Definition of the Caspian Sea. Caspian Sea (largest lake)

The Caspian Sea is inland and located in a vast continental depression on the border of Europe and Asia. The Caspian Sea has no connection with the ocean, which formally allows it to be called a lake, but it has all the features of the sea, since in past geological eras it had connections with the ocean.

The sea area is 386.4 thousand km2, the volume of water is 78 thousand m3.

The Caspian Sea has a vast drainage basin, with an area of ​​about 3.5 million km2. The nature of the landscapes, climatic conditions and types of rivers are different. Despite its vastness, only 62.6% of its area is in waste areas; about 26.1% - for non-drainage. The area of ​​the Caspian Sea itself is 11.3%. 130 rivers flow into it, but almost all of them are located in the north and west (and the eastern coast does not have a single river reaching the sea). The largest river in the Caspian basin is the Volga, which provides 78% of the river waters entering the sea (it should be noted that more than 25% of the Russian economy is located in the basin of this river, and this undoubtedly determines many other features of the waters of the Caspian Sea), as well as the Kura River , Zhaiyk (Ural), Terek, Sulak, Samur.

Physiographically and according to the nature of the underwater relief, the sea is divided into three parts: northern, middle and southern. The conventional border between the northern and middle parts runs along the line Chechen Island–Cape Tyub-Karagan, and between the middle and southern parts along the line Zhiloy Island–Cape Kuuli.

The shelf of the Caspian Sea is on average limited to depths of about 100 m. The continental slope, which begins below the edge of the shelf, ends in the middle part at depths of approximately 500–600 m, in the southern part, where it is very steep, at 700–750 m.

The northern part of the sea is shallow, its average depth is 5–6 m, the maximum depths of 15–20 m are located on the border with the middle part of the sea. The bottom topography is complicated by the presence of banks, islands, and grooves.

The middle part of the sea is an isolated basin, the region of maximum depths of which - the Derbent depression - is shifted to the western coast. The average depth of this part of the sea is 190 m, the greatest is 788 m.

The southern part of the sea is separated from the middle by the Absheron threshold, which is a continuation of the Greater Caucasus. The depths above this underwater ridge do not exceed 180 m. The deepest part of the South Caspian depression with a maximum sea depth of 1025 m is located east of the Kura delta. Several underwater ridges up to 500 m high rise above the bottom of the basin.

The shores of the Caspian Sea are diverse. In the northern part of the sea they are quite indented. Here are the Kizlyarsky, Agrakhansky, Mangyshlaksky bays and many shallow bays. Notable peninsulas: Agrakhansky, Buzachi, Tyub-Karagan, Mangyshlak. Large islands in the northern part of the sea are Tyuleniy and Kulaly. In the deltas of the Volga and Ural rivers, the coastline is complicated by many islands and channels, often changing their position. Many small islands and banks are located on other parts of the coastline.

The middle part of the sea has a relatively flat coastline. The Absheron Peninsula is located on the western coast, on the border with the southern part of the sea. To the east of it there are islands and banks of the Absheron archipelago, of which the largest island is Zhiloy. The eastern coast of the Middle Caspian is more indented; the Kazakh Gulf with Kenderli Bay and several capes stand out here. The largest bay of this coast is Kara-Bogaz-Gol.

South of the Absheron Peninsula are the islands of the Baku archipelago. The origin of these islands, as well as some of the jars east coast the southern part of the sea is associated with the activity of underwater mud volcanoes lying on the seabed. On the eastern shore there are large bays of Turkmenbashi and Turkmensky, and near it the island of Ogurchinsky.

One of the most striking phenomena of the Caspian Sea is the periodic variability of its level. In historical times, the Caspian Sea had a level lower than the World Ocean. Fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea are so great that for more than a century they have attracted the attention of not only scientists. Its peculiarity is that in the memory of mankind its level has always been below the level of the World Ocean. Since the beginning of instrumental observations (since 1830) of sea level, the amplitude of its fluctuations has been almost 4 m, from –25.3 m in the eighties of the 19th century. to –29 m in 1977. In the last century, the level of the Caspian Sea changed significantly twice. In 1929 it stood at about -26 m, and since it had been close to this level for almost a century, this level position was considered to be a long-term or secular average. In 1930 the level began to decline rapidly. By 1941 it had dropped by almost 2 m. This led to the drying out of vast coastal areas of the bottom. The decrease in level, with slight fluctuations (short-term slight rises in level in 1946–1948 and 1956–1958), continued until 1977 and reached a level of –29.02 m, i.e. the level reached its lowest position in history the last 200 years.

In 1978, contrary to all forecasts, sea level began to rise. As of 1994, the level of the Caspian Sea was at –26.5 m, that is, over 16 years the level rose by more than 2 m. The rate of this rise is 15 cm per year. The level increase in some years was higher, and in 1991 it reached 39 cm.

The general fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea are superimposed by its seasonal changes, the long-term average of which reaches 40 cm, as well as surge phenomena. The latter are especially pronounced in the Northern Caspian Sea. For the north west coast characterized by large surges created by prevailing, especially in the cold season, storms of eastern and southeastern directions. A number of large (more than 1.5–3 m) surges have been observed here over the past decades. A particularly large surge with catastrophic consequences was noted in 1952. Fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea cause great damage to the states surrounding its waters.


Climate. The Caspian Sea is located in temperate and subtropical climatic zones. Climatic conditions change in the meridional direction, since the sea stretches from north to south for almost 1200 km.

Various circulation systems interact in the Caspian region, however, winds from eastern directions predominate throughout the year (the influence of the Asian High). The position at fairly low latitudes provides a positive balance of heat influx, so the Caspian Sea serves as a source of heat and moisture for passing air masses for most of the year. The average annual temperature in the northern part of the sea is 8–10°C, in the middle - 11–14°C, in the southern part - 15–17°C. However, in the northernmost areas of the sea, the average January temperature is from –7 to –10°C, and the minimum during intrusions of Arctic air is down to –30°C, which determines the formation of ice cover. In summer, rather high temperatures dominate over the entire region under consideration - 24–26°C. Thus, the Northern Caspian is subject to the most dramatic temperature fluctuations.

The Caspian Sea is characterized by a very small amount of precipitation per year - only 180 mm, with most of it falling during the cold season of the year (from October to March). However, the Northern Caspian differs in this respect from the rest of the basin: here the average annual precipitation is lower (for the western part only 137 mm), and the seasonal distribution is more uniform (10–18 mm per month). In general, we can talk about closeness climatic conditions to arid ones.

Water temperature. The distinctive features of the Caspian Sea (large differences in depths in different parts of the sea, the nature of the bottom topography, isolation) have a certain influence on the formation of temperature conditions. In the shallow Northern Caspian Sea, the entire water column can be considered homogeneous (the same applies to shallow bays located in other parts of the sea). In the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea, surface and deep masses can be distinguished, separated by a transition layer. In the Northern Caspian and in the surface layers of the Middle and Southern Caspian, water temperatures vary over a wide range. In winter, temperatures vary from north to south from less than 2 to 10°C, the water temperature off the west coast is 1–2°C higher than that on the east, in the open sea the temperature is higher than at the coasts: by 2–3°C in the middle part and by 3–4°С in the southern part of the sea. In winter, the distribution of temperature with depth is more uniform, which is facilitated by winter vertical circulation. During moderate and severe winters in the northern part of the sea and shallow bays of the east coast, the water temperature drops to freezing temperature.

In summer, the temperature varies in space from 20 to 28°C. The highest temperatures are observed in the southern part of the sea; temperatures are also quite high in the well-warmed shallow Northern Caspian Sea. The zone where the lowest temperatures occur is adjacent to the east coast. This is explained by the rise of cold deep waters to the surface. Temperatures are also relatively low in the poorly heated deep-sea central part. In open areas of the sea, at the end of May–beginning of June, the formation of a temperature jump layer begins, which is most clearly expressed in August. Most often it is located between 20 and 30 m in the middle part of the sea and 30 and 40 m in the southern part. In the middle part of the sea, due to the surge off the eastern coast, the shock layer rises close to the surface. In the bottom layers of the sea, the temperature throughout the year is about 4.5°C in the middle part and 5.8–5.9°C in the southern part.

Salinity. Salinity values ​​are determined by factors such as river flow, water dynamics, including mainly wind and gradient currents, the resulting water exchange between the western and eastern parts of the Northern Caspian and between the Northern and Middle Caspian, bottom topography, which determines the location of waters with different salinities, mainly along isobaths, evaporation providing a deficit fresh water and an influx of more salty ones. These factors collectively influence seasonal differences in salinity.

The Northern Caspian Sea can be considered as a reservoir of constant mixing of river and Caspian waters. The most active mixing occurs in the western part, where both river and Central Caspian waters directly flow. Horizontal salinity gradients can reach 1‰ per 1 km.

The eastern part of the Northern Caspian Sea is characterized by a more uniform salinity field, since most of the river and sea (Middle Caspian) waters enter this area of ​​the sea in a transformed form.

Based on the values ​​of horizontal salinity gradients, it is possible to distinguish in the western part of the Northern Caspian the river-sea contact zone with water salinity from 2 to 10‰, in the eastern part from 2 to 6‰.

Significant vertical salinity gradients in the Northern Caspian are formed as a result of the interaction of river and sea waters, with runoff playing a decisive role. The strengthening of vertical stratification is also facilitated by the unequal thermal state of the water layers, since the temperature of the surface desalinated waters coming from the seashore in summer is 10–15°C higher than the bottom waters.

In the deep-sea depressions of the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea, salinity fluctuations in the upper layer are 1–1.5‰. The largest difference between the maximum and minimum salinity was noted in the area of ​​the Absheron threshold, where it is 1.6‰ in the surface layer and 2.1‰ at a 5 m horizon.

Decrease in salinity along west bank of the Southern Caspian in the 0–20 m layer is caused by the runoff of the Kura River. The influence of the Kura runoff decreases with depth; at horizons of 40–70 m, the range of salinity fluctuations is no more than 1.1‰. Along the entire western coast to the Absheron Peninsula there is a strip of desalinated water with a salinity of 10–12.5‰, coming from the Northern Caspian Sea.

In addition, in the Southern Caspian Sea, an increase in salinity occurs when salted waters are carried out from bays and bays on the eastern shelf under the influence of southeastern winds. Subsequently, these waters are transferred to the Middle Caspian Sea.

In the deep layers of the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea, the salinity is about 13‰. In the central part of the Middle Caspian, such salinity is observed at horizons below 100 m, and in the deep-water part of the Southern Caspian, the upper boundary of waters with high salinity drops to 250 m. Obviously, in these parts of the sea, vertical mixing of waters is difficult.

Surface water circulation. Currents in the sea are mainly wind-driven. In the western part of the Northern Caspian, currents of the western and eastern quarters are most often observed, in the eastern part - southwestern and southern ones. Currents caused by the runoff of the Volga and Ural rivers can be traced only within the estuary coastal area. Prevailing current speeds are 10–15 cm/s in open areas of the Northern Caspian Sea maximum speeds about 30 cm/s.

IN coastal areas In the middle and southern parts of the sea, in accordance with the wind directions, currents in the northwestern, northern, southeastern and southern directions are observed; along the east coast, currents in the eastern direction often occur. Along the western coast of the middle part of the sea, the most stable currents are southeastern and southern. Current speeds are on average about 20–40 cm/s, with maximum speeds reaching 50–80 cm/s. Other types of currents also play a significant role in the circulation of sea waters: gradient, seiche, and inertial.

Ice formation. The Northern Caspian Sea is covered with ice every year in November, the area of ​​the frozen part of the water area depends on the severity of the winter: in severe winters the entire Northern Caspian Sea is covered with ice, in mild winters the ice remains within 2–3 meter isobath. The appearance of ice in the middle and southern parts of the sea occurs in December-January. On the eastern coast the ice is of local origin, while on the western coast it is most often brought in from the northern part of the sea. In severe winters, shallow bays freeze off the eastern coast of the middle part of the sea, shores and fast ice form off the coast, and on the western coast, drifting ice spreads to the Absheron Peninsula in abnormally cold winters. The disappearance of ice cover is observed in the second half of February–March.

Oxygen content. The spatial distribution of dissolved oxygen in the Caspian Sea has a number of patterns.
The central part of the waters of the Northern Caspian Sea is characterized by a fairly uniform distribution of oxygen. An increased oxygen content is found in the areas near the Volga River near the mouth, while a decreased oxygen content is found in the southwestern part of the Northern Caspian Sea.

In the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea, the highest concentrations of oxygen are confined to shallow coastal areas and pre-estuary coastal areas of rivers, with the exception of the most polluted areas of the sea (Baku Bay, Sumgait region, etc.).

In the deep-water areas of the Caspian Sea, the main pattern remains the same throughout all seasons - a decrease in oxygen concentration with depth.
Thanks to autumn-winter cooling, the density of the North Caspian waters increases to a value at which it becomes possible for North Caspian waters with a high oxygen content to flow along the continental slope to significant depths of the Caspian Sea.

The seasonal distribution of oxygen is mainly associated with the annual course and seasonal relationship of production-destruction processes occurring in the sea.






In spring, the production of oxygen during photosynthesis very significantly covers the decrease in oxygen caused by a decrease in its solubility with increasing water temperature in spring.

In the areas of the mouths of the coastal rivers feeding the Caspian Sea, in the spring there is a sharp increase in the relative oxygen content, which in turn is an integral indicator of the intensification of the photosynthesis process and characterizes the degree of productivity of the mixing zones of sea and river waters.

In summer, due to the significant warming of water masses and the activation of photosynthesis processes, the leading factors in the formation of the oxygen regime are photosynthetic processes in surface waters, and biochemical oxygen consumption by bottom sediments in bottom waters.

Due to the high temperature of the waters, the stratification of the water column, the large influx of organic matter and its intense oxidation, oxygen is quickly consumed with minimal entry into the lower layers of the sea, resulting in the formation of an oxygen deficiency zone in the Northern Caspian Sea. Intense photosynthesis in the open waters of the deep-sea regions of the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea covers the upper 25-meter layer, where oxygen saturation is more than 120%.

In autumn, in the well-aerated shallow areas of the Northern, Middle and Southern Caspian Sea, the formation of oxygen fields is determined by the processes of water cooling and the less active, but still ongoing process of photosynthesis. The oxygen content is increasing.

The spatial distribution of nutrients in the Caspian Sea reveals the following patterns:

  • increased concentrations of nutrients are characteristic of areas near the mouth of the coastal rivers that feed the sea and shallow areas of the sea, subject to active anthropogenic influence (Baku Bay, Turkmenbashi Bay, water areas adjacent to Makhachkala, Fort Shevchenko, etc.);
  • The Northern Caspian, which is a vast mixing zone of river and sea waters, is characterized by significant spatial gradients in the distribution of nutrients;
  • in the Middle Caspian Sea, the cyclonic nature of the circulation contributes to the rise of deep waters with a high content of nutrients into the overlying layers of the sea;
  • in the deep-water regions of the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea, the vertical distribution of nutrients depends on the intensity of the convective mixing process, and their content increases with depth.

The dynamics of nutrient concentrations throughout the year in the Caspian Sea are influenced by factors such as seasonal fluctuations in nutrient runoff into the sea, the seasonal ratio of production-destruction processes, the intensity of exchange between soil and water mass, ice conditions in winter time in the Northern Caspian, processes of winter vertical circulation in deep-water areas of the sea.

In winter, a significant area of ​​the Northern Caspian Sea is covered with ice, but biochemical processes actively develop in subglacial water and ice. The ice of the Northern Caspian, being a kind of accumulator of nutrients, transforms these substances entering the sea from and from the atmosphere.

As a result of the winter vertical circulation of water in the deep-water regions of the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea during the cold season, the active layer of the sea is enriched with nutrients due to their supply from the underlying layers.

Spring for the waters of the Northern Caspian Sea is characterized by a minimum content of phosphates, nitrites and silicon, which is explained by the spring outbreak of phytoplankton development (silicon is actively consumed by diatoms). High concentrations of ammonium and nitrate nitrogen, characteristic of the waters of a large area of ​​the Northern Caspian Sea during floods, are due to intensive washing by river waters.

In the spring season, in the area of ​​water exchange between the Northern and Middle Caspian Seas in the subsurface layer, with a maximum oxygen content, the phosphate content is minimal, which, in turn, indicates the activation of the photosynthesis process in this layer.

In the Southern Caspian, the distribution of nutrients in spring is basically similar to their distribution in the Middle Caspian.

In summer, a redistribution of various forms of biogenic compounds is detected in the waters of the Northern Caspian Sea. Here the content of ammonium nitrogen and nitrates decreases significantly, while at the same time there is a slight increase in the concentrations of phosphates and nitrites and a rather significant increase in the concentration of silicon. In the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea, the concentration of phosphates has decreased due to their consumption during photosynthesis and the difficulty of water exchange with the deep-sea accumulation zone.

In autumn in the Caspian Sea, due to the cessation of the activity of some species of phytoplankton, the content of phosphates and nitrates increases, and the concentration of silicon decreases, as there is an autumn outbreak of the development of diatoms.

Oil has been extracted on the Caspian Sea shelf for more than 150 years.

Currently, large hydrocarbon reserves are being developed on the Russian shelf, the resources of which on the Dagestan shelf are estimated at 425 million tons in oil equivalent (of which 132 million tons of oil and 78 billion m3 of gas), on the shelf of the Northern Caspian Sea - at 1 billion tons of oil .

In total, about 2 billion tons of oil have already been produced in the Caspian Sea.

Losses of oil and its products during production, transportation and use reach 2% of the total volume.

The main sources of pollutants, including petroleum products, entering the Caspian Sea are removal with river runoff, discharge of untreated industrial and agricultural wastewater, municipal wastewater from cities and towns located on the coast, shipping, exploration and exploitation of oil and gas fields. located on the bottom of the sea, oil transportation by sea. The places where pollutants enter with river runoff are 90% concentrated in the Northern Caspian Sea, industrial wastewater is confined mainly to the area of ​​the Absheron Peninsula, and increased oil pollution of the Southern Caspian Sea is associated with oil production and oil exploration drilling, as well as with active volcanic activity (mud) in zone of oil and gas bearing structures.

From the territory of Russia, about 55 thousand tons of petroleum products enter the Northern Caspian annually, including 35 thousand tons (65%) from the Volga River and 130 tons (2.5%) from the runoff of the Terek and Sulak rivers.

Thickening of the film on the water surface to 0.01 mm disrupts gas exchange processes and threatens the death of hydrobiota. The concentration of petroleum products is toxic to fish at 0.01 mg/l and to phytoplankton at 0.1 mg/l.

The development of oil and gas resources on the bottom of the Caspian Sea, the forecast reserves of which are estimated at 12–15 billion tons of standard fuel, will become the main factor in the anthropogenic load on the sea ecosystem in the coming decades.

Caspian autochthonous fauna. The total number of autochthons is 513 species or 43.8% of the entire fauna, which include herring, gobies, mollusks, etc.

Arctic species. The total number of the Arctic group is 14 species and subspecies, or only 1.2% of the entire Caspian fauna (mysids, sea cockroach, whitefish, Caspian salmon, Caspian seal, etc.). The basis of the Arctic fauna are crustaceans (71.4%), which easily tolerate desalination and live at great depths of the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea (from 200 to 700 m), since the lowest water temperatures are maintained here throughout the year (4.9– 5.9°C).

Mediterranean species. These are 2 types of mollusks, needle fish, etc. At the beginning of the 20s of our century, the mollusk mytileaster entered here, later 2 types of shrimp (with mullet, during their acclimatization), 2 types of mullet and flounder. Some Mediterranean species entered the Caspian Sea after the opening of the Volga-Don Canal. Mediterranean species play a significant role in the food supply of fish in the Caspian Sea.

Freshwater fauna (228 species). This group includes anadromous and semi-anadromous fish (sturgeon, salmon, pike, catfish, carp, and also rotifers).

Marine species. These are ciliates (386 forms), 2 species of foraminifera. There are especially many endemics among higher crustaceans (31 species), gastropods (74 species and subspecies), bivalves (28 species and subspecies) and fish (63 species and subspecies). The abundance of endemics in the Caspian Sea makes it one of the most unique brackish bodies of water on the planet.

The Caspian Sea produces more than 80% of the world's sturgeon catches, the bulk of which occur in the Northern Caspian Sea.

To increase sturgeon catches, which sharply decreased during the years of falling sea levels, a set of measures is being implemented. Among them are a complete ban on sturgeon fishing in the sea and its regulation in rivers, and an increase in the scale of sturgeon factory farming.


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The Caspian Sea is one of the most amazing closed bodies of water on Earth.

Over the centuries, the sea has changed more than 70 names. The modern one came from the Caspians - tribes inhabiting the central and southeastern part of Transcaucasia 2 thousand years BC.

Geography of the Caspian Sea

The Caspian Sea is located at the junction of Europe and Asia and geographical location is divided into the Southern, Northern and Middle Caspian. The middle and northern parts of the sea belong to Russia, the southern to Iran, the eastern to Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan, and the southwestern to Azerbaijan. Over the years Caspian states divide the Caspian waters among themselves, and quite sharply at that.

Lake or sea?

In fact, the Caspian Sea is the world's largest lake, but has a number of marine characteristics. These include: a large body of water, strong storms with high waves, high and low tides. But the Caspian Sea does not have a natural connection with the World Ocean, which makes it impossible to call it a sea. At the same time, thanks to the Volga and artificially created channels, such a connection appeared. The salinity of the Caspian Sea is 3 times lower than the usual sea salinity, which does not allow the reservoir to be classified as a sea.

There were times when Caspian seas was truly part of the oceans. Several tens of thousands of years ago the Caspian Sea was connected to the Sea of ​​Azov, and through it to the Black and Mediterranean. As a result of long-term processes occurring in the earth's crust, Caucasus Mountains, which isolated the reservoir. The connection between the Caspian and Black Seas was carried out for a long time through the strait (Kuma-Manych depression) and gradually ceased.

Physical quantities

Area, volume, depth

The area, volume and depth of the Caspian Sea are not constant and directly depend on the water level. On average, the area of ​​the reservoir is 371,000 km², the volume is 78,648 km³ (44% of all world lake water reserves).

(The depth of the Caspian Sea in comparison with lakes Baikal and Tanganyika)

The average depth of the Caspian Sea is 208 m; the northern part of the sea is considered the shallowest. The maximum depth is 1025 m, noted in the South Caspian depression. In terms of depth, the Caspian Sea is second only to Baikal and Tanganyika.

The length of the lake from north to south is about 1200 km, from west to east on average 315 km. The length of the coastline is 6600 km, with islands - about 7 thousand km.

Shores

Basically, the coast of the Caspian Sea is low-lying and smooth. In the northern part it is heavily indented by the river channels of the Urals and Volga. The swampy shores here are located very low. The eastern shores adjoin semi-desert zones and deserts and are covered with limestone deposits. The most winding shores are in the west in the area of ​​the Absheron Peninsula, and in the east in the area of ​​the Kazakh Bay and Kara-Bogaz-Gol.

Sea water temperature

(Temperature of the Caspian Sea at different times of the year)

The average winter water temperature in the Caspian Sea ranges from 0 °C in the northern part to +10 °C in the southern part. In Iranian waters, the temperature does not drop below +13 °C. With the onset of cold weather, the shallow northern part of the lake becomes covered with ice, which lasts for 2-3 months. The thickness of the ice cover is 25-60 cm, at especially low temperatures it can reach 130 cm. In late autumn and winter, drifting ice floes can be observed in the north.

In summer average temperature The surface water temperature in the sea is + 24 °C. In most parts the sea warms up to +25 °C…+30 °C. Warm water and beautiful sandy, occasionally shell and pebble beaches create excellent conditions for full-fledged beach holiday. In the eastern part of the Caspian Sea, near the city of Begdash, abnormally low water temperatures remain in the summer months.

Nature of the Caspian Sea

Islands, peninsulas, bays, rivers

The Caspian Sea includes about 50 large and medium-sized islands, with a total area of ​​350 km². The largest of them are: Ashur-Ada, Garasu, Gum, Dash and Boyuk-Zira. The largest peninsulas are: Agrakhansky, Absheronsky, Buzachi, Mangyshlak, Miankale and Tyub-Karagan.

(Tyuleniy Island in the Caspian Sea, part of the Dagestan Nature Reserve)

TO largest bays The Caspian Sea includes: Agrakhansky, Kazakh, Kizlyarsky, Dead Kultuk and Mangyshlaksky. In the east is salt lake Kara-Bogaz-Gol, previously a lagoon connected to the sea by a strait. In 1980, a dam was built on it, through which water from the Caspian goes to Kara-Bogaz-Gol, where it then evaporates.

130 rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, located mainly in its northern part. The largest of them are: Volga, Terek, Sulak, Samur and Ural. The average annual drainage of the Volga is 220 km³. 9 rivers have delta-shaped mouths.

Flora and fauna

The Caspian Sea is home to about 450 species of phytoplankton, including algae, aquatic and flowering plants. Of the 400 species of invertebrates, worms, crustaceans and molluscs predominate. There are a lot of small shrimp in the sea, which are the object of fishing.

More than 120 species of fish live in the Caspian Sea and its delta. Fishing objects include sprat (“Kilkin fleet”), catfish, pike, bream, pike perch, kutum, mullet, roach, rudd, herring, white fish, pike perch, goby, grass carp, burbot, asp and pike perch. Stocks of sturgeon and salmon are currently depleted, however, the sea is the largest supplier of black caviar in the world.

Fishing in the Caspian Sea is allowed all year round, with the exception of the period from late April to late June. There are many fishing bases with all amenities on the coast. Fishing in the Caspian Sea is a great pleasure. In any part of it, including in large cities, the catch is unusually rich.

The lake is famous for its wide variety of waterfowl. Geese, ducks, loons, gulls, waders, eagles, geese, swans and many others fly to the Caspian Sea during the migration or nesting period. Largest quantity birds - over 600 thousand individuals are observed at the mouths of the Volga and Ural, in the Turkmenbashi and Kyzylagach bays. During the hunting season, a huge number of fishermen come here not only from Russia, but also from countries near and far abroad.

The Caspian Sea is home to the only mammal. This is the Caspian seal or seal. Until recently, seals swam close to the beaches, everyone could admire the amazing animal with round black eyes, and the seals behaved very friendly. Now the seal is on the verge of extinction.

Cities on the Caspian Sea

The largest city on the Caspian Sea coast is Baku. The number of one of the most the most beautiful cities the world is over 2.5 million people. Baku is located on the picturesque Absheron Peninsula and is surrounded on three sides by the waters of the warm and oil-rich Caspian Sea. Less major cities: the capital of Dagestan is Makhachkala, the Kazakh Aktau, the Turkmen Turkmenbashi and the Iranian Bender-Anzeli.

(Baku Bay, Baku - a city on the Caspian Sea)

Interesting facts

Scientists are still debating whether to call a body of water a sea or a lake. The level of the Caspian Sea is gradually decreasing. The Volga delivers most of the water to the Caspian Sea. 90% of black caviar is mined in the Caspian Sea. Among them, the most expensive is the albino beluga caviar “Almas” ($2 thousand per 100 g).

Companies from 21 countries are taking part in the development of oil fields in the Caspian Sea. According to Russian estimates, hydrocarbon reserves in the sea amount to 12 billion tons. American scientists claim that a fifth of the world's hydrocarbon reserves are concentrated in the depths of the Caspian Sea. This is more than the combined reserves of oil-producing countries such as Kuwait and Iraq.

Many geographical names, can mislead people who are not keen on geography. Could it be that an object designated as a sea on all maps is actually a lake? Let's figure it out.

The history of the appearance of the Caspian Sea?

14,000,000 years ago the Sarmatian Sea existed on the planet. It included modern, Black, Caspian and Sea of ​​Azov. About 6,000,000 years ago, due to the rise of the Caucasus Mountains and the decrease in water levels in the Mediterranean Sea, it divided, forming four different seas.

The Caspian is inhabited by many representatives of the fauna of Azov, which once again confirms that these reservoirs were once one whole. This is one of the reasons why the Caspian Sea is considered a lake.

The name of the sea comes from the ancient tribes of the Caspian Sea. They inhabited its shores in the first millennia BC and were engaged in horse breeding. But over the many hundreds of years of its existence, this sea has had many names. It was called Derbentsky, Saraisky, Girkansky, Sigai, Kukkuz. Even in our time, for residents of Iran and Azerbaijan, this lake is called Khazar.

Geographical location

Two parts of the world - Europe and Asia - are washed by the waters of the Caspian Sea. Coastline covers the following countries:

  • Turkmenistan
  • Russia
  • Azerbaijan
  • Kazakhstan

The length from north to south is about one thousand two hundred kilometers, the width from west to east is about three hundred kilometers. The average depth is about two hundred meters, the greatest depth is about a thousand kilometers. Total area The reservoir covers more than 370,000 square kilometers and is divided into three climatic and geographical zones:

  1. Northern
  2. Average
  3. Southern Caspian

The water area includes six large peninsulas and about fifty islands. Their total area is four hundred square kilometers. The largest islands are Dzhambaisky, Ogurchinsky, Chechen, Tyuleniy, Konevsky, Zyudev and the Absheron Islands. About one hundred and thirty rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, including the Volga, Ural, Atrek, Sefirud, Terek, Kura and many others.

Sea or lake?

The official name used in documentation and cartography is the Caspian Sea. But is this true?

In order to have the right to be called a sea, any body of water must be connected to the world's oceans. In the case of the Caspian Sea, this is not reality. The Caspian Sea is separated by almost 500 km of land from the nearest sea, the Black Sea. This is a completely enclosed body of water. The main differences between the seas:

  • The seas can be fed by waterways - rivers.
  • The external seas are directly connected to the ocean, that is, they have access to it.
  • Inland seas are connected to other seas or oceans by straits.

The Caspian received the right to be called a sea primarily because of its impressive size, which is more typical of seas rather than lakes. In area it surpasses even Azov. Also no small role was played by the fact that not a single lake washes the shores of five states at once.

It is worth noting that the structure of the Caspian Sea bottom is of the oceanic type. This happened due to the fact that it was once part of the ancient World Ocean.

Compared to other seas, the percentage of salt saturation in it is very weak and does not exceed 0.05%. The Caspian Sea is fed only by rivers flowing into it, like all lakes on the globe.

Like many seas, the Caspian is famous for its powerful storms. The height of the waves can reach eleven meters. Storms can occur at any time of the year, but they are most dangerous in autumn and winter.

In fact, the Caspian Sea is the most big lake in the world. Its waters are not subject to international maritime laws. The territory of waters is divided between countries on the basis of laws adopted for lakes, and not for seas.

The Caspian Sea has rich mineral resources such as oil and gas. Its waters are inhabited by more than one hundred and twenty species of fish. Among them are the most valuable sturgeons, such as stellate sturgeon, sturgeon, sterlet, beluga, and thorn. 90% of the world's sturgeon catch comes from the Caspian Sea.

Interesting features:

  • Scientists around the world have not yet come to a clear conclusion as to why the Caspian Sea is considered a lake. Some experts even suggest considering it a “lake-sea” or an “inland” sea, like the Dead Sea in Israel;
  • The deepest point of the Caspian Sea is more than one kilometer;
  • Historically, it is known that the total water level in the reservoir has changed more than once. The exact reasons for this are still not understood;
  • It is the only body of water separating Asia and Europe;
  • The largest water artery feeding the lake is the Volga River. It is this that carries the bulk of the water;
  • Thousands of years ago the Caspian Sea was part of the Black Sea;
  • In terms of the number of fish species, the Caspian Sea is inferior to some rivers;
  • The Caspian Sea is the main supplier of the most expensive delicacy - black caviar;
  • The water in the lake is completely renewed every two hundred and fifty years;
  • Japanese territory less area Caspian Sea.

Ecological situation

Intervention into the ecology of the Caspian Sea regularly occurs due to the extraction of oil and natural resources. There are also interventions in the fauna of the reservoir, cases of poaching and illegal fishing of valuable fish species are frequent.

The water level in the Caspian Sea is falling every year. This is due to global warming, due to the influence of which the water temperature on the surface of the reservoir increased by one degree and the sea began to actively evaporate.

It is estimated that water levels have fallen by seven centimeters since 1996. By 2015, the level of the fall was about one and a half meters, and the water continues to fall.

If this continues, in a century the shallowest part of the lake may simply disappear. This will be the part that washes the borders of Russia and Kazakhstan. If global warming intensifies, the process may accelerate and this will happen much earlier.

It is known that long before the onset of global warming, the water level in the Caspian Sea underwent changes. The water kept rising and then falling. Scientists still cannot say exactly why this happened.

The territory of Russia is washed by twelve seas belonging to the basins three oceans. But one of these seas - the Caspian - is often called a lake, which sometimes confuses people who have little understanding of geography.

Meanwhile, it is really more correct to call the Caspian a lake rather than a sea. Why? Let's figure it out.

A little geography. Where is the Caspian Sea located?

Occupying an area that exceeds 370,000 square kilometers, the Caspian Sea stretches from north to south, dividing the spaces of Europe and Asia with its water surface. Its coastline belongs to five different countries: Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan and Iran. Geographers conventionally divide its water area into three parts: the Northern (25% of the area), the Middle (36% of the area) and the Southern Caspian (39% of the area), which differ in climate, geological conditions and natural features. The coastline is predominantly flat, indented by river channels, covered with vegetation, and in the northern part, where the Volga flows into the Caspian Sea, it is also swampy.

The Caspian Sea has about 50 large and small islands, about one and a half dozen bays and six large peninsulas. In addition to the Volga, approximately 130 rivers flow into it, and nine rivers form fairly wide and branched deltas. The annual drainage of the Volga is about 120 cubic kilometers. Together with other large rivers - Terek, Ural, Emba and Sulak - this accounts for up to 90% of the total annual flow into the Caspian Sea.

Why is the Caspian called a lake?

The main feature of any sea is the presence of straits connecting it to the ocean. The Caspian Sea is a closed or drainless body of water that receives river water, but is not connected to any ocean.


Its water contains a very small amount of salt compared to other seas (about 0.05%) and is considered slightly salty. Due to the absence of at least one strait connecting to the ocean, the Caspian Sea is often called the largest lake in the world, since the lake is a completely enclosed body of water that is fed only by river water.

The waters of the Caspian Sea are not subject to international maritime laws, and its waters are divided between all countries that are adjacent to it, in proportion to the coastline.

Why is the Caspian called a sea?

Despite all of the above, most often in geography, as well as in international and internal documents, the name “Caspian Sea” is used, and not “ Caspian lake" First of all, this is explained by the size of the reservoir, which is much more characteristic of the sea than of the lake. Even, which is much smaller in area than the Caspian Sea, local residents often called the sea. There are no other lakes in the world whose shores belong simultaneously to five different countries.

In addition, you should pay attention to the structure of the bottom, which near the Caspian Sea has a pronounced oceanic type. Once upon a time, the Caspian Sea most likely connected with the Mediterranean, but tectonic processes and drying out separated it from the World Ocean. There are more than fifty islands in the Caspian Sea, and the area of ​​some of them is quite large, even by international standards they are considered large. All this allows us to call the Caspian a sea, and not a lake.

Origin of the name

Why is this sea (or lake) called the Caspian? The origin of any name is often associated with ancient history terrain. Different peoples who lived on the shores of the Caspian called it differently. More than seventy names of this reservoir have been preserved in history - it was called the Hyrcanian, Derbent, Sarai Sea, etc.


Iranians and Azerbaijanis still call it the Khazar Sea. It began to be called Caspian after the name of the ancient tribe of nomadic horse breeders who lived in the steppes adjacent to its coast - the numerous Caspian tribe. It was they who gave the name to the largest lake on our planet - the Caspian Sea.

Many place names can be misleading to people who are not keen on geography. Could it be that an object marked on all maps as a sea is actually a lake? Let's figure it out.

The history of the appearance of the Caspian Sea?

14,000,000 years ago, the Sarmatian Sea existed on the planet. It included the modern Black, Caspian and Azov seas. About 6,000,000 years ago, due to the rise of the Caucasus Mountains and the decrease in water levels in the Mediterranean Sea, it divided, forming four different seas.

The Caspian is inhabited by many representatives of the fauna of Azov, which once again confirms that these reservoirs were once one whole. This is one of the reasons why the Caspian Sea is considered a lake.

The name of the sea comes from the ancient tribes of the Caspian Sea. They inhabited its shores in the first millennia BC and were engaged in horse breeding. But over the many hundreds of years of its existence, this sea has had many names. It was called Derbentsky, Saraisky, Girkansky, Sigai, Kukkuz. Even in our time, for residents of Iran and Azerbaijan, this lake is called Khazar.

Geographical location

Two parts of the world - Europe and Asia - are washed by the waters of the Caspian Sea. The coastline covers the following countries:

  • Turkmenistan
  • Russia
  • Azerbaijan
  • Kazakhstan

The length from north to south is about one thousand two hundred kilometers, the width from west to east is about three hundred kilometers. The average depth is about two hundred meters, the greatest depth is about a thousand kilometers. The total area of ​​the reservoir is more than 370,000 square kilometers and is divided into three climatic and geographical zones:

  1. Northern
  2. Average
  3. Southern Caspian

The water area includes six large peninsulas and about fifty islands. Their total area is four hundred square kilometers. The largest islands are Dzhambaisky, Ogurchinsky, Chechen, Tyuleniy, Konevsky, Zyudev and the Absheron Islands. About one hundred and thirty rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, including the Volga, Ural, Atrek, Sefirud, Terek, Kura and many others.

Sea or lake?

The official name used in documentation and cartography is the Caspian Sea. But is this true?

In order to have the right to be called a sea, any body of water must be connected to the world's oceans. In the case of the Caspian Sea, this is not reality. The Caspian Sea is separated by almost 500 km of land from the nearest sea, the Black Sea. This is a completely enclosed body of water. The main differences between the seas:

  • The seas can be fed by waterways - rivers.
  • The external seas are directly connected to the ocean, that is, they have access to it.
  • Inland seas are connected to other seas or oceans by straits.

The Caspian received the right to be called a sea primarily because of its impressive size, which is more typical of seas rather than lakes. In area it surpasses even Azov. Also no small role was played by the fact that not a single lake washes the shores of five states at once.

It is worth noting that the structure of the Caspian Sea bottom is of the oceanic type. This happened due to the fact that it was once part of the ancient World Ocean.

Compared to other seas, the percentage of salt saturation in it is very weak and does not exceed 0.05%. The Caspian Sea is fed only by rivers flowing into it, like all lakes on the globe.

Like many seas, the Caspian is famous for its powerful storms. The height of the waves can reach eleven meters. Storms can occur at any time of the year, but they are most dangerous in autumn and winter.

In fact, the Caspian Sea is the largest lake in the world. Its waters are not subject to international maritime laws. The territory of waters is divided between countries on the basis of laws adopted for lakes, and not for seas.

The Caspian Sea has rich mineral resources such as oil and gas. Its waters are inhabited by more than one hundred and twenty species of fish. Among them are the most valuable sturgeons, such as stellate sturgeon, sturgeon, sterlet, beluga, and thorn. 90% of the world's sturgeon catch comes from the Caspian Sea.

Interesting features:

  • Scientists around the world have not yet come to a clear conclusion as to why the Caspian Sea is considered a lake. Some experts even suggest considering it a “lake-sea” or an “inland” sea, like the Dead Sea in Israel;
  • The deepest point of the Caspian Sea is more than one kilometer;
  • Historically, it is known that the total water level in the reservoir has changed more than once. The exact reasons for this are still not understood;
  • It is the only body of water separating Asia and Europe;
  • The largest water artery feeding the lake is the Volga River. It is this that carries the bulk of the water;
  • Thousands of years ago the Caspian Sea was part of the Black Sea;
  • In terms of the number of fish species, the Caspian Sea is inferior to some rivers;
  • The Caspian Sea is the main supplier of the most expensive delicacy - black caviar;
  • The water in the lake is completely renewed every two hundred and fifty years;
  • The territory of Japan is smaller than the area of ​​the Caspian Sea.

Ecological situation

Intervention into the ecology of the Caspian Sea regularly occurs due to the extraction of oil and natural resources. There are also interventions in the fauna of the reservoir, cases of poaching and illegal fishing of valuable fish species are frequent.

The water level in the Caspian Sea is falling every year. This is due to global warming, due to the influence of which the water temperature on the surface of the reservoir increased by one degree and the sea began to actively evaporate.

It is estimated that water levels have fallen by seven centimeters since 1996. By 2015, the level of the fall was about one and a half meters, and the water continues to fall.

If this continues, in a century the shallowest part of the lake may simply disappear. This will be the part that washes the borders of Russia and Kazakhstan. If global warming intensifies, the process may accelerate and this will happen much earlier.

It is known that long before the onset of global warming, the water level in the Caspian Sea underwent changes. The water kept rising and then falling. Scientists still cannot say exactly why this happened.

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