Jump to content

Kyzyltuz (Zhelezin District)

Coordinates: 53°47′08″N 76°48′50″E / 53.78556°N 76.81389°E / 53.78556; 76.81389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Xufanc (talk | contribs) at 06:47, 7 June 2024 (added category). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Kyzyltuz
Қызылтұз
Sentinel-2 picture of the lake group with pink lake Krasnovishnevoye in the upper right
Kyzyltuz is located in Kazakhstan
Kyzyltuz
Kyzyltuz
LocationBaraba Plain
West Siberian Plain
Coordinates53°47′08″N 76°48′50″E / 53.78556°N 76.81389°E / 53.78556; 76.81389
TypeSalt lake
Basin countriesKazakhstan
Max. length10.8 kilometers (6.7 mi)
Max. width5.8 kilometers (3.6 mi)
Surface area22.8 square kilometers (8.8 sq mi)
Average depth0.3 meters (1 ft 0 in)
Max. depth2 meters (6 ft 7 in)
Residence timeUTC+6
Shore length141.6 kilometers (25.8 mi)
Surface elevation93 meters (305 ft)
Islandsyes
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Kyzyltuz (Kazakh: Қызылтұз Russian: Кызылтуз) is a salt lake group in Zhelezin District, Pavlodar Region, Kazakhstan.[1]

The lakes lie 6 kilometers (3.7 mi) to the northwest of Krasnovka village, in the area of the Kazakhstan-Russia border, and 90 kilometers (56 mi) to the ENE of Zhelezinka, the district capital.[2][3]

Geography

Kyzyltuz is part of the Irtysh basin. It is a steppe lake cluster of the Baraba Plain, it includes lake Krasnovishnevoye (Russian: Красновишневое) that lies on the other side of the border. The Sheldauk hot springs are located 1 kilometer (0.62 mi) to the south of the southern shore. [3][2][1]

The shores of the main lake are flat, with a few irregular-shaped islands in the central area and a deeply indented northern shoreline with a southward projecting headland. There is a separate small lake in the west and another in the east which are aligned with the central lake in a roughly NW - SE direction. The water is salty and the lakes are surrounded by solonetz soil. The bottom is muddy and the mud is reputed to have medicinal properties. In the summer parts of the lake usually dry up and become a salt marsh, the shallow central section drying earlier. In some years all lakes of the group dry up.[4] Other lakes in the area are Zharagash, 43 kilometers (27 mi) to the north and Ulken Azhbolat 60 kilometers (37 mi) to the southeast.[2]

Flora and fauna

The Kyzyltuz lakes are surrounded by steppe vegetation. The waters of the lake cluster are too strongly saline for fish, but Artemia salina thrive in the summer. 35 metric tons (34 long tons; 39 short tons) of the small crustaceans were harvested in 2002.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "N-43 Topographic Chart (in Russian)". Retrieved 11 March 2024.
  2. ^ a b c Google Earth
  3. ^ a b ЛАНДШАФТЫ ПАВЛОДАРСКОЙ ОБЛАСТИ
  4. ^ ATAMEKEN: Geographical Encyclopedia. / General ed. B. O. Jacob. - Almaty: "Kazakh Encyclopedia", 2011. - 648 pages. ISBN 9965-893-70-5
  5. ^ Kursiv, No. 04 (22), Thursday, February 7, 2019