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Ural (river)

The Ural (Russian: Урал, pronounced [ʊˈraɫ]), known before 1775 as the Yaik,[note 1] is a river flowing through Russia and Kazakhstan in the continental border between Europe and Asia. It originates in the southern Ural Mountains and discharges into the Caspian Sea. At 2,428 kilometres (1,509 mi), it is the third-longest river in Europe after the Volga and the Danube, and the 18th-longest river in Asia. The Ural is conventionally considered part of the boundary between the continents of Europe and Asia.

Ural
The river Ural from an airplane between Uralsk and Atyrau, Kazakhstan
Location
CountriesKazakhstan, Russia
CitiesMagnitogorsk, Orsk, Novotroitsk, Orenburg, Oral, Atyrau
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationUral Mountains
MouthCaspian Sea
 • coordinates
46°53′N 51°37′E / 46.883°N 51.617°E / 46.883; 51.617
Length2,428 km (1,509 mi)
Basin size231,000 km2 (89,000 sq mi)
Discharge 
 • average400 m3/s (14,000 cu ft/s)
Official nameUral River Delta and adjacent Caspian Sea coast
Designated10 March 2009
Reference no.1856[1]

The Ural rises near Mount Kruglaya in the Ural Mountains, flows south parallel and west of the north-flowing Tobol, through Magnitogorsk, and around the southern end of the Urals, through Orsk where it turns west for about 300 kilometres (190 mi), to Orenburg, where the river Sakmara joins. From Orenburg it continues west, passing into Kazakhstan, then turning south again at Oral, and meandering through a broad flat plain until it reaches the Caspian a few miles below Atyrau, where it forms a fine 'digitate' (tree-like) delta.[2]

Etymology edit

The river was called Δάϊκος (Daïkos) by Ptolemy in the 2nd century AD.[3][4] Yulian Kulakovsky reads this as Turkic "Jajyk" or "Яик" and on this basis identifies the Huns as Turkic speakers.[5] However, Gerard Clauson disputes that the name could be of Turkic origin as early as the 2nd century, and instead attributes it to Sarmatian origin.[6] Also, the version of origin from the ancient Finno-Ugric and subsequent adaptation by other language groups has not been sufficiently studied (the river originates in the alleged ancestral home of the Finno-Ugric languages). In modern Finno-Ugric, the closest surviving forms are found: "joki" (Finnish), "jogi" (Karelian), "jā" (Mansi), "ju" (Komi) – river, "jəŋk" (Khanty) – water.[7] Also, hypothetically Finno-Ugric titles may have tributaries of the Yaik River, for example Ilek (Erzya "Ilyk" – strength) and Utva (Komi "Ytva" – spring water). In the 10th-Century work De Administrando Imperio, Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus referred to the Ural River as the "Geich."[8] The name Яйыҡ (Yayıq) is currently used in the Bashkir language and Жайық (Zhayıq) in Kazakhstan. In later European texts it is sometimes mentioned as Rhymnus fluvius[9] and in the Russian chronicle of 1140 as Yaik.[10] The river was renamed Ural in the Russian language in 1775, by Catherine II of Russia.

History edit

 
The tip of an old pike pole

In the 10th to 16th centuries, the city of Saray-Jük (or Saraichik, meaning "small Sarai") on the Ural River (now in Atyrau Province of Kazakhstan) was an important trade center on the Silk Road. In the 13th century, it became a stronghold of the Golden Horde. It was destroyed in 1395 by the army of Timur but then rebuilt to become the capital of Nogai Horde in the 15th and 16th centuries. It was finally reduced to a village in 1580 by the Ural Cossacks.[11][12]

After the Russian conquest of the Ural basin in the late 16th century, the shores of the Ural became home to the Yaik Cossacks. One of their main activities was fishing for the sturgeon and related fishes (including the true sturgeon, starry sturgeon, and beluga) in the Ural River and the Caspian. A great variety of fishing techniques existed; the most famous of them was bagrenye (Russian: багренье, from bagor Russian: багор, meaning pike pole): spearing hibernating sturgeons in their underwater lairs in mid-winter. The bagrenye was allowed only on one day of the year. On the appointed day, a large number of Cossacks with pike poles were gathering on the shore; after a signal was given, they rushed on the ice, broke it with their poles, and speared and pulled the fish. Another fishing technique was constructing a weir, known as the uchug (учуг) across the river, to catch fish going upstream to spawn. Until 1918, an uchug was set up in the summer and autumn near Uralsk, so that the fish would not go upstream beyond the Cossacks' land. While the uchug weirs were also known in the Volga Delta, the bagrenye was thought to be a uniquely Ural technique.[13][14]

The Ural Cossacks (known originally as the Yaik Cossacks) resented the attempts by the central government to impose rules and regulations on them, and on occasions rose in rebellions. The largest rebellion, the Pugachev's Rebellion of 1773–75, involved not only the Ural, but much of south-eastern Russia, and resulted in a loss of the government control there. After its suppression, Empress Catherine issued a decree of 15 January 1775 to rename most of the places involved in the revolt, in order to erase the memory of it. Thus the Yaik River and the city of Yaitsk were renamed to the Ural River and Uralsk, respectively, and the Yaik Cossacks became the Ural Cossacks.[15]

Geography edit

 
The bridge across the Ural in the Uchalinsky District (Bashkortostan)

The river begins on the slopes of the Kruglaya Mountain[16] of the Uraltau mountain ridge in South Ural, on the territory of the Uchalinsky District of Bashkortostan. There it has an average width of 60 to 80 metres (200 to 260 ft) and flows as a typical mountain river. It then falls into the Yaik Swamp and after exiting it widens up to 5 kilometres (3 mi). Below Verkhneuralsk, its flow is characteristic of a flatland river; there it enters Chelyabinsk and Orenburg Oblasts. From Magnitogorsk to Orsk its banks are steep and rocky and the bottom has many rifts. After Orsk, the river abruptly turns west and flows through a 45-kilometre (28 mi) long canyon in the Guberlinsk Mountains. After Uralsk, it flows from north to south, through the territory of West Kazakhstan Region and Atyrau Region of Kazakhstan. There, the river widens and has many lakes and ducts. Near the mouth, it splits into the Yaik and Zolotoy distributaries[17][18] and forms vast wetlands. The Yaik distributary is shallow, with almost no trees on the shores, and is rich in fish; whereas Zolotoy is deeper and is navigable.[11] Ural River has a spectacular tree-like (or "digitate") shape of the delta (see image). This type of delta forms naturally in the slow rivers which deliver a great deal of sediments and flow into a quiet sea.[2] In the delta, 13.5 kilometres (8.4 mi) from the mouth of the Zolotoy distributary lies Shalyga Island, which is 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) long, with heights of 1 to 2 metres (3 to 7 ft) and maximum widths of 0.3 kilometres (980 ft).[19]

The tributaries, in order going upstream, are Kushum, Derkul, Chagan, Irtek, Utva, Ilek (major, left), Bolshaya Chobda, Kindel, Sakmara, Tanalyk (major, right), Salmys, Or (major, left) and Suunduk.[18] The Kushum and Bagyrlai are distributaries.[20]

The entire length of the Ural River is considered the Europe-Asia boundary by most authoritative sources.[21][22][23] Rarely, the smaller, shorter Emba River is claimed as the continental boundary,[24][25] but that pushes "Europe" much further into "Central Asian" Kazakhstan. The Ural River bridge in Orenburg is even labeled with permanent monuments carved with the word "Europe" on one side, "Asia" on the other.[26] Regardless, Kazakhstan has some European territory and is at times included in European political and sports organizations.[27][28]

Hydrography edit

 
The "bird's-foot" ("digitate") delta of the Ural in the Caspian Sea[2]

The river is mostly fed by melting snow (60–70%); the contribution of precipitation is relatively minor.[29] Most of its annual discharge (65%) occurs during the spring floods, which occur in March and April near the mouth and in late April through June upstream; 30% drain during the summer and autumn and 5% in winter. During the floods, the river widens to above 10 kilometres (6 mi) near Uralsk and to several tens of kilometers near the mouth. Water level is highest in later April upstream and in May downstream. Its fluctuation is 3 to 4 metres (10 to 13 ft) in the upper stream, 9 to 10 metres (30 to 33 ft) in the middle of the river and about 3 metres (10 ft) in the delta. The average water discharge is 104 cubic metres per second (3,700 cu ft/s) near Orenburg, and 400 cubic metres per second (14,000 cu ft/s) at the Kushum village, which is 76.5 kilometres (47.5 mi) from the mouth. The maximum discharge is 14,000 cubic metres per second (490,000 cu ft/s) and the minimum is 1.62 cubic metres per second (57 cu ft/s). Average turbidity is 280 grams per cubic metre (0.47 lb/cu yd) at Orenburg and 290 grams per cubic metre (0.49 lb/cu yd) near Kushum. The river freezes at the source in early November and in the middle and lower reaches in late November. It opens in the lower reaches in late March and in early April in the upper reaches. The ice drift is relatively short.[16][17][18]

The average depth is 1 to 1.5 metres (3 to 5 ft) near the source, and it increases in the middle reaches and especially near the mouth. The density of underwater vegetation also increases from the source to the mouth, so does the richness of the fauna. The bottom in the upper stream is rocky, with pebble and sand; it changes to silt-sand and occasionally clay downstream. The basin is asymmetrical – its left side from the river is 2.1 times larger in area than the right side; however, the right side is more important for feeding the river. The density of the tributaries is 0.29 km/km2 in the right and 0.19 km/km2 in the left side of the basin. The right-side tributaries are typical mountain rivers whereas the left-side tributaries have flatland character. About 200 kilometres (120 mi) from the mouth there is a dangerous spot for shipping called Kruglovskaya prorva (Russian: Кругловская прорва meaning Kruglovsk abyss). Here the river narrows and creates a strong vortex over a deep pit. The climate is continental with frequent and strong winds. Typical annual precipitation is 530 millimetres (21 in).[11][29]

Fauna edit

The wetlands at and near the delta of the Ural River are especially important to migrating birds as an important stop-over along the Asian flyway.[2] They host many endemic and endangered species, such as great white pelican, Dalmatian pelican, pygmy cormorant, cattle egret, little egret, greater flamingo, white-headed duck, ferruginous duck, Eurasian spoonbill, glossy ibis, houbara bustard, great black-headed gull, slender-billed gull, squacco heron, common crane, demoiselle crane, slender-billed curlew, black stork, red-breasted goose, lesser white-fronted goose, lesser kestrel, whooper swan, tundra swan, osprey, pallid harrier, short-toed eagle and many others. The pygmy cormorant was observed sporadically before 1999 and more regularly after that. Cattle egret is observed since 1990 between April and September (as most other migratory birds in this area), with the total population of several dozen couples. It feeds on frogs, mollusks and small fish.[30] Upstream, there are more of the resident bird species, such as grouse, wild pigeon and partridge.[11]

Ural River is also important for many fish species of the Caspian Sea which visit its delta and migrate upstream for spawning. In the lower reaches of the river there are 47 species from 13 families. The family Cyprinidae account for 40%, sturgeon and herring make up 11%, perch and herring 9% and salmon 4.4%. The main commercial species are sturgeon, roach, bream, perch, carp, asp and Wels catfish. The rare species include Caspian salmon, sterlet, white salmon and kutum.

In the delta of the river and nearby regions live about 48 animal species belonging to 7 orders; most common are rodents (21 species) and predators (12). Among them, Bobrinski's serotine and marbled polecat are endemic. Key species are raccoon dog, muskrat (appeared recently), European hare, house mouse, brown rat, and wild boar. Wild boars had a density of 1.2–2.5 per hectare in 2000 and are hunted commercially. Others include elk, fox, wolf, dwarf fat-tailed jerboa, great gerbil, northern mole vole and saiga antelope.[11][30] The Turkmenian kulan (Equus hemionus kulan) used to live at the Ural River. It might be extinct from that region.

The reptiles are represented by bog turtles, common water snakes, rat snakes and sand lizard. Bog turtles are found in all waters. Common water snakes live on the banks of canals. Rat snakes and sand lizards are few and inhabit relatively high areas of land. Two more reptiles, Caspian whipsnake and Coluber spinalis, are extremely rare. Among amphibians common are lake frog and green frog.[30]

With an estimated 5,000 to 10,000 species, insects exceed all other animals of the region by diversity and biomass. Terrestrial and aquatic insects make up a significant proportion of the diet of birds. Many species are parasitic on birds and transmit infection. Other dominating inhabitants of the river are protozoa, rotifers, Cladocera and copepods. Mollusks are mostly represented by gastropods and bivalves.[30]

Industry edit

Water from the upper reaches of the Ural River is used to supply the prominent Magnitogorsk (Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works, built in the early 1930s) and Orsk-Khalilovsk metallurgical plants, and the low reaches are used for irrigation. Two reservoirs were created near Magnitogorsk, and there is a hydroelectric plant near the village of Iriklinskaya with the corresponding reservoir. Below Uralsk, there is another reservoir and the Kushumsky channel. The river is navigated up to Uralsk and there is a port in Atyrau.[16][31] Fishery is well developed; the commercial fish species include sturgeon, perch, herring, bream, carp and catfish.[18] The delta of Ural River accounts for about half of the fish catchment in Kazakhstan.[30] Also widespread is agriculture, especially growth of melons and watermelons. The city of Atyrau is a major oil producing center of Kazakhstan.[11]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Russian: Яик, Bashkir: Яйыҡ, romanizedYayıq, pronounced [jɑˈjɯq]; Kazakh: Жайық, romanized: Jaiyq, pronounced [ʑɑˈjəq]

References edit

  1. ^ "Ural River Delta and adjacent Caspian Sea coast". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d Ural River Delta, Kazakhstan (NASA Earth Observatory)
  3. ^ Claudius Ptolemy (1843). "Book VI, chapter 14. Σκυθίας τῆς ἐντὸς Ἰμάου ὄρους θέσις". In Nobbe, Karl Friedrich August (ed.). Geographia (in Greek). Leipzig: Karl Tauchnitz. p. vol. 2, p. 122.
  4. ^ McCrindle, John Watson (1885). Ancient India as Described by Ptolemy. Bombay: Thacker, Spink. p. 290. Rhymmos.
  5. ^ Yu. Kulakovsky. (in Russian). Archived from the original on 30 July 2018. Retrieved 4 July 2010.
  6. ^ Gerard Clauson (2005). Studies in Turkic and Mongolic Linguistics (rev. ed.). London: Routledge. pp. 75–76, 124. ISBN 9781134430123.
  7. ^ "Onomastic survey in Eurasia. Finno-Ugric Place Names of Oldest Times".
  8. ^ Theodore Duka (1889). "The Ugor Branch of the Ural-Altaic Family of Languages". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. 21: 600.
  9. ^ Philippus Ferrarius; Michel-Antoine Baudrand (1738). Novum lexicon geographicum: in quo universi orbis, urbes, regiones ... flumina novis & antiquis nominibus appellata, suisque distantiis descripta recensetur (in Latin). p. 109.
  10. ^ B.A. Rybakov (1972). Русские летописцы и автор Слова о полку Игореве (in Russian). Nauka.
  11. ^ a b c d e f 800 km on Ural River (in Russian)
  12. ^ Paul Brummell (2008). Bradt Kazakhstan. Bradt Travel Guides. p. 316. ISBN 978-1-84162-234-7.
  13. ^ Zonn, p. 416
  14. ^ ""Багренье" (Bagrenye, i.e. Pike-pole fishing)". Энциклопедический лексикон (Encyclopedic lexicon) (in Russian). Vol. 4. Saint Petersburg. 1835. p. 65.
  15. ^ A.I. Poterpeeva & V.E. Chetin (1980). Revoliutsionnaia i trudovaia letopis Iuzhnouralskogo kraia: 1682–1918. South Ural.
  16. ^ a b c Ural River, Encyclopædia Britannica
  17. ^ a b V. A. Balkov. (in Russian). bashedu.ru
  18. ^ a b c d "Ural River" (in Russian). Great Soviet Encyclopedia.
  19. ^ Zonn, p. 375
  20. ^ "M-39 Topographic Chart (in Russian)". Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  21. ^ National Geographic Atlas of the World (9th ed.). Washington, DC: National Geographic. 2011. ISBN 978-1-4262-0633-7. "Europe" (plate 59); "Asia" (plate 74): "A commonly accepted division between Asia and Europe ... is formed by the Ural Mountains, Ural River, Caspian Sea, Caucasus Mountains, and the Black Sea with its outlets, the Bosporus and Dardanelles."
  22. ^ World Factbook. Washington, DC: Central Intelligence Agency. 15 June 2022.
  23. ^ Klement Tockner; Urs Uehlinger; Christopher T. Robinson (2009). "18". Rivers of Europe (Illustrated ed.). Academic Press. ISBN 9780123694492.
  24. ^ Glanville Price (2000). Encyclopedia of the languages of Europe. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 12. ISBN 0-631-22039-9.
  25. ^ Zonn, p. 178
  26. ^ "Orenburg bridge monument photos". katjasdacha.com.
  27. ^ Progress aplenty in Kazakhstan, uefa.com
  28. ^ Why Europe plays against Asians (in Russian). sport.ua (2008-09-10)
  29. ^ a b Ural River 13 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine chelindustry.ru (in Russian)
  30. ^ a b c d e . wetlands.kz. (Fauna of the delta of Ural River, in Russian)
  31. ^ Zonn, p. 45

Bibliography edit

  • Zonn, Igor S.; Kostianoy, Andrey & Kosarev, Aleksey N. (2010). The Caspian Sea Encyclopedia. Springer. ISBN 978-3-642-11523-3.

ural, river, this, article, about, river, other, uses, ural, disambiguation, ural, russian, Урал, pronounced, ʊˈraɫ, known, before, 1775, yaik, note, river, flowing, through, russia, kazakhstan, continental, border, between, europe, asia, originates, southern,. This article is about a river For other uses see Ural disambiguation The Ural Russian Ural pronounced ʊˈraɫ known before 1775 as the Yaik note 1 is a river flowing through Russia and Kazakhstan in the continental border between Europe and Asia It originates in the southern Ural Mountains and discharges into the Caspian Sea At 2 428 kilometres 1 509 mi it is the third longest river in Europe after the Volga and the Danube and the 18th longest river in Asia The Ural is conventionally considered part of the boundary between the continents of Europe and Asia UralThe river Ural from an airplane between Uralsk and Atyrau KazakhstanLocationCountriesKazakhstan RussiaCitiesMagnitogorsk Orsk Novotroitsk Orenburg Oral AtyrauPhysical characteristicsSource locationUral MountainsMouthCaspian Sea coordinates46 53 N 51 37 E 46 883 N 51 617 E 46 883 51 617Length2 428 km 1 509 mi Basin size231 000 km2 89 000 sq mi Discharge average400 m3 s 14 000 cu ft s Ramsar WetlandOfficial nameUral River Delta and adjacent Caspian Sea coastDesignated10 March 2009Reference no 1856 1 The Ural rises near Mount Kruglaya in the Ural Mountains flows south parallel and west of the north flowing Tobol through Magnitogorsk and around the southern end of the Urals through Orsk where it turns west for about 300 kilometres 190 mi to Orenburg where the river Sakmara joins From Orenburg it continues west passing into Kazakhstan then turning south again at Oral and meandering through a broad flat plain until it reaches the Caspian a few miles below Atyrau where it forms a fine digitate tree like delta 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Geography 4 Hydrography 5 Fauna 6 Industry 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 BibliographyEtymology editThe river was called Daikos Daikos by Ptolemy in the 2nd century AD 3 4 Yulian Kulakovsky reads this as Turkic Jajyk or Yaik and on this basis identifies the Huns as Turkic speakers 5 However Gerard Clauson disputes that the name could be of Turkic origin as early as the 2nd century and instead attributes it to Sarmatian origin 6 Also the version of origin from the ancient Finno Ugric and subsequent adaptation by other language groups has not been sufficiently studied the river originates in the alleged ancestral home of the Finno Ugric languages In modern Finno Ugric the closest surviving forms are found joki Finnish jogi Karelian ja Mansi ju Komi river jeŋk Khanty water 7 Also hypothetically Finno Ugric titles may have tributaries of the Yaik River for example Ilek Erzya Ilyk strength and Utva Komi Ytva spring water In the 10th Century work De Administrando Imperio Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus referred to the Ural River as the Geich 8 The name Yajyҡ Yayiq is currently used in the Bashkir language and Zhajyk Zhayiq in Kazakhstan In later European texts it is sometimes mentioned as Rhymnus fluvius 9 and in the Russian chronicle of 1140 as Yaik 10 The river was renamed Ural in the Russian language in 1775 by Catherine II of Russia History edit nbsp The tip of an old pike poleIn the 10th to 16th centuries the city of Saray Juk or Saraichik meaning small Sarai on the Ural River now in Atyrau Province of Kazakhstan was an important trade center on the Silk Road In the 13th century it became a stronghold of the Golden Horde It was destroyed in 1395 by the army of Timur but then rebuilt to become the capital of Nogai Horde in the 15th and 16th centuries It was finally reduced to a village in 1580 by the Ural Cossacks 11 12 After the Russian conquest of the Ural basin in the late 16th century the shores of the Ural became home to the Yaik Cossacks One of their main activities was fishing for the sturgeon and related fishes including the true sturgeon starry sturgeon and beluga in the Ural River and the Caspian A great variety of fishing techniques existed the most famous of them was bagrenye Russian bagrene from bagor Russian bagor meaning pike pole spearing hibernating sturgeons in their underwater lairs in mid winter The bagrenye was allowed only on one day of the year On the appointed day a large number of Cossacks with pike poles were gathering on the shore after a signal was given they rushed on the ice broke it with their poles and speared and pulled the fish Another fishing technique was constructing a weir known as the uchug uchug across the river to catch fish going upstream to spawn Until 1918 an uchug was set up in the summer and autumn near Uralsk so that the fish would not go upstream beyond the Cossacks land While the uchug weirs were also known in the Volga Delta the bagrenye was thought to be a uniquely Ural technique 13 14 The Ural Cossacks known originally as the Yaik Cossacks resented the attempts by the central government to impose rules and regulations on them and on occasions rose in rebellions The largest rebellion the Pugachev s Rebellion of 1773 75 involved not only the Ural but much of south eastern Russia and resulted in a loss of the government control there After its suppression Empress Catherine issued a decree of 15 January 1775 to rename most of the places involved in the revolt in order to erase the memory of it Thus the Yaik River and the city of Yaitsk were renamed to the Ural River and Uralsk respectively and the Yaik Cossacks became the Ural Cossacks 15 Geography edit nbsp The bridge across the Ural in the Uchalinsky District Bashkortostan The river begins on the slopes of the Kruglaya Mountain 16 of the Uraltau mountain ridge in South Ural on the territory of the Uchalinsky District of Bashkortostan There it has an average width of 60 to 80 metres 200 to 260 ft and flows as a typical mountain river It then falls into the Yaik Swamp and after exiting it widens up to 5 kilometres 3 mi Below Verkhneuralsk its flow is characteristic of a flatland river there it enters Chelyabinsk and Orenburg Oblasts From Magnitogorsk to Orsk its banks are steep and rocky and the bottom has many rifts After Orsk the river abruptly turns west and flows through a 45 kilometre 28 mi long canyon in the Guberlinsk Mountains After Uralsk it flows from north to south through the territory of West Kazakhstan Region and Atyrau Region of Kazakhstan There the river widens and has many lakes and ducts Near the mouth it splits into the Yaik and Zolotoy distributaries 17 18 and forms vast wetlands The Yaik distributary is shallow with almost no trees on the shores and is rich in fish whereas Zolotoy is deeper and is navigable 11 Ural River has a spectacular tree like or digitate shape of the delta see image This type of delta forms naturally in the slow rivers which deliver a great deal of sediments and flow into a quiet sea 2 In the delta 13 5 kilometres 8 4 mi from the mouth of the Zolotoy distributary lies Shalyga Island which is 2 5 kilometres 1 6 mi long with heights of 1 to 2 metres 3 to 7 ft and maximum widths of 0 3 kilometres 980 ft 19 The tributaries in order going upstream are Kushum Derkul Chagan Irtek Utva Ilek major left Bolshaya Chobda Kindel Sakmara Tanalyk major right Salmys Or major left and Suunduk 18 The Kushum and Bagyrlai are distributaries 20 The entire length of the Ural River is considered the Europe Asia boundary by most authoritative sources 21 22 23 Rarely the smaller shorter Emba River is claimed as the continental boundary 24 25 but that pushes Europe much further into Central Asian Kazakhstan The Ural River bridge in Orenburg is even labeled with permanent monuments carved with the word Europe on one side Asia on the other 26 Regardless Kazakhstan has some European territory and is at times included in European political and sports organizations 27 28 Hydrography edit nbsp The bird s foot digitate delta of the Ural in the Caspian Sea 2 The river is mostly fed by melting snow 60 70 the contribution of precipitation is relatively minor 29 Most of its annual discharge 65 occurs during the spring floods which occur in March and April near the mouth and in late April through June upstream 30 drain during the summer and autumn and 5 in winter During the floods the river widens to above 10 kilometres 6 mi near Uralsk and to several tens of kilometers near the mouth Water level is highest in later April upstream and in May downstream Its fluctuation is 3 to 4 metres 10 to 13 ft in the upper stream 9 to 10 metres 30 to 33 ft in the middle of the river and about 3 metres 10 ft in the delta The average water discharge is 104 cubic metres per second 3 700 cu ft s near Orenburg and 400 cubic metres per second 14 000 cu ft s at the Kushum village which is 76 5 kilometres 47 5 mi from the mouth The maximum discharge is 14 000 cubic metres per second 490 000 cu ft s and the minimum is 1 62 cubic metres per second 57 cu ft s Average turbidity is 280 grams per cubic metre 0 47 lb cu yd at Orenburg and 290 grams per cubic metre 0 49 lb cu yd near Kushum The river freezes at the source in early November and in the middle and lower reaches in late November It opens in the lower reaches in late March and in early April in the upper reaches The ice drift is relatively short 16 17 18 The average depth is 1 to 1 5 metres 3 to 5 ft near the source and it increases in the middle reaches and especially near the mouth The density of underwater vegetation also increases from the source to the mouth so does the richness of the fauna The bottom in the upper stream is rocky with pebble and sand it changes to silt sand and occasionally clay downstream The basin is asymmetrical its left side from the river is 2 1 times larger in area than the right side however the right side is more important for feeding the river The density of the tributaries is 0 29 km km2 in the right and 0 19 km km2 in the left side of the basin The right side tributaries are typical mountain rivers whereas the left side tributaries have flatland character About 200 kilometres 120 mi from the mouth there is a dangerous spot for shipping called Kruglovskaya prorva Russian Kruglovskaya prorva meaning Kruglovsk abyss Here the river narrows and creates a strong vortex over a deep pit The climate is continental with frequent and strong winds Typical annual precipitation is 530 millimetres 21 in 11 29 Fauna editThe wetlands at and near the delta of the Ural River are especially important to migrating birds as an important stop over along the Asian flyway 2 They host many endemic and endangered species such as great white pelican Dalmatian pelican pygmy cormorant cattle egret little egret greater flamingo white headed duck ferruginous duck Eurasian spoonbill glossy ibis houbara bustard great black headed gull slender billed gull squacco heron common crane demoiselle crane slender billed curlew black stork red breasted goose lesser white fronted goose lesser kestrel whooper swan tundra swan osprey pallid harrier short toed eagle and many others The pygmy cormorant was observed sporadically before 1999 and more regularly after that Cattle egret is observed since 1990 between April and September as most other migratory birds in this area with the total population of several dozen couples It feeds on frogs mollusks and small fish 30 Upstream there are more of the resident bird species such as grouse wild pigeon and partridge 11 Ural River is also important for many fish species of the Caspian Sea which visit its delta and migrate upstream for spawning In the lower reaches of the river there are 47 species from 13 families The family Cyprinidae account for 40 sturgeon and herring make up 11 perch and herring 9 and salmon 4 4 The main commercial species are sturgeon roach bream perch carp asp and Wels catfish The rare species include Caspian salmon sterlet white salmon and kutum In the delta of the river and nearby regions live about 48 animal species belonging to 7 orders most common are rodents 21 species and predators 12 Among them Bobrinski s serotine and marbled polecat are endemic Key species are raccoon dog muskrat appeared recently European hare house mouse brown rat and wild boar Wild boars had a density of 1 2 2 5 per hectare in 2000 and are hunted commercially Others include elk fox wolf dwarf fat tailed jerboa great gerbil northern mole vole and saiga antelope 11 30 The Turkmenian kulan Equus hemionus kulan used to live at the Ural River It might be extinct from that region The reptiles are represented by bog turtles common water snakes rat snakes and sand lizard Bog turtles are found in all waters Common water snakes live on the banks of canals Rat snakes and sand lizards are few and inhabit relatively high areas of land Two more reptiles Caspian whipsnake and Coluber spinalis are extremely rare Among amphibians common are lake frog and green frog 30 With an estimated 5 000 to 10 000 species insects exceed all other animals of the region by diversity and biomass Terrestrial and aquatic insects make up a significant proportion of the diet of birds Many species are parasitic on birds and transmit infection Other dominating inhabitants of the river are protozoa rotifers Cladocera and copepods Mollusks are mostly represented by gastropods and bivalves 30 nbsp Eurasian spoonbill nbsp Northern mole vole nbsp Great gerbil nbsp Marbled polecat nbsp SturgeonIndustry editWater from the upper reaches of the Ural River is used to supply the prominent Magnitogorsk Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works built in the early 1930s and Orsk Khalilovsk metallurgical plants and the low reaches are used for irrigation Two reservoirs were created near Magnitogorsk and there is a hydroelectric plant near the village of Iriklinskaya with the corresponding reservoir Below Uralsk there is another reservoir and the Kushumsky channel The river is navigated up to Uralsk and there is a port in Atyrau 16 31 Fishery is well developed the commercial fish species include sturgeon perch herring bream carp and catfish 18 The delta of Ural River accounts for about half of the fish catchment in Kazakhstan 30 Also widespread is agriculture especially growth of melons and watermelons The city of Atyrau is a major oil producing center of Kazakhstan 11 See also editBoundaries between the continents Ural MountainsNotes edit Russian Yaik Bashkir Yajyҡ romanized Yayiq pronounced jɑˈjɯq Kazakh Zhajyk romanized Jaiyq pronounced ʑɑˈjeq References edit Ural River Delta and adjacent Caspian Sea coast Ramsar Sites Information Service Retrieved 25 April 2018 a b c d Ural River Delta Kazakhstan NASA Earth Observatory Claudius Ptolemy 1843 Book VI chapter 14 Sky8ias tῆs ἐntὸs Ἰmaoy ὄroys 8esis In Nobbe Karl Friedrich August ed Geographia in Greek Leipzig Karl Tauchnitz p vol 2 p 122 McCrindle John Watson 1885 Ancient India as Described by Ptolemy Bombay Thacker Spink p 290 Rhymmos Yu Kulakovsky Chapter 2 The map of European Sarmatia in Russian Archived from the original on 30 July 2018 Retrieved 4 July 2010 Gerard Clauson 2005 Studies in Turkic and Mongolic Linguistics rev ed London Routledge pp 75 76 124 ISBN 9781134430123 Onomastic survey in Eurasia Finno Ugric Place Names of Oldest Times Theodore Duka 1889 The Ugor Branch of the Ural Altaic Family of Languages Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 21 600 Philippus Ferrarius Michel Antoine Baudrand 1738 Novum lexicon geographicum in quo universi orbis urbes regiones flumina novis amp antiquis nominibus appellata suisque distantiis descripta recensetur in Latin p 109 B A Rybakov 1972 Russkie letopiscy i avtor Slova o polku Igoreve in Russian Nauka a b c d e f 800 km on Ural River in Russian Paul Brummell 2008 Bradt Kazakhstan Bradt Travel Guides p 316 ISBN 978 1 84162 234 7 Zonn p 416 Bagrene Bagrenye i e Pike pole fishing Enciklopedicheskij leksikon Encyclopedic lexicon in Russian Vol 4 Saint Petersburg 1835 p 65 A I Poterpeeva amp V E Chetin 1980 Revoliutsionnaia i trudovaia letopis Iuzhnouralskogo kraia 1682 1918 South Ural a b c Ural River Encyclopaedia Britannica a b V A Balkov Ural in Russian bashedu ru a b c d Ural River in Russian Great Soviet Encyclopedia Zonn p 375 M 39 Topographic Chart in Russian Retrieved 28 February 2023 National Geographic Atlas of the World 9th ed Washington DC National Geographic 2011 ISBN 978 1 4262 0633 7 Europe plate 59 Asia plate 74 A commonly accepted division between Asia and Europe is formed by the Ural Mountains Ural River Caspian Sea Caucasus Mountains and the Black Sea with its outlets the Bosporus and Dardanelles World Factbook Washington DC Central Intelligence Agency 15 June 2022 Klement Tockner Urs Uehlinger Christopher T Robinson 2009 18 Rivers of Europe Illustrated ed Academic Press ISBN 9780123694492 Glanville Price 2000 Encyclopedia of the languages of Europe Wiley Blackwell p 12 ISBN 0 631 22039 9 Zonn p 178 Orenburg bridge monument photos katjasdacha com Progress aplenty in Kazakhstan uefa com Why Europe plays against Asians in Russian sport ua 2008 09 10 a b Ural River Archived 13 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine chelindustry ru in Russian a b c d e Fauna Delta reki Ural i prilegayushee poberezhe Kaspijskogo morya wetlands kz Fauna of the delta of Ural River in Russian Zonn p 45Bibliography editZonn Igor S Kostianoy Andrey amp Kosarev Aleksey N 2010 The Caspian Sea Encyclopedia Springer ISBN 978 3 642 11523 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ural river amp oldid 1207555041, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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