Marghab River Explained

Marghab River
Name Other:Murghab, Margab, Murqab, Margos, Margu, Margiana, Murgap
Name Etymology:Persian Marv-ab,"River of Merv"[1] [2]
Map:Marghab River watershed.jpg
Map Size:300
Mouth Location:Mary Oasis (ultimately the Aral Sea via Amu Darya)
Subdivision Type1:Countries
Length:~850km (530miles)
Discharge1 Avg:48.7m3/s
Basin Size:34700km2 (Harirod-Murghab basin)[3]
River System:Amu Darya

The Marghab River (Persian/Pashto: مرغاب, Morqâb, Balochi: مرگاپ), anciently the Margiana (Ancient Greek: Μαργιανή, Margianḗ), is an 850km (530miles) long river in Central Asia. It rises in the Paropamisus Mountains (Selseleh-ye Safīd Kūh) in Ghor Province, flows through the Marghab District in central Afghanistan, then runs northwest towards the Bala Murghab. Reaching the oasis of Mary in the Karakum Desert of Turkmenistan, the Marghab debouches into the Karakum Canal, a diversion of water from the Amu Darya. The catchment area of the Marghab is estimated at 46880km2.[4]

Geography

The Marghab River originates in the Ghor Province of central Afghanistan, on a plateau among the chain of mountains of Paropamisus, Gharjistan and Band-i Turkestan. In its higher course, the river runs from east to west, towards Mukhamedkhan, for about 300km (200miles) in a narrow, steep valley measuring less than one kilometer in width, with narrow gorges in some places.

Between Darband-i Kilrekht and Mukhammedkhan, the Marghab crosses the western part of Band-i Turkestan, and then runs toward the northwest in a deep canyon. At Mukhammedkhan, it crosses the gorges of Jaokar. After this, the valley widens somewhat, gradually reaching a width of 2km (01miles) in Turkmenistan. Beyond Mukhamedkhan, a small portion of the water of the Marghab is used for irrigation; approximately 10000ha are irrigated from the Marghab in Afghanistan. The Marghab receives the waters of the Kaysar river on the right, then forms the border between Turkmenistan and Afghanistan over 160NaN0 length.

In Turkmenistan, close to Tagtabazar, the Marghab receives the Kashan River from the left bank, and 25km (16miles) further, there is the confluence of the Kushk. Downstream of the confluence with the Kushk lies the Saryyazy reservoir, built in 1959, and expanded in 1978. The reservoir and its surrounding area is ecologically important for birds.[5] Reaching the oasis of Mary, the Marghab mingles its waters with those of the Karakum Canal, a diversion of water from the Amu Darya.

Hydrometry: the flows at Tagtabazar

The flow of Marghab was observed during 50 years (1936–85) at Tagtabazar, a location in Turkmenistan about 30km (20miles) after the Marghab leaves the Afghan territory, and a score of kilometers upstream of the confluence with the Kushk.[6] At Tagtabazar, average annual flow observed over this period was 48.7m3/s for an observed surface area of 34700km2, which is 74 percent of the totality of the catchment area of the river. The geographically-averaged hydrometric flow passing through this part of the basin, by far greatest from the point of view of the flow, thus reached the figure of 44.3 millimeters per annual, which is very appreciable in this particularly desiccated area.

Monthly mean flows of Murghab (in cubic meters per second) measured at the hydrometric station of Tagtabazar
Data calculated over 50 years

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BarData= bar:Jan text:January bar:Feb text:February bar:Mar text:March bar:Apr text:April bar:May text:May bar:Jun text:June bar:Jul text:July bar:Aug text:Aug. bar:Sep text:Sept. bar:Oct text:Oct. bar:Nov text:Nov. bar:Dec text:Dec.

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bar:Jan from:0 till: 33.6 bar:Feb from:0 till: 35.8 bar:Mar from:0 till: 52.9 bar:Apr from:0 till: 97.5 bar:May from:0 till: 108 bar:Jun from:0 till: 65.3 bar:Jul from:0 till: 35.4 bar:Aug from:0 till: 26.5 bar:Sep from:0 till: 28.8 bar:Oct from:0 till: 32.3 bar:Nov from:0 till: 34.0 bar:Dec from:0 till: 34.8

PlotData= bar:Jan at: 33.6 fontsize:S text: 33.6 shift:(-10,5) bar:Feb at: 35.8 fontsize:S text: 35.8 shift:(-10,5) bar:Mar at: 52.9 fontsize:S text: 52.9 shift:(-10,5) bar:Apr at: 97.5 fontsize:S text: 97.5 shift:(-10,5) bar:May at: 108 fontsize:S text: 108 shift:(-10,5) bar:Jun at: 65.3 fontsize:S text: 65.3 shift:(-10,5) bar:Jul at: 35.4 fontsize:S text: 35.4 shift:(-10,5) bar:Aug at: 26.5 fontsize:S text: 26.5 shift:(-10,5) bar:Sep at: 28.8 fontsize:S text: 28.8 shift:(-10,5) bar:Oct at: 32.3 fontsize:S text: 32.3 shift:(-10,5) bar:Nov at: 34.0 fontsize:S text: 34.0 shift:(-10,5) bar:Dec at: 34.8 fontsize:S text: 34.8 shift:(-10,5)

A 2021 study indicates that in the near term (by 2040), the Marghab's flow could fall by as much as one-third due to climate change, and by 40 percent by the end of the 21st century.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rawlinson, George. A Short History of Persia. January 19, 2018. Ozymandias Press. 9781531277079. Google Books.
  2. Book: Strange, G. Le. The Lands of the Eastern Caliphate. June 16, 2011. Cambridge University Press. 9781107600140. Google Books.
  3. https://www.moore.af/MediaLibsAndFiles/media/afghanistan.moore-global.com/files/Research/17-Afghanistan-Water-Management.pdf
  4. Web site: Surface water resources in North Afghanistan. https://web.archive.org/web/20110723035715/http://cawater-info.net/afghanistan/resources_e.htm. dead. July 23, 2011.
  5. Web site: BirdLife Data Zone. 2023-11-20.
  6. http://webworld.unesco.org/water/ihp/db/shiklomanov/part'4/ASIA/Afghanistan/2AH`Kunduz%20at%20Pule%20Khumri.htm UNESCO - Bassin du Murghab - Station : Takhta-Bazar
  7. Central Asian rivers under climate change: Impacts assessment in eight representative catchments . Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies. 34 . April 2021 . 100779 . Iulii. Didovets. Anastasia. Lobanova. Valentina. Krysanova. Christoph . Menza. Zhanna . Babagalieva . Aliya . Nurbatsina . Nadejda . Gavrilenko . Vohid . Khamidov . Atabek . Umirbekov . Sobir . Qodirov. Dowletgeldi . Muhyyew . Fred Fokko . Hattermann. 100779 . 10.1016/j.ejrh.2021.100779 . 2021JHyRS..3400779D . 233532220 . 10419/229441 . free .