Where is the Caspian Sea lake located? Why the Caspian Sea can not be called either a sea or a lake

, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Iran, Azerbaijan

Geographical position

Caspian Sea- view from space.

The Caspian Sea is located at the junction of two parts of the Eurasian continent - Europe and Asia. Length Caspian Sea from north to south - approximately 1200 kilometers (36°34"-47°13" N), from west to east - from 195 to 435 kilometers, on average 310-320 kilometers (46°-56° E .).

The Caspian Sea is conventionally divided according to physical and geographical conditions into 3 parts - Northern Caspian, Middle Caspian and Southern Caspian. The conditional border between the Northern and Middle Caspian runs along the line of the island. Chechen - Cape Tyub-Karagansky, between the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea - along the line of the island. Residential - Cape Gan-Gulu. The area of ​​the Northern, Middle and Southern Caspian Sea is 25, 36, 39 percent, respectively.

Coast of the Caspian Sea

Coast of the Caspian Sea in Turkmenistan

The territory adjacent to the Caspian Sea is called the Caspian region.

Peninsulas of the Caspian Sea

  • Ashur-Ada
  • Garasu
  • Zyanbil
  • Khara-Zira
  • Sengi-Mugan
  • Chygyl

Bays of the Caspian Sea

  • Russia (Dagestan, Kalmykia and Astrakhan region) - in the west and northwest, length coastline about 1930 kilometers
  • Kazakhstan - in the north, northeast and east, the length of the coastline is about 2320 kilometers
  • Turkmenistan - in the southeast, the length of the coastline is about 650 kilometers
  • Iran - in the south, the length of the coastline is about 1000 kilometers
  • Azerbaijan - in the southwest, the length of the coastline is about 800 kilometers

Cities on the Caspian Sea coast

On the Russian coast there are cities - Lagan, Makhachkala, Kaspiysk, Izberbash and the most Southern City Russia Derbent. port city Astrakhan is also considered to be part of the Caspian Sea, which, however, is not located on the shores of the Caspian Sea, but in the Volga delta, 60 kilometers from the northern coast of the Caspian Sea.

Physiography

Area, depth, volume of water

The area and volume of water in the Caspian Sea varies significantly depending on fluctuations in water levels. At a water level of −26.75 m, the area is approximately 371,000 square kilometers, the volume of water is 78,648 cubic kilometers, which is approximately 44% of the world's lake water reserves. The maximum depth of the Caspian Sea is in the South Caspian depression, 1025 meters from its surface level. In terms of maximum depth, the Caspian Sea is second only to Baikal (1620 m) and Tanganyika (1435 m). The average depth of the Caspian Sea, calculated from the bathygraphic curve, is 208 meters. At the same time, the northern part of the Caspian Sea is shallow, its maximum depth does not exceed 25 meters, and average depth- 4 meters.

Water level fluctuations

Vegetable world

The flora of the Caspian Sea and its coast is represented by 728 species. The predominant plants in the Caspian Sea are algae - blue-green, diatoms, red, brown, characeae and others, and flowering plants - zoster and ruppia. In origin, the flora is predominantly of Neogene age, but some plants were brought into the Caspian Sea by humans deliberately or on the bottoms of ships.

History of the Caspian Sea

Origin of the Caspian Sea

Anthropological and cultural history of the Caspian Sea

Finds in the Khuto u cave south coast The Caspian Sea indicates that man lived in these areas approximately 75 thousand years ago. The first mentions of the Caspian Sea and the tribes living on its coast are found in Herodotus. Around the V-II centuries. BC e. Saka tribes lived on the Caspian coast. Later, during the period of settlement of the Turks, in the period of the 4th-5th centuries. n. e. Talysh tribes (Talysh) lived here. According to ancient Armenian and Iranian manuscripts, Russians sailed the Caspian Sea from the 9th-10th centuries.

Research of the Caspian Sea

Research of the Caspian Sea was started by Peter the Great, when, on his order, an expedition was organized in 1714-1715 under the leadership of A. Bekovich-Cherkassky. In the 1720s, hydrographic research was continued by the expedition of Karl von Werden and F.I. Soimonov, and later by I.V. Tokmachev, M.I. Voinovich and other researchers. At the beginning of the 19th century, instrumental surveys of the shores were carried out by I. F. Kolodkin, in the mid-19th century. - instrumental geographical survey under the direction of N. A. Ivashintsev. Since 1866, for more than 50 years, expeditionary research on the hydrology and hydrobiology of the Caspian Sea was carried out under the leadership of N. M. Knipovich. In 1897, the Astrakhan Research Station was founded. In the first decades of Soviet power, geological research by I.M. Gubkin and other Soviet geologists was actively carried out in the Caspian Sea, mainly aimed at searching for oil, as well as research into the water balance and level fluctuations of the Caspian Sea.

Economy of the Caspian Sea

Mining of oil and gas

Many oil and gas fields are being developed in the Caspian Sea. Proven oil resources in the Caspian Sea are about 10 billion tons, total oil and gas condensate resources are estimated at 18-20 billion tons.

Oil production in the Caspian Sea began in 1820, when the first oil well was drilled on the Absheron shelf near Baku. In the second half of the 19th century, oil production began on an industrial scale on the Absheron Peninsula, and then in other territories.

Shipping

Shipping is developed in the Caspian Sea. There are ferry crossings on the Caspian Sea, in particular, Baku - Turkmenbashi, Baku - Aktau, Makhachkala - Aktau. The Caspian Sea has a shipping connection with Sea of ​​Azov through the Volga, Don and Volga-Don Canal rivers.

Fishing and seafood production

Fishing (sturgeon, bream, carp, pike perch, sprat), caviar production, as well as seal fishing. More than 90 percent of the world's sturgeon catch occurs in the Caspian Sea. In addition to industrial mining, illegal fishing of sturgeon and their caviar flourishes in the Caspian Sea.

Recreational resources

Natural environment of the Caspian coast with sandy beaches, mineral waters and healing mud in the coastal zone creates good conditions for rest and treatment. At the same time, in terms of the degree of development of resorts and the tourism industry, the Caspian coast is noticeably inferior to the Black Sea coast of the Caucasus. At the same time, in recent years, the tourism industry has been actively developing on the coasts of Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkmenistan and Russian Dagestan. Azerbaijan is actively developing resort area in the Baku region. A world-class resort has now been created in Amburan, another modern tourist complex is being built in the area of ​​the village of Nardaran, holidays in the sanatoriums of the villages of Bilgah and Zagulba are very popular. A resort area is also being developed in Nabran, in northern Azerbaijan. However, high prices, a generally low level of service and a lack of advertising lead to the fact that there are almost no foreign tourists at the Caspian resorts. The development of the tourism industry in Turkmenistan is hampered by a long-term policy of isolation, in Iran - Sharia laws, due to which mass holidays of foreign tourists on the Caspian coast of Iran are impossible.

Ecological problems

Environmental problems of the Caspian Sea are associated with water pollution as a result of oil production and transportation on the continental shelf, the flow of pollutants from the Volga and other rivers flowing into the Caspian Sea, the life activity of coastal cities, as well as the flooding of individual objects due to rising levels of the Caspian Sea. Predatory production of sturgeon and their caviar, rampant poaching lead to a decrease in the number of sturgeon and to forced restrictions on their production and export.

International status of the Caspian Sea

Legal status of the Caspian Sea

After the collapse of the USSR, the division of the Caspian Sea has long been and still remains the subject of unresolved disagreements related to the division of Caspian shelf resources - oil and gas, as well as biological resources. For a long time, negotiations were ongoing between the Caspian states on the status of the Caspian Sea - Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan insisted on dividing the Caspian along the median line, Iran insisted on dividing the Caspian by one-fifth between all Caspian states.

In relation to the Caspian Sea, the key is the physical-geographical circumstance that it is a closed inland body of water that does not have a natural connection with the World Ocean. Accordingly, the norms and concepts of international maritime law, in particular, the provisions of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea of ​​1982, should not be automatically applied to the Caspian Sea. Based on this, in relation to the Caspian Sea it would be unlawful to apply such concepts as “territorial sea”, “exclusive economic zone", "continental shelf", etc.

The current legal regime of the Caspian Sea was established by the Soviet-Iranian treaties of 1921 and 1940. These treaties provide for freedom of navigation throughout the sea, freedom of fishing with the exception of ten-mile national fishing zones and a ban on vessels flying the flag of non-Caspian states sailing in its waters.

Negotiations on the legal status of the Caspian Sea are currently ongoing.

Delineation of sections of the Caspian seabed for subsoil use

The Russian Federation concluded an agreement with Kazakhstan on delimiting the bottom of the northern part of the Caspian Sea in order to exercise sovereign rights to subsoil use (dated July 6, 1998 and the Protocol thereto dated May 13, 2002), an agreement with Azerbaijan on delimiting adjacent areas of the bottom of the northern part of the Caspian Sea (dated September 23, 2002), as well as the trilateral Russian-Azerbaijani-Kazakh agreement on the junction point of the demarcation lines of adjacent sections of the Caspian Sea bottom (dated May 14, 2003), which established geographical coordinates dividing lines limiting the areas of the seabed within which the parties exercise their sovereign rights in the field of exploration and production of mineral resources.

This is how the Mediterranean Sea was formed, which then included the current Azov, Black and Caspian seas. On the site of the modern Caspian Sea, a huge Caspian lowland was formed, the surface of which was almost 30 meters below the water level in the World Ocean. When did the next rise of land begin to take place at the place of formation? Caucasus Mountains, The Caspian Sea was finally cut off from the ocean, and in its place a closed, endorheic body of water was formed, which today is considered the largest inland sea on the planet. However, some scientists call this sea a giant lake.
A special feature of the Caspian Sea is the constant fluctuation in the salinity level of its water. Even in different areas This sea's water has different salinity. This was the reason that the Caspian Sea is dominated by animals of the classes of fish and crustaceans, which more easily tolerate fluctuations in water salinity.

Since the Caspian Sea is completely isolated from the ocean, its inhabitants are endermics, i.e. always live in its waters.

The fauna of the Caspian Sea can be divided into four groups.

The first group of animals includes the descendants of ancient organisms that inhabited Tethys about 70 million years ago. Such animals include Caspian gobies (bighead, Knipovich, Berg, bubyr, puglovka, Baer) and herring (Kessler, Brazhnikov, Volga, puzanok, etc.), some mollusks and most crustaceans (long-sex crayfish, Ortemia crustacean, etc.). Some fish, mainly herrings, periodically enter the rivers flowing into the Caspian Sea to spawn; many never leave the sea. Gobies prefer to live in coastal waters and are often found in river mouths.
The second group of animals of the Caspian Sea is represented by Arctic species. penetrated into the Caspian Sea from the north in the post-glacial period. These are animals such as the Caspian seal (Caspian seal), fish - Caspian trout, whitefish, nelma. Of the crustaceans, this group is represented by mysid crustaceans, similar to small shrimp, tiny sea cockroaches and some others.
The third group of animals inhabiting the Caspian Sea includes species that moved here independently or with the help of humans from Mediterranean Sea. These are mollusks mytisaster and abra, crustaceans - amphipods, shrimp, Black Sea and Atlantic crabs and some types of fish: singil (sharp fish), needle fish and Black Sea flounder (flounder).

And finally, the fourth group is freshwater fish that entered the Caspian Sea from fresh rivers and turned into marine or migratory fish, i.e. periodically rising into rivers. Some of the typically freshwater fish also sometimes enter the Caspian Sea. Among the fish of the fourth group are catfish, pike perch, barbel, red-lipped asp, Caspian fisherman, Russian and Persian sturgeon, beluga, stellate sturgeon. It should be noted that the Caspian Sea basin is the main habitat of sturgeon on the planet. Almost 80% of all sturgeon in the world live here. Barbel and vimba are also valuable commercial fish.

As for sharks and other fish that are predatory and dangerous to humans, they do not live in the Caspian Sea-lake.

The Caspian Sea is located on the border of Europe and Asia and is surrounded by the territories of five states: Russia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan. Despite its name, the Caspian Sea is the largest lake on the planet (its area is 371,000 km2), but the bottom, composed of oceanic crust, and salty water together with its large size, they give reason to consider it a sea. A large number of rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, for example, such large ones as the Volga, Terek, Ural, Kura and others.

Relief and depth of the Caspian Sea

Based on the bottom topography, the Caspian Sea is divided into three parts: southern (the largest and deepest), middle and northern.

In the northern part, the depth of the sea is the smallest: on average it ranges from four to eight meters, and the maximum depth here reaches 25 m. The northern part of the Caspian Sea is limited by the Mangyshlak Peninsula and occupies 25% of the total area of ​​the reservoir.

The middle part of the Caspian Sea is deeper. Here the average depth becomes 190 m, while the maximum is 788 meters. The area of ​​the middle Caspian Sea is 36% of the total, and the volume of water is 33% of the total volume of the sea. It is separated from the southern part by the Absheron Peninsula in Azerbaijan.

The deepest and largest part of the Caspian Sea is the southern one. It occupies 39% of the total area, and its share of the total water volume is 66%. Here is the South Caspian depression, which contains the most deep point sea ​​– 1025 m.

Islands, peninsulas and bays of the Caspian Sea

There are about 50 islands in the Caspian Sea, almost all of them are uninhabited. Due to the shallower depth of the northern part of the sea, most of the islands are located there, among them the Baku archipelago, which belongs to Azerbaijan, Seal Islands in Kazakhstan, as well as many Russian islands off the coast of the Astrakhan region and Dagestan.

Among the peninsulas of the Caspian Sea, the largest are Mangyshlak (Mangistau) in Kazakhstan and Absheron in Azerbaijan, on which such big cities as the capital of the country Baku and Sumgayit.

Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay Caspian Sea

The coastline of the sea is very indented, and there are many bays on it, for example, Kizlyarsky, Mangyshlaksky, Dead Kultuk and others. The Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay deserves special mention, which is actually a separate lake connected to the Caspian Sea by a narrow strait, thanks to which it maintains a separate ecosystem and higher salinity of water.

Fishing in the Caspian Sea

Since ancient times, the Caspian Sea has attracted residents of its shores with its fish resources. About 90% of the world's sturgeon production is caught here, as well as fish such as carp, bream, and sprat.

Caspian Sea video

In addition to fish, the Caspian Sea is extremely rich in oil and gas, the total reserves of which are about 18-20 million tons. Salt, limestone, sand and clay are also mined here.

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V. N. MIKHAILOV

The Caspian Sea is the largest on the planet closed lake. This body of water is called the sea for its huge size, brackish water and a regime similar to the sea. The level of the Caspian Sea-lake lies much lower than the level of the World Ocean. At the beginning of 2000, it was around -27 abs. m. At this level, the area of ​​the Caspian Sea is ~ 393 thousand km2 and the volume of water is 78,600 km3. The average and maximum depths are 208 and 1025 m, respectively.

The Caspian Sea stretches from south to north (Fig. 1). The Caspian Sea washes the shores of Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and Iran. The reservoir is rich in fish, its bottom and shores are rich in oil and gas. The Caspian Sea has been studied quite well, but many mysteries remain in its regime. The most characteristic reservoir - this is an instability of the level with sharp drops and rises. The last increase in the level of the Caspian Sea occurred before our eyes from 1978 to 1995. It gave rise to many rumors and speculation. Numerous publications appeared in the press talking about catastrophic floods and an environmental disaster. They often wrote that the rise in the level of the Caspian Sea led to the flooding of almost the entire Volga delta. What is true in the statements made? What is the reason for this behavior of the Caspian Sea?

WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CASPIAN IN THE XX CENTURY

Systematic observations of the level of the Caspian Sea began in 1837. In the second half of the 19th century, the average annual values ​​of the Caspian Sea level were in the range from – 26 to – 25.5 abs. m and had a slight downward trend. This trend continued into the 20th century (Fig. 2). In the period from 1929 to 1941, sea level dropped sharply (by almost 2 m - from - 25.88 to - 27.84 abs. m). In subsequent years, the level continued to fall and, having decreased by approximately 1.2 m, reached in 1977 the lowest level during the observation period - 29.01 abs. m. Then the sea level began to rise rapidly and, having risen by 2.35 m by 1995, reached 26.66 abs. m. In the next four years, the average sea level dropped by almost 30 cm. Its average levels were - 26.80 in 1996, - 26.95 in 1997, - 26.94 in 1998 and - 27.00 abs. m in 1999.

The decrease in sea level in 1930-1970 led to the shallowing of coastal waters, the extension of the coastline towards the sea, and the formation of wide beaches. The latter was perhaps the only positive consequence of the drop in level. There were significantly more negative consequences. As the level dropped, the areas of feeding grounds for fish stocks in the northern Caspian Sea decreased. The shallow-water estuarine coastal area of ​​the Volga began to quickly become overgrown with aquatic vegetation, which worsened the conditions for the passage of fish to spawn in the Volga. Fish catches have sharply decreased, especially valuable species: sturgeon and sterlet. Shipping began to suffer due to the fact that the depths in the approach channels decreased, especially near the Volga delta.

The rise in levels from 1978 to 1995 was not only unexpected, but also led to even greater negative consequences. After all, both the economy and the population of coastal areas have already adapted to the low level.

Many sectors of the economy began to suffer damage. Significant areas were in the flood and flood zone, especially in the northern (plain) part of Dagestan, Kalmykia and the Astrakhan region. The cities of Derbent, Kaspiysk, Makhachkala, Sulak, Kaspiysky (Lagan) and dozens of other smaller settlements suffered from the rise in level. Significant areas of agricultural land have been flooded and submerged. Roads and power lines are destroyed, engineering structures industrial enterprises and public services. A threatening situation has developed with fish farming enterprises. Abrasion processes in the coastal zone and the influence of seawater surges have intensified. In recent years, the flora and fauna of the seaside and coastal zone of the Volga delta have suffered significant damage.

Due to the increase in depth in the shallow waters of the Northern Caspian and the reduction in the areas occupied by aquatic vegetation in these places, the conditions for the reproduction of stocks of anadromous and semi-anadromous fish and the conditions for their migration to the delta for spawning have somewhat improved. However, the predominance of negative consequences from rising sea levels has led to talk of an environmental catastrophe. The development of measures to protect national economic facilities and settlements from the advancing sea began.

HOW UNUSUAL IS THE CURRENT BEHAVIOR OF THE CASPIAN SEA?

Research into the life history of the Caspian Sea can help answer this question. Of course, there are no direct observations of the past regime of the Caspian Sea, but there is archaeological, cartographic and other evidence for historical time and the results of paleogeographic studies covering a longer period.

It has been proven that during the Pleistocene (the last 700-500 thousand years), the level of the Caspian Sea underwent large-scale fluctuations in the range of about 200 m: from -140 to + 50 abs. m. During this period of time, four stages are distinguished in the history of the Caspian Sea: Baku, Khazar, Khvalyn and Novo-Caspian (Fig. 3). Each stage included several transgressions and regressions. The Baku transgression occurred 400-500 thousand years ago, sea level rose to 5 abs. m. During the Khazar stage, there were two transgressions: early Khazar (250-300 thousand years ago, maximum level 10 abs. m) and late Khazar (100-200 thousand years ago, highest level -15 abs. m). The Khvalynian stage in the history of the Caspian Sea included two transgressions: the largest during the Pleistocene period, the Early Khvalynian (40-70 thousand years ago, maximum level 47 absolute meters, which is 74 m higher than the modern one) and the Late Khvalynian (10-20 thousand years ago, rise level up to 0 abs. m). These transgressions were separated by the deep Enotayev regression (22-17 thousand years ago), when sea level dropped to -64 abs. m and was 37 m lower than the modern one.



Rice. 4. Fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea over the past 10 thousand years. P is the natural range of fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea under climatic conditions characteristic of the sub-Atlantic Holocene era (risk zone). I-IV - stages of the New Caspian transgression; M - Mangyshlak, D - Derbent regression

Significant fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea also occurred during the New Caspian stage of its history, which coincided with the Holocene (the last 10 thousand years). After the Mangyshlak regression (10 thousand years ago, the level dropped to – 50 abs. m), five stages of the New Caspian transgression were noted, separated by small regressions (Fig. 4). Following fluctuations in sea level—its transgressions and regressions—the outline of the reservoir also changed (Fig. 5).

Over historical time (2000 years), the range of changes in the average level of the Caspian Sea was 7 m – from – 32 to – 25 abs. m (see Fig. 4). The minimum level in the last 2000 years was during the Derbent regression (VI-VII centuries AD), when it decreased to -32 abs. m. During the time elapsed after the Derbent regression, the average sea level changed in an even narrower range - from – 30 to – 25 abs. m. This range of level changes is called the risk zone.

Thus, the level of the Caspian Sea has experienced fluctuations before, and in the past they were more significant than in the 20th century. Such periodic fluctuations are a normal manifestation of the unstable state of a closed reservoir with variable conditions at the outer boundaries. Therefore, there is nothing unusual in the decrease and increase in the level of the Caspian Sea.

Fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea in the past, apparently, did not lead to irreversible degradation of its biota. Of course, sharp drops in sea level created temporary unfavorable conditions, for example for fish stocks. However, as the level rose, the situation corrected itself. Natural conditions coastal zone (vegetation, bottom animals, fish) experience periodic changes along with sea level fluctuations and, apparently, have a certain margin of stability and resistance to external influences. After all, the most valuable sturgeon stock has always been in the Caspian basin, regardless of sea level fluctuations, quickly overcoming temporary deterioration in living conditions.

Rumors that rising sea levels caused floods throughout the Volga delta were not confirmed. Moreover, it turned out that the increase in water levels even in the lower part of the delta is inadequate to the magnitude of the sea level rise. The increase in water level in the lower part of the delta during the low-water period did not exceed 0.2-0.3 m, and during the flood it almost did not appear at all. At the maximum level of the Caspian Sea in 1995, the backwater from the sea extended along the deepest branch of the delta, Bakhtemiru, no more than 90 km, and along other branches no more than 30 km. Therefore, only the islands on the seashore and the narrow coastal strip of the delta were flooded. Flooding in the upper and middle parts of the delta was associated with high floods in 1991 and 1995 (which is a normal phenomenon for the Volga delta) and with the unsatisfactory condition of protective dams. The reason for the weak influence of sea level rise on the regime of the Volga delta is the presence of a huge shallow coastal zone, which dampens the impact of the sea on the delta.

As for the negative impact of sea level rise on the economy and life of the population in the coastal zone, the following should be recalled. At the end of the last century, sea level was higher than it is now, and this was not perceived as ecological catastrophy. And before the level was even higher. Meanwhile, Astrakhan has been known since the middle of the 13th century, and here in the 13th - mid-16th centuries the capital of the Golden Horde, Sarai-Batu, was located. These and many others settlements on the Caspian coast did not suffer from high levels, since they were located on elevated places and during abnormal flood levels or surges, people temporarily moved from low places to higher places.

Why is it that now the consequences of sea level rise, even to lower levels, are perceived as a catastrophe? The reason for the enormous damage suffered by the national economy is not the rise in level, but the thoughtless and short-sighted development of a strip of land within the mentioned risk zone, freed (as it turned out, temporarily!) from under sea level after 1929, that is, when the level decreased below the mark - 26 abs. m. The buildings erected in the risk zone, naturally, turned out to be flooded and partially destroyed. Now that a territory developed and polluted by humans is being flooded, a dangerous situation is indeed being created. ecological situation, the source of which is not natural processes, but unreasonable economic activity.

ABOUT THE REASONS FOR CASPIAN LEVEL FLUCTUATIONS

When considering the reasons for fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea, it is necessary to pay attention to the confrontation in this area between two concepts: geological and climatic. Significant contradictions in these approaches emerged, for example, at the international conference "Caspian-95".

According to the geological concept, the causes of changes in the level of the Caspian Sea include processes of two groups. The processes of the first group, according to geologists, lead to changes in the volume of the Caspian basin and, as a consequence, to changes in sea level. Such processes include vertical and horizontal tectonic movements of the earth's crust, accumulation of bottom sediments and seismic phenomena. The second group includes processes that, as geologists believe, affect the underground flow into the sea, either increasing or decreasing it. Such processes are called periodic extrusion or absorption of waters that saturate bottom sediments under the influence of changing tectonic stresses (changes in periods of compression and extension), as well as technogenic destabilization of the subsurface caused by oil and gas production or underground nuclear explosions. It is impossible to deny the fundamental possibility of the influence of geological processes on the morphology and morphometry of the Caspian basin and underground flow. However, at present, the quantitative connection of geological factors with fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea has not been proven.

There is no doubt that tectonic movements played a decisive role in the initial stages of the formation of the Caspian basin. However, if we take into account that the Caspian Sea basin is located within a geologically heterogeneous territory, which results in a periodic rather than linear nature of tectonic movements with repeated changes in sign, then one should hardly expect a noticeable change in the capacity of the basin. The tectonic hypothesis is not supported by the fact that the coastlines of the New Caspian transgressions on all sections of the Caspian coast (with the exception of certain areas within the Absheron archipelago) are at the same level.

There is no reason to believe that the cause of fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea is a change in the capacity of its depression due to the accumulation of sediments. The rate of filling of the basin with bottom sediments, among which the main role is played by river discharges, is estimated, according to modern data, to be about 1 mm/year or less, which is two orders of magnitude less than the currently observed changes in sea level. Seismic deformations, which are observed only near the epicenter and attenuate at close distances from it, cannot have any significant effect on the volume of the Caspian basin.

As for the periodic large-scale discharge of groundwater into the Caspian Sea, its mechanism is still unclear. At the same time, this hypothesis is contradicted, according to E.G. Maevu, firstly, the undisturbed stratification of silt waters, indicating the absence of noticeable migrations of water through the thickness of bottom sediments, and secondly, the absence of proven powerful hydrological, hydrochemical and sedimentation anomalies in the sea, which should have accompanied large-scale discharge of groundwater that could influence changes in the level of the reservoir.

The main proof of the insignificant role of geological factors at present is the convincing quantitative confirmation of the plausibility of the second, climatic, or more precisely, water-balance concept of Caspian level fluctuations.

CHANGES IN THE COMPONENTS OF THE CASPIAN WATER BALANCE AS THE MAIN REASON FOR FLUCTUATIONS IN ITS LEVEL

For the first time, fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea were explained by changes climatic conditions(more specifically river flow, evaporation and precipitation on the sea surface) also E.Kh. Lentz (1836) and A.I. Voeikov (1884). Later, the leading role of changes in the components of the water balance in sea level fluctuations was proven again and again by hydrologists, oceanologists, physical geographers and geomorphologists.

The key to most of the studies mentioned is the development of a water balance equation and the analysis of its components. The meaning of this equation is as follows: the change in the volume of water in the sea is the difference between the incoming (river and underground runoff, precipitation on the sea surface) and outgoing (evaporation from the sea surface and outflow of water into the Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay) components of the water balance. The change in the level of the Caspian Sea is the quotient of the change in the volume of its waters divided by the area of ​​the sea. The analysis showed that the leading role in the water balance of the sea belongs to the ratio of the runoff of the Volga, Ural, Terek, Sulak, Samur, Kura rivers and visible or effective evaporation, the difference between evaporation and precipitation on the sea surface. Analysis of the components of the water balance revealed that the largest contribution (up to 72% of the variance) to the level variability is made by the influx of river water, and more specifically, the zone of runoff formation in the Volga basin. As for the reasons for the change in the Volga runoff itself, many researchers believe that they are associated with the variability of atmospheric precipitation (mainly winter) in the river basin. And the precipitation regime, in turn, is determined by atmospheric circulation. It has long been proven that the latitudinal type of atmospheric circulation contributes to an increase in precipitation in the Volga basin, and the meridional type contributes to a decrease.

V.N. Malinin revealed that the root cause of moisture entering the Volga basin should be sought in North Atlantic, and specifically in the Norwegian Sea. It is there that an increase in evaporation from the sea surface leads to an increase in the amount of moisture transferred to the continent and, accordingly, to an increase in atmospheric precipitation in the Volga basin. The latest data on the water balance of the Caspian Sea, obtained by employees of the State Oceanographic Institute R.E. Nikonova and V.N. Bortnik, are given with clarifications by the author in table. 1. These data provide convincing evidence that the main causes of both the rapid drop in sea level in the 1930s and the sharp rise in 1978-1995 were changes in river flow, as well as visible evaporation.

Bearing in mind that river flow is one of the main factors influencing the water balance and, as a consequence, the level of the Caspian Sea (and the Volga flow provides at least 80% of the total river flow into the sea and about 70% of the incoming part of the Caspian water balance), It would be interesting to find a connection between sea level and the flow of the Volga alone, measured most accurately. Direct correlation of these quantities does not give satisfactory results.

However, the connection between sea level and Volga runoff is clearly visible if we take into account the river flow not for every year, but take the ordinates of the difference integral runoff curve, that is, the sequential sum of normalized deviations of annual runoff values ​​from the long-term average value (norm). Even a visual comparison of the course of the average annual levels of the Caspian Sea and the difference integral curve of the Volga runoff (see Fig. 2) allows us to identify their similarities.

Over the entire 98-year period of observations of the Volga runoff (Verkhnee Lebyazhye village at the top of the delta) and sea level (Makhachkala), the correlation coefficient of the connection between sea level and the ordinates of the difference integral runoff curve was 0.73. If we discard years with small changes in level (1900-1928), then the correlation coefficient increases to 0.85. If we take for analysis a period with a rapid decline (1929-1941) and a rise in level (1978-1995), then the overall correlation coefficient will be 0.987, and separately for both periods 0.990 and 0.979, respectively.

The above calculation results fully confirm the conclusion that during periods of a sharp decrease or rise in sea level, the levels themselves are closely related to the runoff (more precisely, to the sum of its annual deviations from the norm).

A special task is to assess the role of anthropogenic factors in fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea, and primarily the reduction of river flow due to irreversible losses due to the filling of reservoirs, evaporation from the surface of artificial reservoirs, and water intake for irrigation. It is believed that since the 40s, irreversible water consumption has steadily increased, which has led to a reduction in the influx of river water to the Caspian Sea and an additional decrease in its level compared to the natural one. According to V.N. Malinin, by the end of the 80s, the difference between the actual sea level and the restored (natural) reached almost 1.5 m. At the same time, the total irrecoverable water consumption in the Caspian basin was estimated in those years at 36-45 km3/year (of which the Volga accounted for about 26 km3/year). If it were not for the withdrawal of river flow, sea level rise would have begun not in the late 70s, but in the late 50s.

The increase in water consumption in the Caspian basin by 2000 was predicted first to 65 km3/year, and then to 55 km3/year (36 of which were accounted for by the Volga). Such an increase in irrevocable losses of river flow should have reduced the level of the Caspian Sea by more than 0.5 m by 2000. In connection with assessing the impact of irreversible water consumption on the level of the Caspian Sea, we note the following. Firstly, estimates in the literature of the volumes of water intake and losses due to evaporation from the surface of reservoirs in the Volga basin are apparently significantly overestimated. Secondly, forecasts for the growth of water consumption turned out to be erroneous. The forecasts included the pace of development of water-consuming sectors of the economy (especially irrigation), which not only turned out to be unrealistic, but also gave way to a decline in production in recent years. In fact, as A.E. points out. Asarin (1997), by 1990, water consumption in the Caspian basin was about 40 km3/year, and has now decreased to 30-35 km3/year (in the Volga basin up to 24 km3/year). Therefore, the “anthropogenic” difference between the natural and actual sea level is currently not as great as predicted.

ABOUT POSSIBLE FLUCTUATIONS IN THE CASPIAN SEA LEVEL IN THE FUTURE

The author does not set himself the goal of analyzing in detail the numerous forecasts of fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea (this is an independent and difficult task). The main conclusion from assessing the results of forecasting Caspian level fluctuations can be drawn as follows. Although the forecasts were based on completely different approaches (both deterministic and probabilistic), there was not a single reliable forecast. The main difficulty in using deterministic forecasts based on the sea water balance equation is the lack of development of the theory and practice of ultra-long-term climate change forecasts over large areas.

When sea levels dropped in the 1930s to 1970s, most researchers predicted they would fall further. In the last two decades, when sea level rise began, most forecasts predicted an almost linear and even accelerating rise in sea level to -25 and even -20 abs. m and higher at the beginning of the 21st century. Three circumstances were not taken into account. Firstly, the periodic nature of fluctuations in the level of all closed reservoirs. The instability of the Caspian Sea level and its periodic nature is confirmed by an analysis of its current and past fluctuations. Secondly, at a sea level close to – 26 abs. m, the flooding of large bays-sors on the north-eastern coast of the Caspian Sea - Dead Kultuk and Kaydak, as well as low-lying areas in other places on the coast - will begin to flood, which have dried out at low levels. This would lead to an increase in the area of ​​shallow waters and, as a consequence, to an increase in evaporation (up to 10 km3/year). At higher sea levels, the outflow of water into Kara-Bogaz-Gol will increase. All this should stabilize or at least slow down the level increase. Thirdly, level fluctuations under the conditions of the modern climatic era (the last 2000 years), as shown above, are limited by the risk zone (from – 30 to – 25 abs. m). Taking into account the anthropogenic decrease in runoff, the level is unlikely to exceed the level of 26-26.5 abs. m.

The decrease in average annual levels in the last four years by a total of 0.34 m may indicate that in 1995 the level reached its maximum (- 26.66 abs. m), and a change in the trend of the Caspian level. In any case, the prediction is that sea level is unlikely to exceed 26 absolute. m, apparently, is justified.

In the 20th century, the level of the Caspian Sea changed within 3.5 m, first falling and then rising sharply. This behavior of the Caspian Sea is the normal state of a closed reservoir as an open dynamic system with variable conditions at its inlet.

Each combination of incoming (river flow, precipitation on the sea surface) and outgoing (evaporation from the surface of a reservoir, outflow into the Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay) components of the Caspian water balance corresponds to its own level of equilibrium. Since the components of the water balance of the sea also change under the influence of climatic conditions, the level of the reservoir fluctuates, trying to reach an equilibrium state, but never reaches it. Ultimately, the trend of changes in the Caspian Sea level in given time depends on the ratio of precipitation minus evaporation in the catchment area (in the basins of the rivers feeding it) and evaporation minus precipitation above the reservoir itself. There is actually nothing unusual about the recent rise in the Caspian sea level by 2.3 m. Such level changes have happened many times in the past and did not cause irreparable damage natural resources Caspian Sea. The current rise in sea level has become a disaster for the economy of the coastal zone only because of the unreasonable development by man of this risk zone.

Vadim Nikolaevich Mikhailov, Doctor of Geographical Sciences, Professor of the Department of Land Hydrology, Faculty of Geography, Moscow State University, Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation, Full Member of the Academy of Water Sciences. Area of ​​scientific interests – hydrology and water resources, interaction of rivers and seas, deltas and estuaries, hydroecology. Author and co-author of about 250 scientific works, including 11 monographs, two textbooks, four scientific and methodological manuals.

CaspAndyskoe mOre(Caspian) is the largest enclosed body of water on Earth. In size, the Caspian Sea is much larger than lakes such as Superior, Victoria, Huron, Michigan, and Baikal.

According to formal characteristics, the Caspian Sea is an endorheic lake. However, given its large size, brackish waters and a regime similar to the sea, this body of water is called a sea.

According to one hypothesis, the Caspian Sea (among the ancient Slavs – the Khvalynsk Sea) received its name in honor of the Caspian tribes who lived BC on its southwestern coast.

The Caspian Sea washes the shores of five states: Russia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan.

The Caspian Sea is elongated in the meridional direction and is located between 36°33΄ and 47°07΄ N latitude. and 45°43΄ and 54°03΄ E. (without Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay). The length of the sea along the meridian is about 1200 km; average width – 310 km. The northern coast of the Caspian Sea is bordered by the Caspian lowland, the eastern coast by the deserts of Central Asia; in the west the Caucasus Mountains approach the sea, in the south the Elburz ridge stretches near the coast.

The Caspian Sea is traditionally divided into three large parts: the Northern (24% of the sea area), the Middle (36%) and the Southern Caspian (40%), which differ significantly in morphology and regime, as well as the large and isolated Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay. The northern, shelf part of the sea is shallow: its average depth is 5–6 m, maximum depths are 15–25 m, the volume is less than 1% of the total water mass of the sea. The Middle Caspian is an isolated basin with an area of ​​maximum depths in the Derbent depression (788 m); its average depth is about 190 m. In the South Caspian, the average and maximum depths are 345 and 1025 m (in the South Caspian depression); 65% of the sea's water mass is concentrated here.

There are about 50 islands in the Caspian Sea with total area approximately 400 km 2; the main ones are Tyuleniy, Chechen, Zyudev, Konevsky, Dzhambaysky, Durneva, Ogurchinsky, Apsheronsky. The length of the coastline is approximately 6.8 thousand km, with islands - up to 7.5 thousand km. The shores of the Caspian Sea are diverse. In the northern and eastern parts they are quite rugged. Here are the large bays of Kizlyarsky, Komsomolets, Mangyshlaksky, Kazakhsky, Kara-Bogaz-Gol, Krasnovodsky and Turkmensky, many bays; at west coast

- Kizilagachsky. The largest peninsulas are Agrakhansky, Buzachi, Tyub-Karagan, Mangyshlak, Krasnovodsky, Cheleken and Apsheronsky. The most common shores are accumulative; , areas with abrasion shores are found along the contour of the Middle and Southern Caspian Sea.

Over 130 rivers flow into the Caspian Sea, the largest of which are the Volga

Ural, Terek, Sulak, Samur, Kura, Sefidrud, Atrek, Emba (its flow enters the sea only in high-water years). Nine rivers have deltas; the largest are located at the mouths of the Volga and Terek. The main feature of the Caspian Sea, as an endorheic reservoir, is instability and a wide range of long-term fluctuations in its level. This most important hydrological feature of the Caspian Sea has a significant impact on all its other hydrological characteristics, as well as on the structure and regime of river mouths and coastal zones. In the Caspian Sea level varied in the range of ~200 m: from -140 to +50 m BS; at -34 to -20 m BS. From the first third of the 19th century. and until 1977, sea level dropped by about 3.8 m - to the lowest level in the last 400 years (-29.01 m BS). In 1978–1995 The level of the Caspian Sea rose by 2.35 m and reached -26.66 m BS. Since 1995, a certain downward trend in level has been dominant - to -27.69 m BS in 2013. The Caspian Sea shifted to Samara Luka on the Volga, and maybe further. During maximum transgressions, the Caspian Sea turned into a drainage lake: excess water flowed through the Kuma-Manych depression into the Sea of ​​Azov and further into the Black Sea. In extreme regressions South coast

The Caspian Sea shifted to the Absheron threshold.

Long-term fluctuations in the level of the Caspian Sea are explained by changes in the structure of the water balance of the Caspian Sea. Sea level rises when the incoming part of the water balance (primarily the water flow of rivers) increases and exceeds the outgoing part, and decreases if the influx of river water decreases. The total water flow of all rivers averages 300 km 3 /year; while the five largest rivers account for almost 95% (the Volga gives 83%). During the period of the lowest sea level, in 1942–1977, the river flow was 275.3 km 3 /year (of which 234.6 km 3 /year was the Volga runoff), precipitation - 70.9, underground flow - 4 km 3 /year, and evaporation and outflow into the Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay are 354.79 and 9.8 km 3 /year. During the period of intense sea level rise, in 1978–1995, - respectively 315 (Volga - 274.1), 86.1, 4, 348.79 and 8.7 km 3 /year; in the modern period - 287.4 (Volga - 248.2), 75.3, 4, 378.3 and 16.3 km 3 /year.

Intra-annual changes in the level of the Caspian Sea are characterized by a maximum in June–July and a minimum in February; the range of intra-annual level fluctuations is 30–40 cm. Surge level fluctuations occur throughout the sea, but they are most significant in the northern part, where, with maximum surges, the level can rise by 2–4.5 m and the edge “retreat” by several tens kilometers inland, and during surges it will drop by 1–2.5 m. Seiche and tidal level fluctuations do not exceed 0.1–0.2 m. Despite the relatively small size of the reservoir, there is strong excitement in the Caspian Sea. Highest altitudes

waves in the Southern Caspian Sea can reach 10–11 m. Wave heights decrease in the direction from south to north.

Water temperature is subject to significant latitudinal and seasonal changes. In winter, it varies from 0–0.5 o C at the ice edge in the north of the sea to 10–11 o C in the south. In summer, the water temperature in the sea averages 23–28 o C, and in shallow coastal waters in the Northern Caspian Sea it can reach 35–40 o C. At depths, a constant temperature is maintained: deeper than 100 m it is 4–7 o C.

In winter, only the northern part of the Caspian Sea freezes; V harsh winter– the entire Northern Caspian and coastal zones of the Middle Caspian. Freeze-up in the Northern Caspian lasts from November to March.

Water salinity changes especially sharply in the northern part of the sea: from 0.1‰ at the mouths of the Volga and Urals to 10–12‰ on the border with the Middle Caspian. In the Northern Caspian Sea, the temporal variability of water salinity is also great. In the middle and southern parts sea ​​salinity fluctuations are small: generally it is 12.5–13.5‰, increasing from north to south and from west to east.

The highest water salinity is in the Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay (up to 300‰). With depth, water salinity increases slightly (by 0.1–0.3‰). The average salinity of the sea is about 12.5‰. More than a hundred species of fish live in the Caspian Sea and the mouths of the rivers flowing into it. There are Mediterranean and Arctic invaders. The objects of fishing are gobies, herring, salmon, carp, mullet and sturgeon fish

. The latter include five species: sturgeon, beluga, stellate sturgeon, thorn and sterlet. The sea can produce up to 500–550 thousand tons of fish annually, if overfishing is not allowed. Of the marine mammals, the endemic Caspian seal lives in the Caspian Sea. 5–6 million waterfowl migrate through the Caspian region annually. The economy of the Caspian Sea is associated with oil and gas production, shipping, fishing, seafood, various salts and minerals (Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay), and the use of recreational resources. The explored oil resources in the Caspian Sea amount to about 10 billion tons, the total resources of oil and gas condensate are estimated at 18–20 billion tons. Oil and gas production is carried out on an ever-increasing scale. The Caspian Sea is used and by water transport

Economic activities and hydrological features of the Caspian Sea create a number of serious environmental and water management problems. Among them: anthropogenic pollution of river and sea waters (mainly with petroleum products, phenols and surfactants), poaching and reduction of fish stocks, especially sturgeon; damage to the population and coastal

economic activity

due to large-scale and rapid changes in the level of the reservoir, the impact of numerous dangerous hydrological phenomena and hydrological-morphological processes.

The total economic loss for all Caspian countries associated with the rapid and significant recent rise in the level of the Caspian Sea, the flooding of part of the coastal land, and the destruction of coastlines and coastal structures, amounted to approximately 15 to 30 billion US dollars. Urgent engineering measures were required to protect the coast.

A sharp drop in the level of the Caspian Sea in the 1930s–1970s. resulted in less damage, but it was still significant. Navigable approach channels became shallow, the shallow seaside at the mouths of the Volga and Ural became heavily overgrown, which became an obstacle to the passage of fish into the rivers to spawn. Fish passages had to be built through the mentioned seashores. Among the unresolved problems is the lack of an international agreement on the international legal status of the Caspian Sea, the division of its waters, bottom and subsoil. The Caspian Sea is the object of many years of research by specialists from all Caspian states. Such domestic organizations as the State Oceanographic Institute, the Institute of Oceanology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the Hydrometeorological Center of Russia, the Caspian Research Institute of Fisheries, the Faculty of Geography of the Moscow State University took an active part in the study of the Caspian Sea.