Central Yakutian Lowland Explained

Central Yakutian Lowland
Other Name:Центральноякутская равнина
Саха сирин ортоку намтала
Type:Alluvial plain
Area:270000km2
Part Of:Siberia
Elevation:60m (200feet) to 200m (700feet)
Map:Russia Sakha Republic
Relief:1
Location:Sakha Republic, Russia

The Central Yakutian Lowland[1] or the Central Yakutian Lowlands (Russian: Центральноякутская равнина|Tsentralnoyakutskaya ravnina; Yakut: Саха сирин ортоку намтала),[2] also known as the Central Yakut Plain[3] or the Vilyuy Lowland,[4] is a low alluvial plain in Siberia, Russia.

Administratively the territory of the lowland is part of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia). It is an extensive plain located in the transition zone between Central and Eastern Siberia and is one of the Great Russian Regions. The main city is Yakutsk, with a number of settlements near it, but the area of the lowland is largely uninhabited elsewhere.[5]

Geography

The Central Yakutian Lowlands extend along the middle basin of the Lena River and partly further downstream and are about in length and wide.[6] They drop gradually from the Central Siberian Plateau to the west and the Lena Plateau to the south and southwest. To the northwest the lowland merges with the North Siberian Lowland and to the north it is bound by the watershed fringing the Lena and Olenyok River basins. To the northeast and east the Central Yakutian Lowland reaches the foothills of the Verkhoyansk Range, westernmost part of the East Siberian Mountains.[7]

The Central Yakutian Lowlands are a flat plain, slightly higher in its peripheral parts. Permafrost is continuous throughout the region. Owing to poor drainage, swamps and thermokarst lakes (alases), are common,[8] as well as low bulges or bumps known as "bulgunnyakh" (Yakut: Булгунньах).[9] In the northwest the Tukulan (Тукуланы) sand dunes are relief forms shaped by aeolian processes along the valley of the Lena River.[10] There are also some areas of high soil salinity.[7]

Hydrography

There are hundreds of river valleys all across the lowlands, which, besides the Lena, include the lower reaches of the Lena tributaries Vilyuy, Amga and Aldan. The entire length of the course of some of the large left tributaries of the Lena, such as the Lungkha, Tyugyuene, Sitte, Khanchaly and Kenkeme, falls wholly within the lowland area.[11] These rivers are subject to spring floods during the thaw period and occasional rain floods in the summer. During the winter small rivers and rivulets freeze to the bottom.[7] The largest lakes of the lowland are Nedzheli and Ulakhan-Kyuel.[11]

Geology

Geologically the lowland roughly corresponds to the eastern, lowest parts of the Vilyuy Syneclise. It is filled with Mesozoic deposits and Quaternary sands and loams, both of alluvial and eolian origin.[1]

Climate and flora

The climate prevailing in the lowland is an extreme subarctic climate (Köppen Dfd), continental and harsh, characterized by a very low annual rainfall of barely per year. 70% to 80% of the precipitation falls in the summer, mostly in the form of rain. The average air temperature in January is a chilly -45C. In July the average temperature is 17C.[7]

Most of the lowland is covered by taiga in which larch predominates. There are as well areas of birch forests, marshes and grassy meadows.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. John Kimble (ed.), Cryosols: Permafrost-Affected Soils
  2. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/241484707_Physical_and_Chemical_Characteristics_of_Lakes_in_the_Central_Yakutian_Lowlands_Russia Physical and Chemical Characteristics of Lakes in the Central Yakutian Lowlands, Russia
  3. https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/siberian-village Siberian Village; Land and Life in the Sakha Republic
  4. [United States Bureau of Commercial Fisheries]
  5. [Google Earth]
  6. Solov'ev, P. A., 1959, Permafrost zones of the northern part of the Lena-Amga Water-shed: Moscow, Nauka. (in Russian)
  7. http://bse.sci-lib.com/article120587.html Central Yakutian Lowland
  8. https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2003JD003680 Permafrost dynamics in the 20th and 21st centuries along the East Siberian transect
  9. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2017/03/27/russian-scientists-find-7000-siberian-hills-possibly-filled-with-explosive-gas/ Russian scientists find 7,000 Siberian hills possibly filled with explosive gas
  10. https://eng.russia.travel/objects/314524/ Tukulan - The Yakut Desert
  11. Web site: Топографска карта P-51,52; M 1:1 000 000 - Topographic USSR Chart (in Russian). 9 April 2022.