Koryak Okrug Explained

Native Name:Коря́кский о́круг
Conventional Long Name:Koryak Okrug
Common Name:Koryak
Subdivision:Former Okrug
Nation:Russia
P1:Far Eastern Krai
S1:Kamchatka Krai
Flag S1:Flag of Kamchatka Krai.svg
Image Map Caption:Location of Koryakia district within Modern Russia.
Capital:Palana
Year Start:1931
Date End:1 July
Year End:2007
Today: Russia
Kamchatka Krai

Koryak Okrug (Russian: Коря́кский о́круг|Koryakskiy okrug; Koryak: Чав’чываокруг, Cav’cәvaokrug), or Koryakia (Russian: Корякия|Koryakiya), was an administrative division of Kamchatka Krai, Russia.[1] It was a federal subject of Russia (an autonomous okrug of Kamchatka Oblast) from 1931[2] until July 1, 2007, when it merged with Kamchatka Oblast. Prior to the merger, it was called Koryak Autonomous Okrug (Russian: Коря́кский автоно́мный о́круг). Its administrative center is the urban locality (an urban-type settlement) of Palana. Population:

Demographics

As of the 2002 census, Koryaks constituted about a quarter of the population. At the time, it had the smallest population of all the federal subjects, despite being ranked seventeenth in size, at 301500km2, encompassing part of the northern half of Kamchatka Peninsula.

Vital statistics

Average population (x 1000)Live birthsDeathsNatural changeCrude birth rate (per 1000)Crude death rate (per 1000)Natural change (per 1000)
19703168335632722.011.510.5
19753370637433221.411.310.1
19803570135135020.010.010.0
19853779328950421.47.813.6
19903863534229316.99.17.8
19913862335027316.69.37.3
19923761136924216.710.16.6
1993344594332613.312.60.8
199432433460align="right" style="color: red" - 2713.514.3align="right" style="color: red" -0.8
199531382481align="right" style="color: red" - 9912.515.8align="right" style="color: red" -3.2
199629374436align="right" style="color: red" - 6212.714.8align="right" style="color: red" -2.1
199729373400align="right" style="color: red" - 2713.013.9align="right" style="color: red" -0.9
1998283963554114.212.71.5
199927319397align="right" style="color: red" - 7811.814.7align="right" style="color: red" -2.9
200026289391align="right" style="color: red" - 10211.014.9align="right" style="color: red" -3.9
200126298390align="right" style="color: red" - 9211.615.1align="right" style="color: red" -3.6
200225310376align="right" style="color: red" - 6612.314.9align="right" style="color: red" -2.6
200324268462align="right" style="color: red" - 19411.019.0align="right" style="color: red" -8.0
200424339463align="right" style="color: red" - 12414.419.7align="right" style="color: red" -5.3
200523294466align="right" style="color: red" - 17212.920.5align="right" style="color: red" -7.6
200622270366align="right" style="color: red" - 9612.316.7align="right" style="color: red" -4.4
200721280351align="right" style="color: red" - 7113.216.5align="right" style="color: red" -3.3
200820267368align="right" style="color: red" - 10113.018.0align="right" style="color: red" -4.9
200920268365align="right" style="color: red" - 9713.618.5align="right" style="color: red" -4.9
201019233397align="right" style="color: red" - 16412.320.9align="right" style="color: red" -8.7

Ethnic groups

About 50.5% of the total population is indigenous, the Koryaks being the largest such group. They are, however, outnumbered by the ethnic Russians.

Ethnic
group
1939 Census1959 Census1970 Census1979 Census1989 Census2002 Census2010 Census2021 Census
Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%
Koryaks6,85527.2%5,01018.2%5,89319.1%5,66016.2%6,57216.5%6,71026.7%5,67630.3%5,21533.4%
Chukchis1,2675.0%1,0623.9%1,1643.8%1,2223.5%1,4603.7%1,4125.6%1,3277.1%1,0226.6%
Itelmens8013.2%9003.3%9703.1%1,0022.9%1,1793.0%1,1814.7%9485.1%8785.6%
Evens7142.8%5201.9%6132.0%4761.4%7131.8%7513.0%7434.0%5733.7%
Russians13,79454.8%16,67460.6%19,52263.1%22,49364.5%24,77362.0%12,71950.6%8,66946.2%6,72843.1%
Ukrainians8473.4%1,3104.8%1,1863.8%1,9995.7%2,8967.3%1,0294.1%4742.5% 2091.3%
Others8823.5%2,0497.4%1,5695.1%1,9995.7%2,3475.9%1,3555.4%9766.3%
Total25,16027,52530,91734,85039,94025,15718,75915,601

2006 earthquake

See main article: 2006 Kamchatka earthquakes. On April 20, 2006, Kamchatka Peninsula was struck by a major earthquake. The 7.7-magnitude tremor had its epicenter near the village of Tilichiki. The Koryakia branch of the Ministry of Emergency Situations said some area residents were injured but there were no fatalities.

The quake occurred at about noon local time Friday, so residents were awake and not caught in their beds.

The United States Geological Survey reported a series of at least fifty smaller aftershocks in the area and immediately offshore. They ranged from 4.1 to 6.5 magnitudes on the Richter scale.

Bruce Presgrave, a geophysicist with the U.S.G.S. in Colorado, said the quake was relatively shallow. He estimated that about 2,000 people live close enough to the epicenter to have felt its full force.

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. http://base.consultant.ru/cons/cgi/online.cgi?req=doc;base=LAW;n=61449;div=LAW;ref=s Russian: Федеральный конституционный закон №2-ФКЗ от 12 июля 2006 года "Об образовании в составе Российской Федерации нового субъекта Российской Федерации в результате объединения Камчатской области и Корякского автономного округа"]. Статья 5. (Federal Constitutional Law #2-FKZ of July 12, 2006 On Creation of a New Federal Subject Within the Russian Federation as a Result of the Merger of Kamchatka Oblast and Koryak Autonomous Okrug. Article 5)
  2. Chaussonnet, p. 29