0 16 6 61 9 6 8 44 2 2 9 26 8 8 9 16 0 7 0 44 6 Daily mean C F 16 2 2 8 14 7 5 5 7 2 19 0 3 2 37 8 11 6 52 9 18 2 64 8 20 2 68 4 17 0 62 6 11 5 52 7 3 4 38 1 6 21 12 7 9 1 2 4 36 3 Average low C F 20 1 4 2 19 1 2 4 11 8 10 8 1 7 28 9 5 6 42 1 12 3 54 1 14 7 58 5 11 7 53 1 6 4 43 5 0 0 32 0 9 1 15 6 16 4 2 5 2 3 27 9 Average precipitation mm inches 19 0 7 14 0 6 15 0 6 24 0 9 36 1 4 58 2 3 72 2 8 66 2 6 44 1 7 38 1 5 32 1 3 24 0 9 442 17 4 Source 51 Global warming Edit Researchers including Sergei Kirpotin at Tomsk State University and Judith Marquand at Oxford University warn that Western Siberia has begun to thaw as a result of global warming The frozen peat bogs in this region may hold billions of tons of methane gas which may be released into the atmosphere Methane is a greenhouse gas 22 times more powerful than carbon dioxide 52 In 2008 a research expedition for the American Geophysical Union detected levels of methane up to 100 times above normal in the atmosphere above the Siberian Arctic likely the result of methane clathrates being released through holes in a frozen lid of seabed permafrost around the outfall of the Lena and the area between the Laptev Sea and East Siberian Sea 53 54 Since 1988 experimentation at Pleistocene Park has proposed to restore the grasslands of prehistoric times by conducting research on the effects of large herbivores on permafrost suggesting that animals rather than climate maintained the past ecosystem The nature reserve park also conducts climatic research on the changes expected from the reintroduction of grazing animals or large herbivores hypothesizing that a transition from tundra to grassland would lead to a net change in energy emission to absorption ratios 55 According to Vasily Kryuchkov approximately 31 000 square kilometers of the Russian Arctic has subjected to severe environmental disturbance Fauna EditBirds Edit See also List of birds of Russia Capercaillies occupy much of the Siberian taiga Order Galliformes Edit Family Tetraonidae Edit Hazel grouse 56 Siberian grouse 57 Black grouse 58 Black billed capercaillie 59 Western capercaillie 60 Willow ptarmigan 61 Rock ptarmigan 62 A muskox on Bolshoy Begichev Island in Laptev Sea Family Phasianidae Edit Daurian partridge Grey partridge Altai snowcock Japanese quail Common quail Ring necked pheasant Two saddled Bactrian camels shedding their coat in the Altai mountain range Mammals Edit See also List of mammals of Russia A Siberian tigress and cub Kamchatka brown bear at Kamchatka Peninsula Polar bear on Wrangel Island Order Artiodactyla Edit Moose Bactrian camel Wisent European bison Red deer Wild boar Siberian roe deer Manchurian wapiti 63 Siberian musk deer 64 Order Carnivora Edit Family Canidae Edit Grey wolf Tundra wolf Arctic fox Red foxFamily Felidae Edit Snow leopard Amur leopard 65 Siberian tiger 66 Eurasian lynx Pallas catFamily Mustelidae Edit Least weasel Stoat Mountain weasel Siberian weasel Steppe polecat Sable Eurasian river otter Asian badger WolverineFamily Ursidae Edit Asian black bear 67 Brown bear 68 Polar bearFlora Edit Siberian larch Larix sibirica trees in summer Kuznetsk Alatau Nature Reserve Kemerovo Oblast Larix sibirica Larix gmelinii Picea obovata 69 Pinus pumila 70 See also Category Flora of SiberiaPolitics EditMain article Siberian regionalism Notable sovereign states in Siberia Edit Xianbei state 1st 3rd century CE First Turkic Khaganate 6th 7th century Eastern Turkic Khaganate 7th century Second Turkic Khaganate 7th 8th century Mongol Empire 13th 14th century Khanate of Sibir 1468 1598 Tsardom of Russia 1598 1721 Russian Empire 1721 1917 Russian Republic 1917 1918 Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic 1918 1922 Far Eastern Republic 1920 1922 Tuvan People s Republic 1921 1944 Soviet Union 1922 1991 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic 1922 1991 Russian Federation 1991 present Borders and administrative division Edit Map of the most populated area of Siberia with clickable city names SVG Comparison of the nine biggest Siberian cities growth in the 20th century The term Siberia has both a long history and wide significance and association The understanding and association of Siberia have gradually changed during the ages Historically Siberia was defined as the whole part of Russia and North Kazakhstan to the east of Ural Mountains including the Russian Far East According to this definition Siberia extended eastward from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific coast and southward from the Arctic Ocean to the border of Central Asia and the national borders of both Mongolia and China 71 Soviet era sources Great Soviet Encyclopedia and others 3 and modern Russian ones 72 usually define Siberia as a region extending eastward from the Ural Mountains to the watershed between Pacific and Arctic drainage basins and southward from the Arctic Ocean to the hills of north central Kazakhstan and the national borders of both Mongolia and China By this definition Siberia includes the federal subjects of the Siberian Federal District and some of the Ural Federal District as well as Sakha Yakutia Republic which is a part of the Far Eastern Federal District Geographically this definition includes subdivisions of several other subjects of Urals and Far Eastern federal districts but they are not included administratively This definition excludes Sverdlovsk Oblast and Chelyabinsk Oblast both of which are included in some wider definitions of Siberia Other sources may use either a somewhat wider definition that states the Pacific coast not the watershed is the eastern boundary thus including the whole Russian Far East as well as all Northern Kazakhstan is its subregion in the south west 2 or a somewhat narrower one that limits Siberia to the Siberian Federal District thus excluding all subjects of other districts 73 In Russian Siberia is commonly used as a substitute for the name of the federal district by those who live in the district itself but less commonly used to denote the federal district by people residing outside of it Due to the different interpretations of Siberia starting from Tyumen to Chita the territory generally defined as Siberia some people will define themselves as Siberian while others not A number of factors in recent years including the fomenting of Siberian separatism have made the definition of the territory of Siberia a potentially controversial subject 74 In the eastern extent of Siberia there are territories which are not clearly defined as either Siberia or the Far East making the question of what is Siberia one with no clear answer and what is a Siberian one of self identification 75 Novosibirsk is the largest city in Siberia Federal subjects of Siberia GSE Subject Administrative centerUral Federal District Khanty Mansi Autonomous Okrug Khanty Mansiysk Kurgan Oblast Kurgan Tyumen Oblast Tyumen Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug SalekhardSiberian Federal District Altai Krai Barnaul Altai Republic Gorno Altaysk Irkutsk Oblast Irkutsk Khakassia Abakan Kemerovo Oblast Kemerovo Krasnoyarsk Krai Krasnoyarsk Novosibirsk Oblast Novosibirsk Omsk Oblast Omsk Tomsk Oblast Tomsk Tuva KyzylFar Eastern Federal District Buryatia Ulan Ude Sakha Yakutia Yakutsk Zabaykalsky Krai Chita Amur waterfront in Khabarovsk Vladivostok Primorsky Krai Yakutsk is the capital of the Sakha Republic Federal subjects of Siberia in wide sense Subject Administrative centerFar Eastern Federal District Amur Oblast Blagoveshchensk Chukotka Autonomous Okrug Anadyr Jewish Autonomous Oblast Birobidzhan Kamchatka Krai Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Khabarovsk Krai Khabarovsk Magadan Oblast Magadan Primorsky Krai Vladivostok Sakhalin Oblast Yuzhno SakhalinskUral Federal District Chelyabinsk Oblast Chelyabinsk Sverdlovsk Oblast YekaterinburgMajor cities Edit The most populous city of Siberia as well as the third most populous city of Russia is the city of Novosibirsk Present day Novosibirsk is an important business science manufacturing and cultural center of the Asian part of Russia Omsk played an important role in the Russian Civil War serving as a provisional Russian capital as well in the expansion into and governing of Central Asia In addition to its cultural status it has become a major oil refining education transport and agriculture hub Other historic cities of Siberia include Tobolsk the first capital and the only kremlin in Siberia Tomsk formerly a wealthy merchant s town and Irkutsk former seat of Eastern Siberia s governor general near lake Baikal Other major cities include Barnaul Kemerovo Krasnoyarsk Novokuznetsk Tyumen Wider definitions of geographic Siberia also include the cities of Chelyabinsk and Yekaterinburg in the Urals Khabarovsk and Vladivostok in the Russian Far East and even Petropavlovsk in Kazakhstan and Harbin in China Economy Edit Russian oil and gas pipelines in use before international sanctions and boycotts following Russia s 2022 invasion of Ukraine Novosibirsk is the largest by population and the most important city for the Siberian economy with an extra boost since 2000 when it was designated a regional center for the executive bureaucracy Siberian Federal District Omsk is a historic and currently the second largest city in the region and since 1950s hosting Russia s largest oil refinery Siberia is extraordinarily rich in minerals containing ores of almost all economically valuable metals It has some of the world s largest deposits of nickel gold lead coal molybdenum gypsum diamonds diopside silver and zinc as well as extensive unexploited resources of oil and natural gas 76 Around 70 of Russia s developed oil fields are in the Khanty Mansiysk region 77 Russia contains about 40 of the world s known resources of nickel at the Norilsk deposit in Siberia Norilsk Nickel is the world s biggest nickel and palladium producer 78 Siberian agriculture is severely restricted by the short growing season of most of the region However in the southwest where soils consist of exceedingly fertile black earths and the climate is a little more moderate there is extensive cropping of wheat barley rye and potatoes along with the grazing of large numbers of sheep and cattle Elsewhere food production owing to the poor fertility of the podzolic soils and the extremely short growing seasons is restricted to the herding of reindeer in the tundra which has been practiced by natives for over 10 000 years citation needed Siberia has the world s largest forests Timber remains an important source of revenue even though many forests in the east have been logged much more rapidly than they are able to recover The Sea of Okhotsk is one of the two or three richest fisheries in the world owing to its cold currents and very large tidal ranges and thus Siberia produces over 10 of the world s annual fish catch although fishing has declined somewhat since the collapse of the USSR in 1991 79 Reported in 2009 the development of renewable energy in Russia is held back by the lack of a conducive government policy framework 80 needs update As of 2011 update Siberia still offers special opportunities for off grid renewable energy developments Remote parts of Siberia are too costly to connect to central electricity and gas grids and have therefore historically been supplied with costly diesel sometimes flown in by helicopter In such cases renewable energy is often cheaper 81 In 2020 the gross regional product of Siberia was 26 7 trillion or around US 400 billion 82 Sport Edit KHL game HC Sibir Novosibirsk vs Amur Khabarovsk The Yenisey Krasnoyarsk basketball team has played in the VTB United League since 2011 12 Russia s third most popular sport bandy 83 is important in Siberia In the 2015 16 Russian Bandy Super League season Yenisey from Krasnoyarsk became champions for the third year in a row by beating Baykal Energiya from Irkutsk in the final 84 85 Two or three more teams depending on the definition of Siberia play in the Super League the 2016 17 champions SKA Neftyanik from Khabarovsk as well as Kuzbass from Kemerovo and Sibselmash from Novosibirsk In 2007 Kemerovo got Russia s first indoor arena specifically built for bandy 86 Now Khabarovsk has the world s largest indoor arena specifically built for bandy Arena Yerofey 87 It was venue for Division A of the 2018 World Championship In time for the 2020 World Championship an indoor arena will be ready for use in Irkutsk That one will also have a speed skating oval 88 The 2019 Winter Universiade was hosted by Krasnoyarsk Demographics EditMain article Demographics of Siberia See also Siberians and Indigenous peoples of Siberia Population of Siberia 89 90 Ethnicity Population Slavic 18 235 471 86 2 Turkic 1 704 665 8 1 Mongol 454 312 2 1 Uralic 131 430 0 6 Other 637 992 3 0 Tomsk one of the oldest Siberian cities was founded in 1604 According to the Russian Census of 2010 the Siberian and Far Eastern Federal Districts located entirely east of the Ural Mountains together have a population of about 25 6 million Tyumen and Kurgan Oblasts which are geographically in Siberia but administratively part of the Urals Federal District together have a population of about 4 3 million Thus the whole region of Siberia in the broadest usage of the term is home to approximately 30 million people 91 It has a population density of about three people per square kilometre The largest ethnic group in Siberia is Slavic origin Russians including their sub ethnic group Siberians and russified Ukrainians 92 Slavic and other Indo European ethnicities make up the vast majority over 85 of the Siberian population There are also other groups of indigenous Siberian and non indigenous ethnic origin A minority of the current population are descendants of Mongol or Turkic people mainly Buryats Yakuts Tuvans Altai and Khakas or northern indigenous people Slavic origin Russians outnumber all of the indigenous peoples combined except in the Republics of Tuva and Sakha According to the 2002 census there are 500 000 Tatars in Siberia but of these 300 000 are Volga Tatars who also settled in Siberia during periods of colonization and are thus also non indigenous Siberians in contrast to the 200 000 Siberian Tatars which are indigenous to Siberia 93 Of the indigenous Siberians the Mongol speaking Buryats numbering approximately 500 000 are the most numerous group in Siberia and they are mainly concentrated in their homeland the Buryat Republic 94 According to the 2010 census there were 478 085 indigenous Turkic speaking Yakuts 95 Other ethnic groups indigenous to Siberia include Kets Evenks Chukchis Koryaks Yupiks and Yukaghirs About seventy percent of Siberia s people live in cities mainly in apartments 96 Many people also live in rural areas in simple spacious log houses Novosibirsk 97 is the largest city in Siberia with a population of about 1 6 million Tobolsk Tomsk Tyumen Krasnoyarsk Irkutsk and Omsk are the older historical centers Religion EditSee also Shamanism in Siberia and Religion in Russia Transfiguration Cathedral Khabarovsk There are a variety of beliefs throughout Siberia including Orthodox Christianity other denominations of Christianity Tibetan Buddhism and Islam 98 The Siberian Federal District alone has an estimation of 250 000 Muslims An estimated 70 000 Jews live in Siberia 99 some in the Jewish Autonomous Region 100 The predominant religious group is the Russian Orthodox Church Tradition regards Siberia the archetypal home of shamanism and polytheism is popular 101 These native sacred practices are considered by the tribes to be very ancient There are records of Siberian tribal healing practices dating back to the 13th century 102 The vast territory of Siberia has many different local traditions of gods These include Ak Ana Anapel Bugady Musun Kara Khan Khaltesh Anki Kini je Ku urkil Nga Nu tenut Num Torum Pon Pugu Todote Toko yoto Tomam Xaya Iccita and Zonget Places with sacred areas include Olkhon an island in Lake Baikal Transport EditMany cities in northern Siberia such as Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky cannot be reached by road as there are virtually none connecting from other major cities in Russia or Asia Siberia can be reached through the Trans Siberian Railway The Trans Siberian Railway operates from Moscow in the west to Vladivostok in the east Cities that are located far from the railway are reached by air or by the separate Baikal Amur Railway BAM Culture EditCuisine Edit Stroganina is a raw fish dish of the indigenous people of northern Arctic Siberia made from raw thin long sliced frozen fish 103 It is a popular dish with native Siberians 104 Siberia is also known for its pelmeni dumpling which in the winter are traditionally frozen and stored outdoors In addition there are various berry nut and mushroom dishes making use of the riches of abundant nature See also Edit Siberia portalSiberian regionalism Tunguska BasinReferences Edit Ocenka chislennosti postoyannogo naseleniya na 1 yanvarya 2022 g i v srednem za 2021 g gov ru in Russian Retrieved 11 June 2022 a b c d Siberia Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 22 September 2021 a b Sibir Bolshaya sovetskaya enciklopediya The Great Soviet Encyclopedia in Russian Arctic Oscillation and Polar Vortex Analysis and Forecasts Atmospheric and Environmental Research Verisk Analytics Retrieved 20 May 2018 a b c Haywood A J 2010 Siberia A Cultural History Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199754182 VPN 2010 Perepis 2010 ru in Russian Archived from the original on 18 January 2012 Retrieved 3 April 2016 VPN 2010 Gks ru in Russian Archived from the original on 15 March 2013 Retrieved 3 April 2016 Siberia a b Crossley Pamela Kyle 2002 The Manchus Peoples of Asia Vol 14 3rd ed Wiley Blackwell p 213 ISBN 978 0 631 23591 0 Retrieved 28 December 2013 Czaplicka Marie Antoinette 1914 Aboriginal Siberia a study in social anthropology Oxford Clarendon Press p 20 Baikaloff Anatole December 1950 Notes on the origin of the name Siberia Slavonic and East European Review 29 72 288 Pankova Svetlana Simpson St John 21 January 2021 Masters of the Steppe The Impact of the Scythians and Later Nomad Societies of Eurasia Proceedings of a conference held at the British Museum 27 29 October 2017 Archaeopress Publishing Ltd pp 218 219 ISBN 978 1 78969 648 6 Inv nr Si 1727 1 69 1 70 Francfort Henri Paul 1 January 2020 Sur quelques vestiges et indices nouveaux de l hellenisme dans les arts entre la Bactriane et le Gandhara 130 av J C 100 apr J C environ Journal des Savants 37 Ollermann Hans 22 August 2019 Belt Plaque with a Bear Hunt From Russia Siberia Gold 220 180 B C The State Hermitage Museum St Petersburg Russia Yellowstone s Super Sister Archived from the original on 14 March 2005 Retrieved 17 April 2010 the Siberian Traps is the prime suspect in wiping out 90 percent of all living species 251 million years ago the most severe extinction event in Earth s history Discovery Channel Benton M J 2005 When Life Nearly Died The Greatest Mass Extinction of All Time Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28573 2 need quotation to verify Meet this extinct cave lion at least 10 000 years old world exclusive siberiantimes com Retrieved 30 January 2016 Wang Y Pedersen M W Alsos I g et al 2021 Late Quaternary dynamics of Arctic biota from ancient environmental genomics Nature 600 7887 86 92 Bibcode 2021Natur 600 86W doi 10 1038 s41586 021 04016 x PMC 8636272 PMID 34671161 DNA identifies new ancient human dubbed X woman BBC News 25 March 2010 Richards Michael P 2020 Archaeological Science Cambridge University Press p 23 ISBN 9780521195225 In early 2010 researchers published a complete mitochondrial genome sequence retrieved from a hominin excavated from the Denisova cave in Siberia The results demonstrated that the Denisovan lineage diverged early from the modern humans and Neanderthals Jomon Culture and the peopling of the Japanese archipelago advancements in the fields of morphometrics and ancient DNA ResearchGate Retrieved 18 August 2019 Evans Gavin 2019 Skin Deep Dispelling the Science of Race 1 ed Simon and Schuster p 139 ISBN 9781786076236 Raff Jennifer 9 June 2020 Origin A Genetic History of the Americas ISBN 978 1 5387 4971 5 Sapiens 8 February 2022 A Genetic Chronicle of the First Peoples in the Americas SAPIENS Retrieved 29 October 2022 Gibbons Ann 10 June 2015 Nomadic herders left a strong genetic mark on Europeans and Asians Science AAAS Naumov Igor V 2006 The Mongols in Siberia In Collins David Norman ed The History of Siberia Routledge Studies in the History of Russia and Eastern Europe Translated by Collins David Norman London Routledge p 44 ISBN 9781134207039 Retrieved 11 June 2019 In 1207 Chinggis Khan sent his troops north under the command of his elder son Jochi to subjugate the forest peoples Jochi was able to do so in the space of three years The only exception was the remote northern tribes Most of Siberia became part of the Mongol Empire This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Pakendorf B Novgorodov I N Osakovskij V L Danilova A B P Protod Jakonov A P Stoneking M 2006 Investigating the effects of prehistoric migrations in Siberia Genetic variation and the origins of Yakuts Human Genetics 120 3 334 353 doi 10 1007 s00439 006 0213 2 PMID 16845541 S2CID 31651899 Richards 2003 p 538 Asia ex magna Orbis terrae descriptione Gerardi Mercatoris desumpta studio amp industria G M Iunioris Sean C Goodlett Russia s Expansionist Policies I The Conquest of Siberia Falcon fsc edu Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 15 May 2010 For example Prison without a roof Barker Adele Marie 2010 Barker Adele Marie Grant Bruce eds The Russia Reader History Culture Politics The World Readers Durham North Carolina Duke University Press p 441 ISBN 9780822346487 Retrieved 11 June 2019 Throughout Russian history there is a long standing tradition of imprisoning and sentencing to internal exile within the country proper political and religious dissidents Among those sentenced to internal exile were the Decembrists Several were executed others were exiled to Siberia the Far East and Kazakhstan Fisher Raymond H Treadgold Donald W 1958 Review The Great Siberian Migration Government and Peasant in Resettlement from Emancipation to the First World War The American Historical Review 63 4 989 990 doi 10 2307 1848991 JSTOR 1848991 The Russian Far East A History John J Stephan 1996 Stanford University Press p 62 ISBN 0 8047 2701 5 Fiona Hill Russia Coming In From the Cold Archived 24 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Globalist 23 February 2004 Farinella Paolo Foschini L Froeschle Christiane Gonczi R Jopek T J Longo G Michel Patrick 2001 Probable asteroidal origin of the Tunguska Cosmic Body PDF Astronomy amp Astrophysics 377 3 1081 1097 Bibcode 2001A amp A 377 1081F doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20011054 The Unknown Gulag The Lost World of Stalin s Special Settlements Lynne Viola 2007 Oxford University Press US p 3 ISBN 0 19 518769 5 Robert Conquest in Victims of Stalinism A Comment Europe Asia Studies Vol 49 No 7 Nov 1997 pp 1317 1319 states We are all inclined to accept the Zemskov totals even if not as complete with their 14 million intake to Gulag camps alone to which must be added four to five million going to Gulag colonies to say nothing of the 3 5 million already in or sent to labour settlements However taken these are surely high figures Zemskov Gulag Sociologiceskije issledovanija 1991 No 6 pp 14 15 Stephane Courtois Mark Kramer Livre noir du Communisme crimes terreur repression Harvard University Press 1999 p 206 ISBN 0 674 07608 7 300 000 known deaths in the camps from 1934 to 1940 Courtois and Kramer 1999 Livre noir du Communisme p 239 Chamberlain Lesley 27 April 2003 Dark side of the moon Arlindo correia org Retrieved 11 June 2019 Today s major industrial cities of Noril sk Vorkuta Kolyma and Magadan were camps originally built by prisoners and run by ex prisoners Altai Saving the Pearl of Siberia Pacific Environment Archived from the original on 22 March 2007 Retrieved 30 November 2006 Lioubimtseva E U Gorshkov S P amp Adams J M A Giant Siberian Lake During the Last Glacial Evidence and Implications Oak Ridge National laboratory Archived 13 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine C Michael Hogan 2011 Taiga eds M McGinley amp C Cleveland Encyclopedia of Earth National Council for Science and the Environment Washington DC a b c d Meyerhof A A 1980 Geology and Petroleum Fields in Proterozoic and Lower Cambrian Strata Lena Tunguska Petroleum Province Eastern Siberia USSR in Giant Oil and Gas Fields of the Decade 1968 1978 AAPG Memoir 30 Halbouty M T editor Tulsa American Association of Petroleum Geologists ISBN 0891813063 Novosibirsk climate Worldclimate com 4 February 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2010 Omsk climate Worldclimate com 4 February 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2010 Kazachengoye climate Worldclimate com 4 February 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2010 Badkar Mamta 6 February 2014 This Tiny Town In Russia Is The Most Miserable Place In The World Business Insider Retrieved 28 August 2021 Gidrometcentr Rossii in Russian Archived from the original on 27 June 2008 Retrieved 8 January 2009 Ian Sample Warming hits tipping point The Guardian 11 August 2005 Connor Steve 23 September 2008 Exclusive The methane time bomb The Independent Retrieved 3 October 2008 N Shakhova I Semiletov A Salyuk D Kosmach and N Bel cheva 2007 Methane release on the Arctic East Siberian shelf Geophysical Research Abstracts 9 01071 Sergey A Zimov 6 May 2005 Pleistocene Park Return of the mammoths ecosystem In Science pages 796 798 Article also to be found in www pleistocenepark ru en Materials Archived 3 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 5 May 2013 Northern Hazelhen Tetrastes bonasia Photo Gallery Birds of Siberia sibirds ru Retrieved 18 June 2020 Siberian Grouse Falcipennis falcipennis Photo Gallery Birds of Russian Far East fareastru birds watch Retrieved 18 June 2020 Northern Black Grouse Lyrurus tetrix Photo Gallery Birds of Siberia sibirds ru Retrieved 18 June 2020 Black billed Capercaillie Tetrao urogalloides Photo Gallery Birds of Siberia sibirds ru Retrieved 18 June 2020 Western Capercaillie Tetrao urogallus Photo Gallery Birds of Siberia sibirds ru Retrieved 18 June 2020 Willow Ptarmigan Lagopus lagopus Photo Gallery Birds of Siberia sibirds ru Retrieved 18 June 2020 Rock Ptarmigan Lagopus muta Photo Gallery Birds of Siberia sibirds ru Retrieved 18 June 2020 Valerius Geist January 1998 Deer of the World Their Evolution Behaviour and Ecology Stackpole Books p 211 ISBN 978 0 8117 0496 0 Retrieved 30 January 2016 Nyambayar B Mix H Tsytsulina K 2015 Moschus moschiferus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2015 e T13897A61977573 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2015 2 RLTS T13897A61977573 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Database entry includes a brief justification of why this species is of vulnerable Uphyrkina O Miquelle D Quigley H Driscoll C O Brien S J 2002 Conservation Genetics of the Far Eastern Leopard Panthera pardus orientalis PDF Journal of Heredity 93 5 303 11 doi 10 1093 jhered 93 5 303 PMID 12547918 Archived from the original PDF on 4 February 2016 Retrieved 30 January 2016 Miquelle D Darman Y Seryodkin I 2011 Panthera tigris ssp altaica IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2011 e T15956A5333650 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2011 2 RLTS T15956A5333650 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Garshelis D Steinmetz R 2020 Ursus thibetanus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T22824A166528664 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T22824A166528664 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 McLellan B N Proctor M F Huber D Michel S 2017 Ursus arctos IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T41688A121229971 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T41688A121229971 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Farjon A 2013 Pinus pumila IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013 e T42405A2977712 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2013 1 RLTS T42405A2977712 en A Farjon 2013 Picea obovata IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013 e T42331A2973177 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2013 1 RLTS T42331A2973177 en Malyj enciklopedicheskij slovar Brokgauza i Efrona The Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary in Russian Sibir Slovar sovremennyh geograficheskih nazvanij in Russian Siberia Archived from the original on 24 August 2000 Retrieved 4 June 2008 The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition Siberian separatism whether federal center can hold remote regions Robert Lansing Institute lansinginstitute org 27 October 2020 Retrieved 22 June 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Douglas Causey Russian Far East Siberia Class www siberiaclass org Archived from the original Lecture on 20 October 2021 Statistics on the Development of Gas Fields in Western Siberia Daily Questions on Energy and Economy Schlindwein Simone 26 August 2008 The City Built on Oil EU Russia Summit Visits Siberia s Boomtown Spiegel Online Spiegel Retrieved 8 August 2014 Norilsk raises 2010 nickel output forecast Reuters 29 January 2010 Retrieved 8 August 2014 FAO National Aquaculture Sector Overview NASO 16 January 2005 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Overland Indra Kjaernet Heidi 2009 Russian renewable energy The potential for international cooperation Ashgate Overland Indra 2011 The Siberian Curse A Blessing in Disguise for Renewable Energy Sibirica 9 2 1 20 doi 10 3167 sib 2010 090201 via ResearchGate Valovoj regionalnyj produkt po subektam Rossijskoj Federacii v 2016 2020gg in Russian Google Translate Retrieved 14 April 2016 Google Translate Retrieved 14 April 2016 Photo with no context unreliable source Informaciya o stadione KLM stadiona Himik Kemerovo Reestr Federaciya hokkeya s myachom Rossii rusbandy ru Retrieved 14 April 2016 Informaciya o stadione Arena Erofej Habarovsk Reestr Federaciya hokkeya s myachom Rossii rusbandy ru Retrieved 14 April 2016 Google Translate Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved 30 December 2022 Including Siberian Federal District Tyumen Oblast Kurgan Oblast Zabaykalsky Krai Buryatia and Sakha Census 2010 official results Russian Archived 28 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine Ukrainians in Russia s Far East try to maintain community life The Ukrainian Weekly 4 May 2003 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Archived copy Archived from the original on 27 February 2002 Retrieved 21 February 2003 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples Russian Federation Buryats World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples Russian Federation Yakuts Gutman Garik 2012 Regional Environmental Changes in Siberia and Their Global Consequences Springer Netherlands p 20 ISBN 9789400745698 Official website of the city of Novosibirsk English novo sibirsk ru Retrieved 25 May 2022 Arnold Thomas Walker 1896 The Preaching of Islam A History of the Propagation of the Muslim Faith Westminster Archibald Constable and Company pp 206 207 Retrieved 11 October 2015 Of the spread of Islam among the Tatars of Siberia we have a few particulars It was not until the latter half of the sixteenth century that it gained a footing in this country but even before this period Muhammadan missionaries had from time to time made their way into Siberia with the hope of winning the heathen population over to the acceptance of their faith but the majority of them met with a martyr s death When Siberia came under Muhammadan rule in the reign of Kuchum Khan the graves of seven of these missionaries were discovered Kuchum Khan made every effort for the conversion of his subjects and sent to Bukhara asking for missionaries to assist him in this pious undertaking Planting Jewish roots in Siberia Fjc ru 24 May 2004 Archived from the original on 27 August 2009 Retrieved 15 May 2010 Why some Jews would rather live in Siberia than Israel The Christian Science Monitor 7 June 2010 Hoppal 2005 13 Secrets of Siberian Shamanism New Dawn The World s Most Unusual Magazine www newdawnmagazine com 16 May 2013 Retrieved 9 January 2017 Rasputin V Winchell M Mikkelson G 1997 Siberia Siberia Northwestern University Press pp 322 323 ISBN 978 0 8101 1575 0 Motarjemi Yasmine Moy Gerald Todd E C D 2013 Encyclopedia of Food Safety Amsterdam Elsevier Science Academic Press p 176 ISBN 978 0 12 378613 5 Bibliography EditBatalden Stephen K 1997 The Newly Independent States of Eurasia Handbook of Former Soviet Republics Contributor Sandra L Batalden revised ed Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0897749404 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Bisher Jamie 2006 White Terror Cossack Warlords of the Trans Siberian Routledge ISBN 978 1135765965 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Black Jeremy 2008 War and the World Military Power and the Fate of Continents 1450 2000 Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300147698 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Nicholas B Breyfogle Abby Schrader and Willard Sunderland eds Peopling the Russian Periphery Borderland Colonization in Eurasian history London Routledge 2007 Etkind Alexander 2013 Internal Colonization Russia s Imperial Experience John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0745673547 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Forsyth James 1994 A History of the Peoples of Siberia Russia s North Asian Colony 1581 1990 illustrated reprint revised ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521477710 Retrieved 24 April 2014 James Forsyth A History of the Peoples of Siberia Russia s North Asian Colony 1581 1990 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994 Jack Zachary Michael ed 2008 Inside the Ropes Sportswriters Get Their Game On U of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0803219076 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Kropotkin Peter Alexeivitch Bealby John Thomas 1911 Siberia In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 10 18 Steven G Marks Road to Power The Trans Siberian Railroad and the Colonization of Asian Russia 1850 1917 London I B Tauris 1991 Mote Victor L 1998 Siberia Worlds Apart Westview series on the post Soviet republics illustrated ed Westview Press ISBN 978 0813312989 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Igor V Naumov The History of Siberia Edited by David Collins London Routledge 2009 Routledge Studies in the History of Russia and Eastern Europe Stephan John J 1996 The Russian Far East A History illustrated reprint ed Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804727013 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Pesterev V 2015 Siberian frontier the territory of fear Royal Geographical Society with IBG London Wood Alan 2011 Russia s Frozen Frontier A History of Siberia and the Russian Far East 1581 1991 illustrated ed A amp C Black ISBN 978 0340971246 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Alan Wood ed The History of Siberia From Russian Conquest to Revolution London Routledge 1991 Conde Nast s Traveler Volume 36 Conde Nast Publications 2001 Retrieved 24 April 2014 Yearbook Contributor International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs 1992 Retrieved 24 April 2014 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Portals Russia GeographySiberia at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons News from Wikinews Texts from Wikisource Travel guides from Wikivoyage Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siberia amp oldid 1137734060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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