Absheron Peninsula Explained

Absheron Peninsula
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Azerbaijan
Seat:Baku city
Parts Type:Subdivisions
P1:Baku (city)
P2:Sumqayit (city)
P3:Absheron (rayon)
Area Total Km2:2110
Population Total:4.6 million
Population As Of:2022
Population Rank:1st
Population Density Km2:3070
Demographics Type1:Ethnicity
Demographics1 Title1:Azerbaijani
Demographics1 Info1:80%
Demographics1 Title2:Other
Demographics1 Info2:20%
Iso Code:AZ-AB
Blank Info:AZE100346

The Absheron Peninsula (Azerbaijani: Abşeron yarımadası) is a peninsula in Azerbaijan. It is the location of Baku, the biggest and the most populous city of the country, and also the Baku metropolitan area, with its satellite cities Sumqayit and Khyrdalan.

There are three districts, of which two are urban (Baku and Sumqayit) and one is suburban (Absheron Rayon).

It extends 60km (40miles) eastward into the Caspian Sea, and reaches a maximum width of 30km (20miles). Though technically the easternmost extension of the Caucasus Mountains, the landscape is only mildly hilly, a gently undulating plain that ends in a long spit of sand dunes known as Shah Dili, and now declared the Absheron National Park. In this part, the peninsula is dissected by ravines and characterized by frequent salt lakes.

Etymology

The name "Absheron" comes from Persian āb šuran (salty waters).[1] This also gave its name to the city of Apsheronsk in Russia.

According to Conrad Malte-Brun in 1810, an alternative name for the peninsula was Okoressa.[2]

History

During the late 19th century exploitation of the peninsula's petroleum resources caused large scale migrations of Iranian laborers to the Caucasus and Central Asia.[3]

Geography

The Absheron peninsula is located in eastern Azerbaijan, along the western coast of the Caspian Sea with layers of deposits from the Cretaceous, Palaeogene, Neogene, Pliocene and Quaternary periods. The lithological composition up to the Neogene layers is made up of clays, sandy clays, sands and limestones. Middle Pliocene sediments are sandy clays. These are thick in areas with highly mineralized groundwaters. Fresh groundwater is unable to permeate the thick clays to reach underlying sequences, by the overlying layers of sediment deposits have a lower salinity. In the western areas of the peninsula there are outcrops of low permeability clays from the Cretaceous, Palaogene, Neogene, and Lower Pliocene. These clays are deeper in the eastern areas and covered by Quaternary sediments. Although the peninsula is tectonically a southeast continuous of the Greater Caucasus, its Quaternary deposits are isolated.[4]

Climate

The Absheron Peninsula has a temperate semi-arid climate (Köppen climate classification: BSk) with warm and dry summers, cool and occasionally wet winters, and strong winds all year long. The peninsula is the most arid part of Azerbaijan (precipitation here is around or less than 2000NaN0 a year). The majority of the light annual precipitation occurs in seasons other than summer, but none of these seasons are particularly wet. The natural vegetation of the Absheron Peninsula is dry steppe and semi-desert. Due to the semi-arid climate, local agriculture requires irrigation.

Environmental issues

Petrochemical and refining industries on the peninsula have had environmental impacts on the Caspian Sea shore and the sea itself.[4] Local scientists consider the peninsula (including Baku and Sumqayit and the Caspian Sea) to be the ecologically most devastated area in the world.[5]

Economy

See main article: Petroleum industry in Azerbaijan.

Beginning in the 1870s, the Absheron Peninsula was the site of some of the world's earliest petroleum production. Much of the landscape remains scarred with rusting oil derricks. Despite serious problems with environmental damage and pollution, the Absheron is known for its flowers, horticulture, mulberries and figs. The northern coast has wide though less-than-pristine beaches which are popular local tourist attractions.

Wealthy people have settled in the Absheron Peninsula, including Robert Nobel and Zeynalabdin Taghiyev.

Natural resources

There are natural resources such as oil, lime, sand and salt in the peninsula. The peninsula has famous lakes like Masazir, Khojahasan and Boyuk Shor. Several ancient oil wells of the world are located in the Absheron Peninsula. Azerbaijan is in the first place for the variety of mud volcanoes in Absheron. 400 out of 800 mud volcanoes in the Asia (1100 in the world) are located within the Southern Caspian oil-gas basin as well as in the dry areas of Azerbaijan and other islands in the water area of the Caspian Sea.

Main roads

The main highways of the country are in Baku and the Absheron Peninsula. These are the highways of Heydar Aliyev International Airport, Sea port, Baku Railway Station and others which connect the capital to other regions of the country. Major oil and gas pipelines go through here. Baku TRACECA (Transport Corridor Europe–the Caucasus–Asia) is the major point of the international traffic corridor. Within this project, Azerbaijan participates in the re-establishment of the historic Silk Road.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Everett-Heath, John . The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Place Names . 2019-10-24 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-188291-3 . en-US . 10.1093/acref/9780191882913.001.0001.
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=DHA9AAAAYAAJ&dq=okoressa&pg=PA313 Malte-Brun's 1822 English translation - Universal Geography
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=6rgGbKh3spgC The State and the Subaltern: Modernization, Society and the State in Turkey and Iran
  4. R.G. Israfilov in Urban Groundwater Management and Sustainability (2006)
  5. Web site: Malling . Jens . 2014-04-17 . Sumqayit, an ecological Armageddon . 2024-01-19 . Le Monde diplomatique . en.