Bolshoye Ostrovnoye Explained

Bolshoye Ostrovnoye
Other Name:Большое Островное
Coords:52.7256°N 81.7047°W
Pushpin Map:Russia Altai Krai#Russia
Catchment:892sqkm
Basin Countries:Russia
Length:16.6km (10.3miles)
Width:4.1km (02.5miles)
Area:28.6sqkm
Depth:1.8m (05.9feet)
Max-Depth:5.6m (18.4feet)
Elevation:206m (676feet)
Islands:Berezovy Island
Cities:Mamontovo

Bolshoye Ostrovnoye (Russian: Большое Островное)[1] is a salt lake in Mamontovsky District, Altai Krai, Russian Federation.[2]

The lake lies roughly in the middle of the Krai. Mamontovo, Ostrovnoye and Malye Butyrki are located close to the lakeshore. The nearest towns are Bukanskoye, near the northern end, and Kazantsevo 11km (07miles) to the southwest.[3]

Geography

Bolshoye Ostrovnoye is an endorheic lake that lies within one of the wide ravines of glacial origin cutting diagonally across the Ob Plateau. The lake has an irregular shape, stretching roughly from northeast to southwest for over 18km (11miles). It has a very narrow southern section, and the broader section has two opposing landspits in the middle that almost divide the lake in two. There is an island near the northern shore. The bottom of the lake is sandy and most of the shore is low and swampy. The lake basin is well defined, located in the ancient valley of the Kasmala River. A southern branch at the head of the Kasmala flows out of the lake.[4]

The northern end of lake Gorkoye (Chernokurynskoye) is located 12km (07miles) to the southwest and lake Gorkoye (Romanovsky District) 11km (07miles) slightly to the WNW. Lake Zerkalnoye lies 20km (10miles) to the southeast and Mostovoye 59km (37miles) to the northwest.[1]

Flora and fauna

The ribbon pine forest characteristic of the Ob Plateau flanks the eastern side of Bolshoye Ostrovnoye. Bulrushes and willows grow by the shore. The water is only slightly saline and fish were once abundant in the lake. Pike, crucian carp and roach are still to be found in its waters, however, in recent decades species such as tench, peled and perch have disappeared owing to eutrophication.[4]

At the time of the USSR there used to be a fish processing plant by the lakeshore, where fish caught in the lake was smoked. The facility was abandoned about 25 years ago, but currently there are plans to revive it and stock the lake with fish.[5] [6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: N-44 Topographic Chart (in Russian). 1 July 2024.
  2. [Google Earth]
  3. Web site: N-44 Topographic Chart (in Russian). 1 July 2024.
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20090707061339/http://www.geo.alt.ru/Altai/akva/ozera/kasmala.html Encyclopedia of the Nature of the Altai region. Большое Островное озеро
  5. https://altapress.ru/zhizn/story/deputat-gosdumi-mechtaet-vozrodit-na-altayskom-ozere-ribzavod-200546 Депутат Госдумы мечтает возродить на алтайском озере рыбзавод
  6. https://akunb.altlib.ru/o-tsentre-ekologiya/ekologicheskaya-karta-altaya/mamontovskiy-rayon/ Мамонтовский район