The West Siberian Plain is one of the largest accumulative low-lying plains in the world. It stretches from the shores of the Kara Sea to the steppes of Kazakhstan and from the Urals in the west to the Central Siberian Plateau in the east. The comparative uniformity of the relief (Fig. 3) determines the clearly expressed zoning of the landscapes of Western Siberia - from tundra in the north to steppe in the south (Fig. 4). Due to the weak drainage of the territory within its limits, hydromorphic complexes play a very prominent role: bogs and swampy forests occupy here a total of about 128 million hectares, and in the steppe and forest-steppe zones there are many solonetzes, malt and salt marshes. The plain has the shape of a trapezoid tapering towards the north: the distance from its southern border to its northern one reaches almost 2500 km, its width is from 800 to 1900 km, and the area is only slightly less than 3 million km 2.

The geographical position of the West Siberian Plain determines the transitional nature of its climate between the temperate continental Russian Plain and the sharply continental climate of Central Siberia. Therefore, the country's landscapes are distinguished by a number of peculiar features: the natural zones here are somewhat displaced to the north compared to the Russian Plain, there is no zone of broad-leaved forests, and landscape differences within the zones are less noticeable than on the Russian Plain. The West Siberian Plain is the most inhabited and developed (especially in the south) part of Siberia. Within its limits are the Tyumen, Kurgan, Omsk, Novosibirsk, Tomsk, a significant part of the Altai Territory, as well as some eastern regions of the Sverdlovsk and Chelyabinsk regions and the western regions of the Krasnoyarsk Territory.

Rice. 3

Rice. 4

Provinces: 1 - Jamaican; 2 - Tazovskaya; 3 - Gydanskaya; 4 - Obsko-Tazovskaya; 5 - Yeniseisko-Tazovskaya; 6 - Severossvinskaya; 7 - Obsko-Purskaya; 8 - Yenisei: 9 - Subural; 10 - Sredneobskaya; 11 - Vasyugan; 12 - Chulymo-Yeniseiskaya; 13 - Nezhneobskaya; 14 - Zauralskaya; 15 - Priishimskaya; 16 - Barabinskaya; 17 - Verkhneobskaya; 18 - Priturgayskaya; 19 - Priirtyshskaya; 20 - Kulundiyskaya.

The acquaintance of Russians with Western Siberia for the first time took place, probably back in the 11th century, when the Novgorodians visited the lower reaches of the Ob. Ermak's campaign (1581-1584) opens a brilliant period of the Great Russian geographical discoveries in Siberia and the development of its territory. However, the scientific study of the country's nature began only in the 18th century, when detachments were sent here first from the Great Northern, and then from academic expeditions. In the XIX century. Russian scientists and engineers are studying the conditions of navigation on the Ob, Yenisei and the Kara Sea, the geological and geographical features of the route of the then projected Siberian railway, salt deposits in the steppe zone. A significant contribution to the knowledge of the West Siberian taiga and steppes was made by the research of soil-botanical expeditions of the Resettlement Administration undertaken in 1908-1914. in order to study the conditions of agricultural development of the plots allotted for the resettlement of peasants from European Russia.

The study of the nature and natural resources of Western Siberia acquired a completely different scope after the Great October Revolution. In the studies that were necessary for the development of the productive forces, no longer individual specialists or small detachments took part, but hundreds of large complex expeditions and many scientific institutes created in various cities of Western Siberia. Detailed and versatile research was carried out here by the USSR Academy of Sciences (Kulundinskaya, Barabinskaya, Gydanskaya and other expeditions) and its Siberian branch, the West Siberian Geological Administration, geological institutes, expeditions of the Ministry of Agriculture, Hydroproject and other organizations. As a result of these studies, ideas about the country's relief changed significantly, detailed soil maps of many regions of Western Siberia were compiled, measures were developed for the rational use of saline soils and the famous West Siberian chernozems. Forest typological studies of Siberian geobotanists and the study of peat bogs and tundra pastures were of great practical importance. But especially significant results were brought by the work of geologists. Deep drilling and special geophysical studies have shown that the depths of many regions of Western Siberia contain the richest deposits of natural gas, large reserves of iron ore, brown coal and many other minerals, which already serve as a solid basis for the development of industry in Western Siberia.

The West Siberian Plain is one of the largest accumulative low-lying plains in the world. It stretches from the shores of the Kara Sea to the steppes of Kazakhstan and from the Urals in the west to the Central Siberian Plateau in the east. The plain has the shape of a trapezoid tapering to the north: the distance from its southern border to its northern one reaches almost 2500 km, width - from 800 to 1900 km, and the area is only slightly less than 3 million. km 2 .

In the Soviet Union, there are no longer such vast plains with such a weakly rugged relief and such small fluctuations in relative heights. The comparative uniformity of the relief determines the clearly expressed zoning of the landscapes of Western Siberia - from tundra in the north to steppe in the south. Due to the weak drainage of the territory within its limits, hydromorphic complexes play a very prominent role: swamps and swampy forests occupy here a total of about 128 mln. ha, and in the steppe and forest-steppe zones there are many salt licks, malts and salt marshes.

The geographical position of the West Siberian Plain determines the transitional nature of its climate between the temperate continental Russian Plain and the sharply continental climate of Central Siberia. Therefore, the country's landscapes are distinguished by a number of peculiar features: the natural zones here are somewhat displaced to the north compared to the Russian Plain, there is no zone of broad-leaved forests, and landscape differences within the zones are less noticeable than on the Russian Plain.

The West Siberian Plain is the most inhabited and developed (especially in the south) part of Siberia. Within its limits are the Tyumen, Kurgan, Omsk, Novosibirsk, Tomsk and North Kazakhstan regions, a significant part of the Altai Territory, the Kustanai, Kokchetav and Pavlodar regions, as well as some eastern districts of the Sverdlovsk and Chelyabinsk regions and the western regions of the Krasnoyarsk Territory.

The acquaintance of Russians with Western Siberia for the first time took place, probably back in the 11th century, when the Novgorodians visited the lower reaches of the Ob. Ermak's campaign (1581-1584) opens a brilliant period of the Great Russian geographical discoveries in Siberia and the development of its territory.

However, the scientific study of the country's nature began only in the 18th century, when detachments were sent here first from the Great Northern, and then from academic expeditions. In the XIX century. Russian scientists and engineers are studying the conditions of navigation on the Ob, Yenisei and the Kara Sea, the geological and geographical features of the route of the then projected Siberian railway, salt deposits in the steppe zone. A significant contribution to the knowledge of the West Siberian taiga and steppes was made by the research of soil-botanical expeditions of the Resettlement Administration undertaken in 1908-1914. in order to study the conditions of agricultural development of the plots allotted for the resettlement of peasants from European Russia.

The study of the nature and natural resources of Western Siberia acquired a completely different scope after the Great October Revolution. In the studies that were necessary for the development of the productive forces, no longer individual specialists or small detachments took part, but hundreds of large complex expeditions and many scientific institutes created in various cities of Western Siberia. Detailed and versatile research was carried out here by the USSR Academy of Sciences (Kulundinskaya, Barabinskaya, Gydanskaya and other expeditions) and its Siberian branch, the West Siberian Geological Administration, geological institutes, expeditions of the Ministry of Agriculture, Hydroproject and other organizations.

As a result of these studies, ideas about the country's relief changed significantly, detailed soil maps of many regions of Western Siberia were compiled, measures were developed for the rational use of saline soils and the famous West Siberian chernozems. Forest typological studies of Siberian geobotanists and the study of peat bogs and tundra pastures were of great practical importance. But especially significant results were brought by the work of geologists. Deep drilling and special geophysical studies have shown that the depths of many regions of Western Siberia contain the richest deposits of natural gas, large reserves of iron ore, brown coal and many other minerals, which already serve as a solid basis for the development of industry in Western Siberia.

Geological structure and history of the development of the territory

Of the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the section Nature of the World.

Many features of the nature of Western Siberia are due to the nature of its geological structure and history of development. The entire territory of the country is located within the West Siberian epigercyn plate, the foundation of which is composed of dislocated and metamorphosed Paleozoic deposits, similar in nature to those of the Urals, and in the south of the Kazakh Upland. The formation of the main folded structures of the basement of Western Siberia, which have a predominantly meridional direction, belongs to the era of the Hercynian orogenesis.

The tectonic structure of the West Siberian plate is rather heterogeneous. However, even its large structural elements are less clearly manifested in the modern relief than the tectonic structures of the Russian Platform. This is explained by the fact that the relief of the surface of Paleozoic rocks, lowered to great depths, is leveled here by a cover of Meso-Cenozoic deposits, the thickness of which exceeds 1000 m, and in individual depressions and syneclises of the Paleozoic basement - 3000-6000 m.

The Mesozoic formations of Western Siberia are represented by marine and continental sandy-clay deposits. Their total capacity in some areas reaches 2500-4000 m... The alternation of marine and continental facies indicates the tectonic mobility of the territory and repeated changes in the conditions and regime of sedimentation on the West Siberian plate that sank at the beginning of the Mesozoic.

Paleogene deposits are predominantly marine and consist of gray clays, mudstones, glauconite sandstones, opokas, and diatomites. They accumulated at the bottom of the Paleogene Sea, which, through the depression of the Turgai Strait, connected the Arctic Basin with the seas then located on the territory of Central Asia. This sea left Western Siberia in the middle of the Oligocene, and therefore the Upper Paleogene deposits are represented here by sandy-clayey continental facies.

Significant changes in the conditions of accumulation of sedimentary deposits took place in the Neogene. Formations of rocks of Neogene age, which come to the surface mainly in the southern half of the plain, consist exclusively of continental lacustrine-river deposits. They were formed in the conditions of a sparsely dissected plain, first covered with rich subtropical vegetation, and later - with deciduous deciduous forests from the representatives of the Turgai flora (beech, walnut, hornbeam, lapina, etc.). In some places, there were areas of savannah, where giraffes, mastodons, hipparions, camels lived at that time.

The events of the Quaternary period had a particularly great influence on the formation of the landscapes of Western Siberia. During this time, the territory of the country experienced repeated subsidence and was still an area of ​​predominantly accumulation of loose alluvial, lacustrine, and in the north - marine and glacial deposits. The thickness of the Quaternary cover reaches 200-250 m... However, in the south, it noticeably decreases (in some places up to 5-10 m), and in the modern relief, the effects of differentiated neotectonic movements are clearly expressed, as a result of which swell-like uplifts have arisen, often coinciding with the positive structures of the Mesozoic sedimentary cover.

Lower Quaternary deposits are represented in the north of the plain by alluvial sands filling the buried valleys. The alluvium sole is sometimes located in them by 200-210 m below the current level of the Kara Sea. Above them, in the north, preglacial clays and loams usually occur with fossil remains of tundra flora, which testifies to the noticeable cooling of Western Siberia that had already begun at that time. However, in the southern regions of the country, dark coniferous forests with an admixture of birch and alder prevailed.

The Middle Quaternary in the northern half of the plain was the era of marine transgressions and repeated glaciation. The most significant of them was Samarovskoe, the deposits of which compose the interfluve of the territory lying between 58-60 ° and 63-64 ° N. sh. According to the currently prevailing views, the cover of the Samarov glacier, even in the extreme northern regions of the lowland, was not continuous. The composition of the boulders shows that the sources of its food were the glaciers descending from the Urals to the Ob valley, and in the east - the glaciers of the Taimyr mountain ranges and the Central Siberian plateau. However, even during the period of maximum development of glaciation in the West Siberian Plain, the Ural and Siberian ice sheets did not adjoin one another, and the rivers of the southern regions, although they encountered a barrier formed by ice, found their way to the north in the interval between them.

The composition of the deposits of the Samarovskaya strata, along with typical glacial rocks, also includes marine and glacial-marine clays and loams formed on the bottom of the sea advancing from the north. Therefore, the typical forms of moraine relief are less pronounced here than on the Russian Plain. On the lacustrine and fluvioglacial plains adjacent to the southern edge of the glaciers, forest-tundra landscapes then prevailed, and in the extreme south of the country, loess-like loams formed, in which pollen of steppe plants (wormwood, kermek) was found. The marine transgression also continued in the post-Samarovo time, the deposits of which are represented in the north of Western Siberia by the Messovo sands and clays of the Sanchugov formation. In the northeastern part of the plain, moraines and glacial-marine loams of the younger Taz glaciation are widespread. The interglacial epoch, which began after the retreat of the ice sheet, in the north was marked by the spread of the Kazantsevo marine transgression, in the sediments of which in the lower reaches of the Yenisei and Ob rivers there are the remains of a more thermophilic marine fauna than the one currently inhabiting the Kara Sea.

The last, Zyryansk, glaciation was preceded by a regression of the boreal sea caused by uplifts in the northern regions of the West Siberian Plain, the Urals and the Central Siberian Plateau; the amplitude of these uplifts was only a few tens of meters. At the maximum stage of the development of the Zyryansk glaciation, the glaciers descended into the areas of the Yenisei plain and the eastern foot of the Urals to approximately 66 ° N. sh., where a number of stadial terminal moraines were left. In the south of Western Siberia at this time, there was a re-winding of sandy-clayey Quaternary deposits, the formation of aeolian landforms and the accumulation of loess-like loams.

Some researchers of the northern regions of the country also paint a more complex picture of the events of the Quaternary glaciation in Western Siberia. Thus, according to geologist V.N.Saks and geomorphologist G.I. Lazukov, glaciation began here in the Lower Quaternary and consisted of four independent epochs: Yarskaya, Samarovskaya, Tazovskaya and Zyryanskaya. Geologists S. A. Yakovlev and V. A. Zubakov even count six glaciations, referring the beginning of the most ancient of them to the Pliocene.

On the other hand, there are supporters of a single glaciation of Western Siberia. Geographer A.I. Popov, for example, considers the sediments of the glacial epoch of the northern half of the country as a single water-glacial complex, consisting of marine and glacial-marine clays, loams and sands containing inclusions of boulder material. In his opinion, there were no extensive ice sheets on the territory of Western Siberia, since typical moraines are found only in the extreme western (at the foot of the Urals) and eastern (near the ledge of the Central Siberian Plateau) regions. The middle part of the northern half of the plain during the glacial epoch was covered by the waters of the sea transgression; the boulders trapped in its sediments were brought here by icebergs that broke away from the edge of the glaciers, which descended from the Central Siberian Plateau. Geologist V.I.Gromov also recognizes only one Quaternary glaciation in Western Siberia.

At the end of the Zyryansk glaciation, the northern coastal regions of the West Siberian Plain subsided again. The subsided areas were flooded by the waters of the Kara Sea and covered with marine sediments that compose post-glacial marine terraces, the highest of which rises by 50-60 m above the modern level of the Kara Sea. Then, after the regression of the sea in the southern half of the plain, a new incision of rivers began. Due to the small slopes of the channel, lateral erosion prevailed in most of the river valleys of Western Siberia, the deepening of the valleys was slow, and therefore they are usually of considerable width, but shallow depth. On poorly drained interfluvial spaces, the processing of the ice age relief continued: in the north, it consisted in leveling the surface under the influence of solifluction processes; in the southern, non-glacial provinces, where more atmospheric precipitation fell, the processes of deluvial washout played a particularly prominent role in the transformation of the relief.

Paleobotanical materials suggest that after the glaciation there was a period with a slightly drier and warmer climate than now. This is confirmed, in particular, by the finds of stumps and tree trunks in the sediments of the tundra regions of Yamal and the Gydan Peninsula by 300-400 km north of the modern border of woody vegetation and widespread development in the south of the tundra zone of relict large hillocky peatlands.

At present, on the territory of the West Siberian Plain, there is a slow displacement of the boundaries of geographic zones to the south. Forests in many places are advancing on the forest-steppe, forest-steppe elements penetrate into the steppe zone, and the tundra is slowly displacing woody vegetation near the northern limit of sparse forests. True, in the south of the country man intervenes in the natural course of this process: by cutting down forests, he not only stops their natural advance on the steppe, but also contributes to the displacement of the southern border of the forests to the north.

Relief

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the section Nature of the World.

Scheme of the main orographic elements of the West Siberian Plain

Differentiated subsidence of the West Siberian plate in the Mesozoic and Cenozoic led to the predominance of the processes of accumulation of loose sediments within its limits, the thick cover of which levels the unevenness of the surface of the Hercynian basement. Therefore, the modern West Siberian Plain is characterized by a generally flat surface. However, it cannot be regarded as a monotonous lowland, as it was believed until recently. In general, the territory of Western Siberia has a concave shape. Its lowest parts (50-100 m) are located mainly in the central ( Kondinskaya and Sredneobskaya lowlands) and northern ( Nizhneobskaya, Nadym and Pursk lowlands) parts of the country. Low (up to 200-250 m) hills: Severo-Sosvinskaya, Turin, Ishimskaya, Priobskoe and Chulym-Yenisei plateau, Ketsko-Tymskaya, Verkhnetazovskaya, Lower Yeniseyskaya... A pronounced strip of hills forms in the inner part of the plain Siberian Uvaly(average height - 140-150 m), stretching from the west from the Ob to the east to the Yenisei, and parallel to them Vasyugan plain.

Some orographic elements of the West Siberian Plain correspond to geological structures: gentle anticlinal uplifts correspond, for example, the Verkhnetazovskaya and Lulimvor, a Barabinskaya and Kondinskaya the lowlands are confined to the syneclises of the slab foundation. However, discordant (inversion) morphostructures are not uncommon in Western Siberia. These include, for example, the Vasyugan plain, formed on the site of a gentle syneclise, and the Chulym-Yenisei plateau, located in the basement deflection zone.

The West Siberian Plain is usually divided into four large geomorphological areas: 1) marine accumulative plains in the north; 2) glacial and water-glacial plains; 3) periglacial, mainly lacustrine-alluvial plains; 4) southern non-glacial plains (Voskresensky, 1962).

Differences in the relief of these areas are explained by the history of their formation in the Quaternary, the nature and intensity of the latest tectonic movements, zonal differences in modern exogenous processes. In the tundra zone, relief forms are especially widespread, the formation of which is associated with the harsh climate and the widespread distribution of permafrost. Thermokarst basins, bulgunnyakhs, spotted and polygonal tundras are quite common; solifluction processes are developed. The southern steppe provinces are characterized by numerous closed basins of suffusion origin, occupied by salt marshes and lakes; the network of river valleys is sparse here, and erosional landforms in the interfluves are rare.

The main elements of the relief of the West Siberian Plain are wide flat interfluves and river valleys. Due to the fact that the share of interfluvial spaces accounts for a large part of the country's area, it is they that determine the general appearance of the relief of the plain. In many places, the slopes of their surface are insignificant, the runoff of atmospheric precipitation, especially in the forest-bog zone, is very difficult and the interfluves are very swampy. Large areas are occupied by swamps to the north of the Siberian railway line, in the interfluves of the Ob and Irtysh rivers, in the Vasyugane and Barabinsk forest-steppe. However, in some places the relief of the interfluves acquires the character of a wavy or hilly plain. Such areas are especially typical for some northern provinces of the plain, subjected to Quaternary glaciations, which left here a heap of stadial and bottom moraines. In the south - in Baraba, on the Ishim and Kulunda plains - the surface is often complicated by numerous low manes stretching from the north-east to the south-west.

Another important element of the country's relief is river valleys. All of them were formed in conditions of small slopes of the surface, slow and calm flow of rivers. Due to the differences in the intensity and nature of erosion, the appearance of the river valleys of Western Siberia is very diverse. There are also well-developed deep (up to 50-80 m) the valleys of large rivers - the Ob, Irtysh and Yenisei - with a steep right bank and a system of low terraces on the left bank. In some places, their width is several tens of kilometers, and the Ob valley in the lower reaches even reaches 100-120 km... The valleys of most small rivers are often only deep ditches with poorly expressed slopes; during spring floods, the water completely fills them and fills even the neighboring valleys.

Climate

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the section Nature of the World.

Western Siberia is a country with a rather harsh continental climate. Its great length from north to south determines a clearly pronounced zoning of the climate and significant differences in climatic conditions of the northern and southern parts of Western Siberia, associated with a change in the amount of solar radiation and the nature of the circulation of air masses, especially flows of western transport. The southern provinces of the country, located in the interior of the continent, at a great distance from the oceans, are characterized, in addition, by a greater continental climate.

In the cold period, the interaction of two baric systems takes place within the country: an area of ​​relatively high atmospheric pressure located above the southern part of the plain, an area of ​​low pressure, which in the first half of winter stretches in the form of a hollow of the Icelandic baric minimum over the Kara Sea and the northern peninsulas. In winter, masses of continental air of temperate latitudes prevail, which come from Eastern Siberia or are formed on site as a result of air cooling over the territory of the plain.

Cyclones often pass in the border zone of areas of high and low pressure. They are especially frequent in the first half of winter. Therefore, the weather in the coastal provinces is very unstable; on the coast of Yamal and the Gydan peninsula strong winds guarantee, the speed of which reaches 35-40 m / sec... The temperature here is even slightly higher than in the neighboring forest-tundra provinces, located between 66 and 69 ° C. sh. However, to the south, winter temperatures are gradually increasing again. In general, winter is characterized by stable low temperatures, there are few thaws here. The minimum temperatures throughout Western Siberia are almost the same. Even near the southern border of the country, in Barnaul, there are frosts down to -50 -52 °, that is, almost the same as in the far north, although the distance between these points is more than 2000 km... The spring is short, dry and relatively cold; April, even in the forest-bog zone, is not yet quite a spring month.

In the warm season, a reduced pressure is established over the country, and an area of ​​higher pressure forms over the Arctic Ocean. In this regard, weak northerly or northeasterly winds prevail in summer and the role of westerly air transport is noticeably enhanced. In May there is a rapid rise in temperatures, but often, during the invasions of the Arctic air masses, there are returns of cold weather and frost. The warmest month is July, the average temperature of which is from 3.6 ° on the White Island to 21-22 ° in the Pavlodar region. The absolute maximum temperature is from 21 ° in the north (Bely Island) to 40 ° in the extreme southern regions (Rubtsovsk). High summer temperatures in the southern half of Western Siberia are explained by the flow of heated continental air here from the south - from Kazakhstan and Central Asia. Autumn comes late. Even in September, the weather is warm in the afternoon, but November, even in the south, is already a real winter month with frosts down to -20 -35 °.

Most of the precipitation falls in the summer and is brought in by air masses coming from the west, from the Atlantic. From May to October, Western Siberia receives up to 70-80% of the annual precipitation. There are especially many of them in July and August, which is explained by the intense activity on the Arctic and polar fronts. The amount of winter precipitation is relatively small and ranges from 5 to 20-30 mm / month... In the south, snow sometimes does not fall at all during some winter months. Significant fluctuations in the amount of precipitation are characteristic in different years. Even in the taiga, where these changes are less than in other zones, precipitation, for example, in Tomsk, falls from 339 mm in dry year up to 769 mm wet. Especially large differences are observed in the forest-steppe zone, where, with an average long-term precipitation of about 300-350 mm / year in wet years it drops to 550-600 mm / year, and dry - only 170-180 mm / year.

There are also significant zonal differences in the values ​​of evaporation, which depend on the amount of precipitation, air temperature and the evaporating properties of the underlying surface. Most of all, moisture evaporates in the rainfall-rich southern half of the forest bog zone (350-400 mm / year). In the north, in the coastal tundra, where the air humidity is relatively high in summer, the amount of evaporation does not exceed 150-200 mm / year... It is approximately the same in the south of the steppe zone (200-250 mm), which is explained by the small amount of precipitation falling in the steppes. However, the volatility here reaches 650-700 mm, therefore, in some months (especially in May) the amount of evaporated moisture can exceed the amount of precipitation by 2-3 times. In this case, the lack of atmospheric precipitation is compensated for by the moisture reserves in the soil, accumulated due to autumn rains and melting of the snow cover.

The extreme southern regions of Western Siberia are characterized by droughts, which occur mainly in May and June. They are observed on average after three to four years during periods with anticyclonic circulation and increased frequency of incursions of the Arctic air. The dry air coming from the Arctic, when passing over Western Siberia, warms up and becomes enriched with moisture, but it warms up more intensively, so the air moves further and further from the saturation state. In this regard, evaporation increases, which leads to drought. In some cases, droughts are also caused by the influx of dry and warm air masses from the south - from Kazakhstan and Central Asia.

In winter, the territory of Western Siberia is covered with snow for a long time, the duration of which in the northern regions reaches 240-270 days, and in the south - 160-170 days. Due to the fact that the period of solid precipitation lasts more than six months, and thaws begin no earlier than March, the thickness of the snow cover in the tundra and steppe zones in February is 20-40 cm, in the forest-swamp zone - from 50-60 cm in the west up to 70-100 cm in the eastern Yenisei regions. In treeless - tundra and steppe - provinces, where there are strong winds and snowstorms in winter, snow is distributed very unevenly, since the winds blow it from elevated relief elements into depressions, where powerful snowdrifts are formed.

The harsh climate of the northern regions of Western Siberia, where the heat entering the soil is not enough to maintain a positive temperature of rocks, contributes to freezing of soils and widespread permafrost. On the Yamal, Tazovsky and Gydansky peninsulas, permafrost is found everywhere. In these areas of its continuous (continuous) distribution, the thickness of the frozen layer is very significant (up to 300-600 m), and its temperatures are low (in watersheds - 4, -9 °, in the valleys -2, -8 °). To the south, within the northern taiga up to latitude of about 64 °, permafrost occurs already in the form of isolated islands, interspersed with taliks. Its thickness decreases, temperatures rise to -0.5 -1 °, and the depth of summer thawing also increases, especially in areas composed of mineral rocks.

Water

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the section Nature of the World.

Western Siberia is rich in ground and surface waters; in the north, its coast is washed by the waters of the Kara Sea.

The entire territory of the country is located within the large West Siberian artesian basin, in which hydrogeologists distinguish several basins of the second order: Tobolsk, Irtysh, Kulundinsko-Barnaul, Chulymsky, Obsky, etc. sands, sandstones) and water-resistant rocks, artesian basins are characterized by a significant number of aquifers confined to formations of various ages - Jurassic, Cretaceous, Paleogene and Quaternary. The groundwater quality of these horizons is very different. In most cases, artesian waters of deep horizons are more mineralized than those occurring closer to the surface.

In some aquifers of the Ob and Irtysh artesian basins at a depth of 1000-3000 m there are hot salty waters, most often of a chloride calcium-sodium composition. Their temperature is from 40 to 120 °, the daily flow rate of wells reaches 1-1.5 thousand. m 3, and the total reserves are 65,000 km 3; such pressurized water can be used to heat cities, greenhouses and greenhouses.

Groundwater in arid steppe and forest-steppe regions of Western Siberia is of great importance for water supply. In many areas of the Kulunda steppe, deep tubular wells were built to extract them. Ground waters of Quaternary deposits are also used; however, in the southern regions, due to climatic conditions, poor drainage of the surface and slow circulation, they are often highly saline.

The surface of the West Siberian Plain is drained by many thousands of rivers, the total length of which exceeds 250 thousand meters. km... These rivers carry about 1200 km 3 water - 5 times more than the Volga. The density of the river network is not very large and varies in different places depending on the relief and climatic features: in the Tavda basin, it reaches 350 km, and in the Barabinsk forest-steppe - only 29 km for 1000 km 2. Some southern regions of the country with a total area of ​​over 445 thousand sq. km 2 belong to the territories of closed flow and are distinguished by the abundance of closed lakes.

The main sources of food for most rivers are melted snow waters and summer-autumn rains. In accordance with the nature of power sources, the runoff is uneven by seasons: approximately 70-80% of its annual amount occurs in spring and summer. Especially a lot of water flows down during the spring flood, when the level of large rivers rises by 7-12 m(in the lower reaches of the Yenisei even up to 15-18 m). For a long time (in the south - five, and in the north - eight months), West Siberian rivers are frozen in ice. Therefore, the winter months account for no more than 10% of the annual runoff.

The rivers of Western Siberia, including the largest ones - the Ob, Irtysh and Yenisei, are characterized by slight slopes and low flow rates. So, for example, the fall of the Ob channel in the section from Novosibirsk to the mouth for 3000 km equals only 90 m, and the speed of its flow does not exceed 0.5 m / sec.

The most important waterway of Western Siberia is the river Ob with its large left tributary Irtysh. The Ob is one of the greatest rivers in the world. Its basin area is almost 3 million sq. km 2, and the length is 3676 km... The Ob basin is located within several geographic zones; in each of them the nature and density of the river network are different. So, in the south, in the forest-steppe zone, the Ob receives relatively few tributaries, but in the taiga zone, their number increases markedly.

Below the confluence of the Irtysh, the Ob turns into a powerful stream with a width of up to 3-4 km... Near the mouth of the river, in some places, the width of the river reaches 10 km, and depth - up to 40 m... This is one of the most abundant rivers in Siberia; she brings an average of 414 to the Gulf of Ob per year km 3 water.

The Ob is a typical flat river. Its channel slopes are small: the drop in the upper part is usually 8-10 cm, and below the mouth of the Irtysh does not exceed 2-3 cm by 1 km currents. During the spring and summer, the Ob runoff near Novosibirsk is 78% of the annual; near the estuary (near Salekhard), the distribution of runoff by seasons is as follows: winter - 8.4%, spring - 14.6%, summer - 56% and autumn - 21%.

Six rivers of the Ob basin (Irtysh, Chulym, Ishim, Tobol, Ket and Konda) have a length of more than 1000 km; the length of even some tributaries of the second order sometimes exceeds 500 km.

The largest of the tributaries is Irtysh whose length is 4248 km... Its origins lie outside the Soviet Union, in the mountains of the Mongolian Altai. On a significant part of its turning, the Irtysh crosses the steppes of Northern Kazakhstan and has almost no tributaries up to Omsk. Only in the lower reaches, already within the taiga, several large rivers flow into it: Ishim, Tobol, etc. The Irtysh is navigable throughout the entire length, but in the upper reaches in summer, during a period of low water level, navigation is difficult due to numerous rifts.

Along the eastern border of the West Siberian Plain flows Yenisei- the most abundant river in the Soviet Union. Its length is 4091 km(if we count the Selenga River as the source, then 5940 km); the basin area is almost 2.6 mln. km 2. Like the Ob, the Yenisei basin is stretched in the meridional direction. All its large right tributaries flow through the territory of the Central Siberian Plateau. From the flat swampy watersheds of the West Siberian Plain, only shorter and less watery left tributaries of the Yenisei begin.

The Yenisei originates in the mountains of the Tuva ASSR. In the upper and middle reaches, where the river crosses the spurs of the Sayan and the Central Siberian plateau, formed by bedrocks, rapids are found in its channel (Kazachinsky, Osinovsky, etc.). After the confluence of the Nizhnaya Tunguska, the current becomes calmer and slower, and sandy islands appear in the channel, dividing the river into channels. The Yenisei flows into the wide Yenisei Bay of the Kara Sea; its width near the mouth, located near the Brekhov Islands, reaches 20 km.

The Yenisei is characterized by large fluctuations in the costs of the seasons of the year. Its minimum winter consumption near the mouth is about 2500 m 3 / sec, the maximum during the flood period exceeds 132 thous. m 3 / sec with an average annual of about 19 800 m 3 / sec... For a year, the river brings to its mouth more than 623 km 3 water. In the lower reaches, the depth of the Yenisei is very significant (in some places 50 m)... This makes it possible for sea-going vessels to climb up the river by more than 700 km and reach Igarka.

The West Siberian Plain contains about one million lakes, the total area of ​​which is more than 100 thousand sq. km 2. According to the origin of the basins, they are divided into several groups: occupying the primary irregularities of the flat relief; thermokarst; moraine-glacial; lakes of river valleys, which, in turn, are divided into floodplain and oxbow lakes. Peculiar lakes - "fogs" - are found in the Urals part of the plain. They are located in wide valleys, overflow in spring, sharply reducing their size in summer, and by autumn, many of them disappear altogether. In the forest-steppe and steppe regions of Western Siberia, there are lakes that fill suffusion or tectonic basins.

Soils, vegetation and fauna

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the section Nature of the World.

The flat relief of Western Siberia contributes to a pronounced zoning in the distribution of soils and vegetation cover. Within the country are gradually replacing one another tundra, forest-tundra, forest-swamp, forest-steppe and steppe zones. Geographic zoning thus resembles, in general terms, the zoning system of the Russian Plain. However, the zones of the West Siberian Plain also have a number of local specific features that noticeably distinguish them from similar zones in Eastern Europe. Typical zonal landscapes are located here on dissected and better drained upland and riverine areas. In poorly drained interfluvial spaces, the flow from which is difficult, and the soils are usually highly moistened, marsh landscapes prevail in the northern provinces, and landscapes formed under the influence of saline groundwater in the south. Thus, the character and density of the relief dissection play a much greater role here than on the Russian Plain in the distribution of soils and vegetation cover, which determine significant differences in the soil moisture regime.

Therefore, in the country there are, as it were, two independent systems of latitudinal zoning: the zoning of drained areas and the zoning of undrained interfluves. These differences are most clearly manifested in the nature of the soils. So, in the drained areas of the forest bog zone, strongly podzolized soils are formed under the coniferous taiga and sod-podzolic soils under birch forests, and in the neighboring undrained areas, powerful podzols, bog and meadow-bog soils are formed. The drained areas of the forest-steppe zone are most often occupied by leached and degraded chernozems or dark gray podzolized soils under birch groves; in undrained areas, they are replaced by boggy, saline or meadow chernozem soils. On the upland areas of the steppe zone, either ordinary chernozems, characterized by increased obesity, low thickness and lingual (heterogeneity) of the soil horizons, or chestnut soils predominate; in poorly drained areas, spots of malt and solodized solonetzes or solonetzic meadow-steppe soils are common among them.

Fragment of a section of swampy taiga of the Surgut Polesye (after V. I. Orlov)

There are some other features that distinguish the zones of Western Siberia from the zones of the Russian Plain. In the tundra zone, which extends much farther north than on the Russian Plain, large areas are occupied by Arctic tundra, which are absent in the mainland regions of the European part of the Union. The woody vegetation of the forest-tundra is represented mainly by Siberian larch, and not spruce, as in the regions lying to the west of the Urals.

In the forest bog zone, 60% of the area of ​​which is occupied by bogs and weakly drained boggy forests 1, pine forests prevail, occupying 24.5% of the forested area, and birch forests (22.6%), mainly secondary. Smaller areas are covered with moist dark coniferous taiga from cedar (Pinus sibirica), fir (Abies sibirica) and ate (Picea obovata)... Broad-leaved species (with the exception of linden, which is rarely found in the southern regions) are absent in the forests of Western Siberia, and therefore there is no zone of broad-leaved forests.

1 It is for this reason that the zone is called forest swamp in Western Siberia.

The increase in the continentality of the climate causes a relatively abrupt, compared to the Russian Plain, transition from forest-bog landscapes to dry steppe spaces in the southern regions of the West Siberian Plain. Therefore, the width of the forest-steppe zone in Western Siberia is much smaller than on the Russian Plain, and of the tree species it contains mainly birch and aspen.

The West Siberian Plain is entirely part of the transitional Euro-Siberian zoogeographic subregion of the Palaearctic. There are 478 known species of vertebrates, including 80 species of mammals. The fauna of the country is young and in its composition does not differ much from the fauna of the Russian Plain. Only in the eastern half of the country there are some eastern, Zanisei forms: the Dzungarian hamster (Phodopus sungorus), chipmunk (Eutamias sibiricus) etc. In recent years, the fauna of Western Siberia has been enriched by the muskrat acclimatized here (Ondatra zibethica), a hare (Lepus europaeus), American mink (Lutreola vison), Teleut squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris exalbidus), and a carp was brought to its reservoirs (Cyprinus carpio) and bream (Abramis brama).

Natural resources

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the section Nature of the World.

The natural resources of Western Siberia have long served as the basis for the development of various sectors of the economy. There are tens of millions of hectares of good arable land here. Especially of great value are the land areas of the steppe and forest of the steppe zones with their climate favorable for agriculture and highly fertile chernozems, gray forest and non-solonetsous chestnut soils, which occupy more than 10% of the country's area. Due to the flatness of the relief, the development of lands in the southern part of Western Siberia does not require large capital expenditures. For this reason, they were one of the priority areas for the development of virgin and fallow lands; in recent years, more than 15 mln. ha new lands, increased production of grain and industrial crops (sugar beet, sunflower, etc.). The lands located to the north, even in the southern taiga zone, are still underutilized and are a good reserve for development in the coming years. However, this will require significantly higher expenditures of labor and funds for drainage, stubbing and clearing of land from shrubs.

Of high economic value are the pastures of the forest-swamp, forest-steppe and steppe zones, especially flooded meadows along the shares of the Ob, Irtysh, Yenisei and their large tributaries. The abundance of natural meadows here creates a solid base for the further development of animal husbandry and a significant increase in its productivity. Of great importance for the development of reindeer husbandry are reindeer reindeer pastures of the tundra and forest-tundra, which occupy more than 20 million cubic meters in Western Siberia. ha; more than half a million domesticated deer graze on them.

A significant part of the plain is occupied by forests - birch, pine, cedar, fir, spruce and larch. The total forested area in Western Siberia exceeds 80 mln. ha; timber stock of about 10 billion m 3, and its annual growth is over 10 million. m 3. The most valuable forests are located here, which provide timber for various sectors of the national economy. Forests are most widely used at present along the Ob valleys, the lower reaches of the Irtysh and some of their navigable or floating tributaries. But many forests, including especially valuable tracts of kondovaya pine, located between the Urals and the Ob, are still poorly developed.

Dozens of large rivers of Western Siberia and hundreds of their tributaries serve as important shipping routes connecting the southern regions with the extreme north. The total length of navigable rivers exceeds 25 thousand. km... The length of the rivers along which timber is rafting is approximately the same. The country's deep rivers (Yenisei, Ob, Irtysh, Tom, etc.) have large energy resources; when fully utilized, they could provide more than $ 200 billion. kWh electricity per year. The first large Novosibirsk hydroelectric power station on the Ob River with a capacity of 400 thous. kw entered service in 1959; above it, a reservoir with an area of ​​1070 km 2. In the future, it is planned to build a hydroelectric power station on the Yenisei (Osinovskaya, Igarskaya), in the upper reaches of the Ob (Kamenskaya, Baturinskaya), on Tom (Tomskaya).

The waters of the large West Siberian rivers can also be used for irrigation and watering of the semi-desert and desert regions of Kazakhstan and Central Asia, which are already experiencing a significant shortage of water resources. Currently, design organizations are developing the main provisions and a feasibility study for the transfer of a part of the Siberian rivers' runoff to the Aral Sea basin. According to preliminary studies, the implementation of the first stage of this project should provide an annual transfer of 25 km 3 waters from Western Siberia to Central Asia. To this end, it is planned to create a large reservoir on the Irtysh, near Tobolsk. From it to the south along the Tobol valley and along the Turgai depression into the Syrdarya basin to the reservoirs created there, the Ob-Caspian canal with a length of more than 1500 km... The rise of water to the Tobol-Aral watershed is supposed to be carried out by a system of powerful pumping stations.

At the next stages of the project, the volume of water transferred annually can be increased to 60-80 km 3. Since the waters of the Irtysh and Tobol will no longer be enough for this, the work of the second stage provides for the construction of dams and reservoirs on the upper Ob, and possibly on the Chulym and Yenisei.

Naturally, the withdrawal of tens of cubic kilometers of water from the Ob and Irtysh should affect the regime of these rivers in their middle and lower reaches, as well as changes in the landscapes of the territories adjacent to the projected reservoirs and transfer channels. Predicting the nature of these changes now occupies a prominent place in the scientific research of Siberian geographers.

Quite recently, many geologists, based on the notion of the uniformity of the thick unconsolidated sediments that compose the plain and the seeming simplicity of its tectonic structure, very carefully evaluated the possibility of discovering any valuable minerals in its depths. However, the geological and geophysical studies carried out in recent decades, accompanied by the drilling of deep wells, have shown the erroneousness of the previous ideas about the country's poverty in mineral resources and allowed a completely new view of the prospects for the use of its mineral resources.

As a result of these studies, more than 120 oil fields have already been discovered in the strata of the Mesozoic (mainly Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous) deposits of the central regions of Western Siberia. The main oil-bearing areas are located in the Middle Ob region - in Nizhnevartovskoye (including the Samotlor field, which can produce oil up to 100-120 mln. t / year), Surgut (Ust-Balykskoye, West Surgutskoye, etc.) and Yuzhno-Balyksky (Mamontovskoye, Pravdinskoye, etc.) regions. In addition, there are deposits in the Shaim region, in the Ural part of the plain.

In recent years, in the north of Western Siberia - in the lower reaches of the Ob, Taz and Yamal - the largest natural gas fields have also been discovered. Potential reserves of some of them (Urengoysky, Medvezhy, Zapolyarny) amount to several trillion cubic meters; gas production at each can reach 75-100 billion. m 3 per year. In general, the forecasted gas reserves in the bowels of Western Siberia are estimated at 40-50 trillion. m 3, including in categories A + B + C 1 - more than 10 trillion. m 3 .

Oil and gas fields in Western Siberia

The discovery of both oil and gas fields is of great importance for the development of the economy of Western Siberia and neighboring economic regions. Tyumen and Tomsk regions are turning into important regions of the oil-producing, oil-refining and chemical industries. Already in 1975 more than 145 mln. T oil and tens of billions of cubic meters of gas. To deliver oil to the regions of consumption and processing, the Ust-Balyk - Omsk oil pipelines were built (965 km), Shaim - Tyumen (436 km), Samotlor - Ust-Balyk - Kurgan - Ufa - Almetyevsk, through which oil got access to the European part of the USSR - to the places of its greatest consumption. For the same purpose, the Tyumen-Surgut railway and gas pipelines were built, along which natural gas from West Siberian fields goes to the Urals, as well as to the central and northwestern regions of the European part of the Soviet Union. In the last five-year period, the construction of the giant Siberia-Moscow super gas pipeline was completed (its length is more than 3000 km), through which gas from the Medvezhye field is supplied to Moscow. In the future, gas from Western Siberia will go through pipelines to the countries of Western Europe.

Deposits of brown coal, confined to the Mesozoic and Neogene deposits of the marginal regions of the plain (Severo-Sosvinsky, Yenisei-Chulymsky and Ob-Irtysh basins), have also become known. Western Siberia also possesses colossal peat reserves. In its peat bogs, the total area of ​​which exceeds 36.5 mln. ha, concluded a little less than 90 billion. T air-dry peat. This is almost 60% of all peat resources in the USSR.

Geological studies have led to the discovery of deposits and other minerals. In the southeast, in the Upper Cretaceous and Paleogene sandstones of the environs of Kolpashev and Bakchar, large deposits of oolitic iron ores have been discovered. They lie relatively shallow (150-400 m), the iron content in them is up to 36-45%, and the predicted geological reserves of the West Siberian iron ore basin are estimated at 300-350 billion. T, including in one Bakcharskoye field - 40 billion. T... Numerous salt lakes in the south of Western Siberia contain hundreds of millions of tons of table salt and Glauber's salt, as well as tens of millions of tons of soda. In addition, Western Siberia has huge reserves of raw materials for the production of building materials (sand, clay, marls); along its western and southern outskirts, there are deposits of limestone, granite, diabase.

Western Siberia is one of the most important economic and geographical regions of the USSR. About 14 million people live on its territory (the average population density is 5 people per 1 km 2) (1976). In the cities and workers' settlements there are machine-building, oil refining and chemical plants, enterprises of the timber, light and food industries. Various branches of agriculture are of great importance in the economy of Western Siberia. It produces about 20% of the marketable grain of the USSR, a significant amount of various industrial crops, a lot of oil, meat and wool.

The decisions of the 25th Congress of the CPSU outlined a further gigantic growth of the economy of Western Siberia and a significant increase in its importance in the economy of our country. In the coming years, within its limits, it is planned to create new energy bases based on the use of deposits of cheap coal and hydropower resources of the Yenisei and Ob, to develop the oil and gas industry, to create new centers of mechanical engineering and chemistry.

The main directions of development of the national economy plan to continue the formation of the West Siberian territorial-production complex, to turn Western Siberia into the main base of the USSR for oil and gas production. In 1980, 300-310 mln. T oil and up to 125-155 bln. m 3 natural gas (about 30% of gas production in our country).

It is planned to continue the construction of the Tomsk petrochemical complex, to commission the first stage of the Achinsk oil refinery, to launch the construction of the Tobolsk petrochemical complex, to build oil gas processing plants, a system of powerful pipelines for transporting oil and gas from the northwestern regions of Western Siberia to the European part of the USSR and to oil refineries in the eastern regions of the country, as well as the Surgut-Nizhnevartovsk railway and begin construction of the Surgut-Urengoy railway. The tasks of the five-year plan envisage accelerating the exploration of oil, natural gas and condensate deposits in the Middle Ob region and in the north of the Tyumen region. Logging, grain and livestock production will also increase significantly. In the southern regions of the country, it is planned to carry out a number of large reclamation measures - to irrigate and water large tracts of lands in Kulunda and Irtysh, to begin construction of the second stage of the Aleisk system and the Charysh group water pipeline, to build drainage systems in Baraba.

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general characteristics

The West Siberian Plain is one of the largest accumulative low-lying plains in the world. It stretches from the shores of the Kara Sea to the steppes of Kazakhstan and from the Urals in the west to the Central Siberian Plateau in the east. The plain has the shape of a trapezoid tapering to the north: the distance from its southern border to its northern one reaches almost 2500 km, width - from 800 to 1900 km, and the area is only slightly less than 3 million. km 2 .

In the Soviet Union, there are no longer such vast plains with such a weakly rugged relief and such small fluctuations in relative heights. The comparative uniformity of the relief determines the clearly expressed zoning of the landscapes of Western Siberia - from tundra in the north to steppe in the south. Due to the weak drainage of the territory within its limits, hydromorphic complexes play a very prominent role: swamps and swampy forests occupy here a total of about 128 mln. ha, and in the steppe and forest-steppe zones there are many salt licks, malts and salt marshes.

The geographical position of the West Siberian Plain determines the transitional nature of its climate between the temperate continental Russian Plain and the sharply continental climate of Central Siberia. Therefore, the country's landscapes are distinguished by a number of peculiar features: the natural zones here are somewhat displaced to the north compared to the Russian Plain, there is no zone of broad-leaved forests, and landscape differences within the zones are less noticeable than on the Russian Plain.

The West Siberian Plain is the most inhabited and developed (especially in the south) part of Siberia. Within its limits are the Tyumen, Kurgan, Omsk, Novosibirsk, Tomsk and North Kazakhstan regions, a significant part of the Altai Territory, the Kustanai, Kokchetav and Pavlodar regions, as well as some eastern districts of the Sverdlovsk and Chelyabinsk regions and the western regions of the Krasnoyarsk Territory.

The acquaintance of Russians with Western Siberia for the first time took place, probably back in the 11th century, when the Novgorodians visited the lower reaches of the Ob. Ermak's campaign (1581-1584) opens a brilliant period of the Great Russian geographical discoveries in Siberia and the development of its territory.

However, the scientific study of the country's nature began only in the 18th century, when detachments were sent here first from the Great Northern, and then from academic expeditions. In the XIX century. Russian scientists and engineers are studying the conditions of navigation on the Ob, Yenisei and the Kara Sea, the geological and geographical features of the route of the then projected Siberian railway, salt deposits in the steppe zone. A significant contribution to the knowledge of the West Siberian taiga and steppes was made by the research of soil-botanical expeditions of the Resettlement Administration undertaken in 1908-1914. in order to study the conditions of agricultural development of the plots allotted for the resettlement of peasants from European Russia.

The study of the nature and natural resources of Western Siberia acquired a completely different scope after the Great October Revolution. In the studies that were necessary for the development of the productive forces, no longer individual specialists or small detachments took part, but hundreds of large complex expeditions and many scientific institutes created in various cities of Western Siberia. Detailed and versatile research was carried out here by the USSR Academy of Sciences (Kulundinskaya, Barabinskaya, Gydanskaya and other expeditions) and its Siberian branch, the West Siberian Geological Administration, geological institutes, expeditions of the Ministry of Agriculture, Hydroproject and other organizations.

As a result of these studies, ideas about the country's relief changed significantly, detailed soil maps of many regions of Western Siberia were compiled, measures were developed for the rational use of saline soils and the famous West Siberian chernozems. Forest typological studies of Siberian geobotanists and the study of peat bogs and tundra pastures were of great practical importance. But especially significant results were brought by the work of geologists. Deep drilling and special geophysical studies have shown that the depths of many regions of Western Siberia contain the richest deposits of natural gas, large reserves of iron ore, brown coal and many other minerals, which already serve as a solid basis for the development of industry in Western Siberia.

Geological structure and history of the development of the territory

Of the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the section Nature of the World Song and Cry of Mother Earth ", dedicated to the beauty of nature and ecological problems of Western Siberia and illustrated by the author's photographs.

Many features of the nature of Western Siberia are due to the nature of its geological structure and history of development. The entire territory of the country is located within the West Siberian epigercyn plate, the foundation of which is composed of dislocated and metamorphosed Paleozoic deposits, similar in nature to those of the Urals, and in the south of the Kazakh Upland. The formation of the main folded structures of the basement of Western Siberia, which have a predominantly meridional direction, belongs to the era of the Hercynian orogenesis.

The tectonic structure of the West Siberian plate is rather heterogeneous. However, even its large structural elements are less clearly manifested in the modern relief than the tectonic structures of the Russian Platform. This is explained by the fact that the relief of the surface of Paleozoic rocks, lowered to great depths, is leveled here by a cover of Meso-Cenozoic deposits, the thickness of which exceeds 1000 m, and in individual depressions and syneclises of the Paleozoic basement - 3000-6000 m.

The Mesozoic formations of Western Siberia are represented by marine and continental sandy-clay deposits. Their total capacity in some areas reaches 2500-4000 m... The alternation of marine and continental facies indicates the tectonic mobility of the territory and repeated changes in the conditions and regime of sedimentation on the West Siberian plate that sank at the beginning of the Mesozoic.

Paleogene deposits are predominantly marine and consist of gray clays, mudstones, glauconite sandstones, opokas, and diatomites. They accumulated at the bottom of the Paleogene Sea, which, through the depression of the Turgai Strait, connected the Arctic Basin with the seas then located on the territory of Central Asia. This sea left Western Siberia in the middle of the Oligocene, and therefore the Upper Paleogene deposits are represented here by sandy-clayey continental facies.

Significant changes in the conditions of accumulation of sedimentary deposits took place in the Neogene. Formations of rocks of Neogene age, which come to the surface mainly in the southern half of the plain, consist exclusively of continental lacustrine-river deposits. They were formed in the conditions of a sparsely dissected plain, first covered with rich subtropical vegetation, and later - with deciduous deciduous forests from the representatives of the Turgai flora (beech, walnut, hornbeam, lapina, etc.). In some places, there were areas of savannah, where giraffes, mastodons, hipparions, camels lived at that time.

The events of the Quaternary period had a particularly great influence on the formation of the landscapes of Western Siberia. During this time, the territory of the country experienced repeated subsidence and was still an area of ​​predominantly accumulation of loose alluvial, lacustrine, and in the north - marine and glacial deposits. The thickness of the Quaternary cover reaches 200-250 m... However, in the south, it noticeably decreases (in some places up to 5-10 m), and in the modern relief, the effects of differentiated neotectonic movements are clearly expressed, as a result of which swell-like uplifts have arisen, often coinciding with the positive structures of the Mesozoic sedimentary cover.

Lower Quaternary deposits are represented in the north of the plain by alluvial sands filling the buried valleys. The alluvium sole is sometimes located in them by 200-210 m below the current level of the Kara Sea. Above them, in the north, preglacial clays and loams usually occur with fossil remains of tundra flora, which testifies to the noticeable cooling of Western Siberia that had already begun at that time. However, in the southern regions of the country, dark coniferous forests with an admixture of birch and alder prevailed.

The Middle Quaternary in the northern half of the plain was the era of marine transgressions and repeated glaciation. The most significant of them was Samarovskoe, the deposits of which compose the interfluve of the territory lying between 58-60 ° and 63-64 ° N. sh. According to the currently prevailing views, the cover of the Samarov glacier, even in the extreme northern regions of the lowland, was not continuous. The composition of the boulders shows that the sources of its food were the glaciers descending from the Urals to the Ob valley, and in the east - the glaciers of the Taimyr mountain ranges and the Central Siberian plateau. However, even during the period of maximum development of glaciation in the West Siberian Plain, the Ural and Siberian ice sheets did not adjoin one another, and the rivers of the southern regions, although they encountered a barrier formed by ice, found their way to the north in the interval between them.

The composition of the deposits of the Samarovskaya strata, along with typical glacial rocks, also includes marine and glacial-marine clays and loams formed on the bottom of the sea advancing from the north. Therefore, the typical forms of moraine relief are less pronounced here than on the Russian Plain. On the lacustrine and fluvioglacial plains adjacent to the southern edge of the glaciers, forest-tundra landscapes then prevailed, and in the extreme south of the country, loess-like loams formed, in which pollen of steppe plants (wormwood, kermek) was found. The marine transgression also continued in the post-Samarovo time, the deposits of which are represented in the north of Western Siberia by the Messovo sands and clays of the Sanchugov formation. In the northeastern part of the plain, moraines and glacial-marine loams of the younger Taz glaciation are widespread. The interglacial epoch, which began after the retreat of the ice sheet, in the north was marked by the spread of the Kazantsevo marine transgression, in the sediments of which in the lower reaches of the Yenisei and Ob rivers there are the remains of a more thermophilic marine fauna than the one currently inhabiting the Kara Sea.

The last, Zyryansk, glaciation was preceded by a regression of the boreal sea caused by uplifts in the northern regions of the West Siberian Plain, the Urals and the Central Siberian Plateau; the amplitude of these uplifts was only a few tens of meters. At the maximum stage of the development of the Zyryansk glaciation, the glaciers descended into the areas of the Yenisei plain and the eastern foot of the Urals to approximately 66 ° N. sh., where a number of stadial terminal moraines were left. In the south of Western Siberia at this time, there was a re-winding of sandy-clayey Quaternary deposits, the formation of aeolian landforms and the accumulation of loess-like loams.

Some researchers of the northern regions of the country also paint a more complex picture of the events of the Quaternary glaciation in Western Siberia. Thus, according to geologist V.N.Saks and geomorphologist G.I. Lazukov, glaciation began here in the Lower Quaternary and consisted of four independent epochs: Yarskaya, Samarovskaya, Tazovskaya and Zyryanskaya. Geologists S. A. Yakovlev and V. A. Zubakov even count six glaciations, referring the beginning of the most ancient of them to the Pliocene.

On the other hand, there are supporters of a single glaciation of Western Siberia. Geographer A.I. Popov, for example, considers the sediments of the glacial epoch of the northern half of the country as a single water-glacial complex, consisting of marine and glacial-marine clays, loams and sands containing inclusions of boulder material. In his opinion, there were no extensive ice sheets on the territory of Western Siberia, since typical moraines are found only in the extreme western (at the foot of the Urals) and eastern (near the ledge of the Central Siberian Plateau) regions. The middle part of the northern half of the plain during the glacial epoch was covered by the waters of the sea transgression; the boulders trapped in its sediments were brought here by icebergs that broke away from the edge of the glaciers, which descended from the Central Siberian Plateau. Geologist V.I.Gromov also recognizes only one Quaternary glaciation in Western Siberia.

At the end of the Zyryansk glaciation, the northern coastal regions of the West Siberian Plain subsided again. The subsided areas were flooded by the waters of the Kara Sea and covered with marine sediments that compose post-glacial marine terraces, the highest of which rises by 50-60 m above the modern level of the Kara Sea. Then, after the regression of the sea in the southern half of the plain, a new incision of rivers began. Due to the small slopes of the channel, lateral erosion prevailed in most of the river valleys of Western Siberia, the deepening of the valleys was slow, and therefore they are usually of considerable width, but shallow depth. On poorly drained interfluvial spaces, the processing of the ice age relief continued: in the north, it consisted in leveling the surface under the influence of solifluction processes; in the southern, non-glacial provinces, where more atmospheric precipitation fell, the processes of deluvial washout played a particularly prominent role in the transformation of the relief.

Paleobotanical materials suggest that after the glaciation there was a period with a slightly drier and warmer climate than now. This is confirmed, in particular, by the finds of stumps and tree trunks in the sediments of the tundra regions of Yamal and the Gydan Peninsula by 300-400 km north of the modern border of woody vegetation and widespread development in the south of the tundra zone of relict large hillocky peatlands.

At present, on the territory of the West Siberian Plain, there is a slow displacement of the boundaries of geographic zones to the south. Forests in many places are advancing on the forest-steppe, forest-steppe elements penetrate into the steppe zone, and the tundra is slowly displacing woody vegetation near the northern limit of sparse forests. True, in the south of the country man intervenes in the natural course of this process: by cutting down forests, he not only stops their natural advance on the steppe, but also contributes to the displacement of the southern border of the forests to the north.

Relief

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the Nature of the World section, and also read the book by V.P. Nazarov "Song and Cry of Mother Earth", dedicated to the beauty of nature and environmental problems of Western Siberia and illustrated by the author's photographs.

Scheme of the main orographic elements of the West Siberian Plain

Differentiated subsidence of the West Siberian plate in the Mesozoic and Cenozoic led to the predominance of the processes of accumulation of loose sediments within its limits, the thick cover of which levels the unevenness of the surface of the Hercynian basement. Therefore, the modern West Siberian Plain is characterized by a generally flat surface. However, it cannot be regarded as a monotonous lowland, as it was believed until recently. In general, the territory of Western Siberia has a concave shape. Its lowest parts (50-100 m) are located mainly in the central ( Kondinskaya and Sredneobskaya lowlands) and northern ( Nizhneobskaya, Nadym and Pursk lowlands) parts of the country. Low (up to 200-250 m) hills: Severo-Sosvinskaya, Turin, Ishimskaya, Priobskoe and Chulym-Yenisei plateau, Ketsko-Tymskaya, Verkhnetazovskaya, Lower Yeniseyskaya... A pronounced strip of hills forms in the inner part of the plain Siberian Uvaly(average height - 140-150 m), stretching from the west from the Ob to the east to the Yenisei, and parallel to them Vasyugan plain.

Some orographic elements of the West Siberian Plain correspond to geological structures: gentle anticlinal uplifts correspond, for example, the Verkhnetazovskaya and Lulimvor, a Barabinskaya and Kondinskaya the lowlands are confined to the syneclises of the slab foundation. However, discordant (inversion) morphostructures are not uncommon in Western Siberia. These include, for example, the Vasyugan plain, formed on the site of a gentle syneclise, and the Chulym-Yenisei plateau, located in the basement deflection zone.

The West Siberian Plain is usually divided into four large geomorphological areas: 1) marine accumulative plains in the north; 2) glacial and water-glacial plains; 3) periglacial, mainly lacustrine-alluvial plains; 4) southern non-glacial plains (Voskresensky, 1962).

Differences in the relief of these areas are explained by the history of their formation in the Quaternary, the nature and intensity of the latest tectonic movements, zonal differences in modern exogenous processes. In the tundra zone, relief forms are especially widespread, the formation of which is associated with the harsh climate and the widespread distribution of permafrost. Thermokarst basins, bulgunnyakhs, spotted and polygonal tundras are quite common; solifluction processes are developed. The southern steppe provinces are characterized by numerous closed basins of suffusion origin, occupied by salt marshes and lakes; the network of river valleys is sparse here, and erosional landforms in the interfluves are rare.

The main elements of the relief of the West Siberian Plain are wide flat interfluves and river valleys. Due to the fact that the share of interfluvial spaces accounts for a large part of the country's area, it is they that determine the general appearance of the relief of the plain. In many places, the slopes of their surface are insignificant, the runoff of atmospheric precipitation, especially in the forest-bog zone, is very difficult and the interfluves are very swampy. Large areas are occupied by swamps to the north of the Siberian railway line, in the interfluves of the Ob and Irtysh rivers, in the Vasyugane and Barabinsk forest-steppe. However, in some places the relief of the interfluves acquires the character of a wavy or hilly plain. Such areas are especially typical for some northern provinces of the plain, subjected to Quaternary glaciations, which left here a heap of stadial and bottom moraines. In the south - in Baraba, on the Ishim and Kulunda plains - the surface is often complicated by numerous low manes stretching from the north-east to the south-west.

Another important element of the country's relief is river valleys. All of them were formed in conditions of small slopes of the surface, slow and calm flow of rivers. Due to the differences in the intensity and nature of erosion, the appearance of the river valleys of Western Siberia is very diverse. There are also well-developed deep (up to 50-80 m) the valleys of large rivers - the Ob, Irtysh and Yenisei - with a steep right bank and a system of low terraces on the left bank. In some places, their width is several tens of kilometers, and the Ob valley in the lower reaches even reaches 100-120 km... The valleys of most small rivers are often only deep ditches with poorly expressed slopes; during spring floods, the water completely fills them and fills even the neighboring valleys.

Climate

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the Nature of the World section, and also read the book by V.P. Nazarov "Song and Cry of Mother Earth", dedicated to the beauty of nature and environmental problems of Western Siberia and illustrated by the author's photographs.

Western Siberia is a country with a rather harsh continental climate. Its great length from north to south determines a clearly pronounced zoning of the climate and significant differences in climatic conditions of the northern and southern parts of Western Siberia, associated with a change in the amount of solar radiation and the nature of the circulation of air masses, especially flows of western transport. The southern provinces of the country, located in the interior of the continent, at a great distance from the oceans, are characterized, in addition, by a greater continental climate.

In the cold period, the interaction of two baric systems takes place within the country: an area of ​​relatively high atmospheric pressure located above the southern part of the plain, an area of ​​low pressure, which in the first half of winter stretches in the form of a hollow of the Icelandic baric minimum over the Kara Sea and the northern peninsulas. In winter, masses of continental air of temperate latitudes prevail, which come from Eastern Siberia or are formed on site as a result of air cooling over the territory of the plain.

Cyclones often pass in the border zone of areas of high and low pressure. They are especially frequent in the first half of winter. Therefore, the weather in the coastal provinces is very unstable; on the coast of Yamal and the Gydan peninsula strong winds guarantee, the speed of which reaches 35-40 m / sec... The temperature here is even slightly higher than in the neighboring forest-tundra provinces, located between 66 and 69 ° C. sh. However, to the south, winter temperatures are gradually increasing again. In general, winter is characterized by stable low temperatures, there are few thaws here. The minimum temperatures throughout Western Siberia are almost the same. Even near the southern border of the country, in Barnaul, there are frosts down to -50 -52 °, that is, almost the same as in the far north, although the distance between these points is more than 2000 km... The spring is short, dry and relatively cold; April, even in the forest-bog zone, is not yet quite a spring month.

In the warm season, a reduced pressure is established over the country, and an area of ​​higher pressure forms over the Arctic Ocean. In this regard, weak northerly or northeasterly winds prevail in summer and the role of westerly air transport is noticeably enhanced. In May there is a rapid rise in temperatures, but often, during the invasions of the Arctic air masses, there are returns of cold weather and frost. The warmest month is July, the average temperature of which is from 3.6 ° on the White Island to 21-22 ° in the Pavlodar region. The absolute maximum temperature is from 21 ° in the north (Bely Island) to 40 ° in the extreme southern regions (Rubtsovsk). High summer temperatures in the southern half of Western Siberia are explained by the flow of heated continental air here from the south - from Kazakhstan and Central Asia. Autumn comes late. Even in September, the weather is warm in the afternoon, but November, even in the south, is already a real winter month with frosts down to -20 -35 °.

Most of the precipitation falls in the summer and is brought in by air masses coming from the west, from the Atlantic. From May to October, Western Siberia receives up to 70-80% of the annual precipitation. There are especially many of them in July and August, which is explained by the intense activity on the Arctic and polar fronts. The amount of winter precipitation is relatively small and ranges from 5 to 20-30 mm / month... In the south, snow sometimes does not fall at all during some winter months. Significant fluctuations in the amount of precipitation are characteristic in different years. Even in the taiga, where these changes are less than in other zones, precipitation, for example, in Tomsk, falls from 339 mm in dry year up to 769 mm wet. Especially large differences are observed in the forest-steppe zone, where, with an average long-term precipitation of about 300-350 mm / year in wet years it drops to 550-600 mm / year, and dry - only 170-180 mm / year.

There are also significant zonal differences in the values ​​of evaporation, which depend on the amount of precipitation, air temperature and the evaporating properties of the underlying surface. Most of all, moisture evaporates in the rainfall-rich southern half of the forest bog zone (350-400 mm / year). In the north, in the coastal tundra, where the air humidity is relatively high in summer, the amount of evaporation does not exceed 150-200 mm / year... It is approximately the same in the south of the steppe zone (200-250 mm), which is explained by the small amount of precipitation falling in the steppes. However, the volatility here reaches 650-700 mm, therefore, in some months (especially in May) the amount of evaporated moisture can exceed the amount of precipitation by 2-3 times. In this case, the lack of atmospheric precipitation is compensated for by the moisture reserves in the soil, accumulated due to autumn rains and melting of the snow cover.

The extreme southern regions of Western Siberia are characterized by droughts, which occur mainly in May and June. They are observed on average after three to four years during periods with anticyclonic circulation and increased frequency of incursions of the Arctic air. The dry air coming from the Arctic, when passing over Western Siberia, warms up and becomes enriched with moisture, but it warms up more intensively, so the air moves further and further from the saturation state. In this regard, evaporation increases, which leads to drought. In some cases, droughts are also caused by the influx of dry and warm air masses from the south - from Kazakhstan and Central Asia.

In winter, the territory of Western Siberia is covered with snow for a long time, the duration of which in the northern regions reaches 240-270 days, and in the south - 160-170 days. Due to the fact that the period of solid precipitation lasts more than six months, and thaws begin no earlier than March, the thickness of the snow cover in the tundra and steppe zones in February is 20-40 cm, in the forest-swamp zone - from 50-60 cm in the west up to 70-100 cm in the eastern Yenisei regions. In treeless - tundra and steppe - provinces, where there are strong winds and snowstorms in winter, snow is distributed very unevenly, since the winds blow it from elevated relief elements into depressions, where powerful snowdrifts are formed.

The harsh climate of the northern regions of Western Siberia, where the heat entering the soil is not enough to maintain a positive temperature of rocks, contributes to freezing of soils and widespread permafrost. On the Yamal, Tazovsky and Gydansky peninsulas, permafrost is found everywhere. In these areas of its continuous (continuous) distribution, the thickness of the frozen layer is very significant (up to 300-600 m), and its temperatures are low (in watersheds - 4, -9 °, in the valleys -2, -8 °). To the south, within the northern taiga up to latitude of about 64 °, permafrost occurs already in the form of isolated islands, interspersed with taliks. Its thickness decreases, temperatures rise to -0.5 -1 °, and the depth of summer thawing also increases, especially in areas composed of mineral rocks.

Water

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the Nature of the World section, and also read the book by V.P. Nazarov "Song and Cry of Mother Earth", dedicated to the beauty of nature and environmental problems of Western Siberia and illustrated by the author's photographs.

Western Siberia is rich in ground and surface waters; in the north, its coast is washed by the waters of the Kara Sea.

The entire territory of the country is located within the large West Siberian artesian basin, in which hydrogeologists distinguish several basins of the second order: Tobolsk, Irtysh, Kulundinsko-Barnaul, Chulymsky, Obsky, etc. sands, sandstones) and water-resistant rocks, artesian basins are characterized by a significant number of aquifers confined to formations of various ages - Jurassic, Cretaceous, Paleogene and Quaternary. The groundwater quality of these horizons is very different. In most cases, artesian waters of deep horizons are more mineralized than those occurring closer to the surface.

In some aquifers of the Ob and Irtysh artesian basins at a depth of 1000-3000 m there are hot salty waters, most often of a chloride calcium-sodium composition. Their temperature is from 40 to 120 °, the daily flow rate of wells reaches 1-1.5 thousand. m 3, and the total reserves are 65,000 km 3; such pressurized water can be used to heat cities, greenhouses and greenhouses.

Groundwater in arid steppe and forest-steppe regions of Western Siberia is of great importance for water supply. In many areas of the Kulunda steppe, deep tubular wells were built to extract them. Ground waters of Quaternary deposits are also used; however, in the southern regions, due to climatic conditions, poor drainage of the surface and slow circulation, they are often highly saline.

The surface of the West Siberian Plain is drained by many thousands of rivers, the total length of which exceeds 250 thousand meters. km... These rivers carry about 1200 km 3 water - 5 times more than the Volga. The density of the river network is not very large and varies in different places depending on the relief and climatic features: in the Tavda basin, it reaches 350 km, and in the Barabinsk forest-steppe - only 29 km for 1000 km 2. Some southern regions of the country with a total area of ​​over 445 thousand sq. km 2 belong to the territories of closed flow and are distinguished by the abundance of closed lakes.

The main sources of food for most rivers are melted snow waters and summer-autumn rains. In accordance with the nature of power sources, the runoff is uneven by seasons: approximately 70-80% of its annual amount occurs in spring and summer. Especially a lot of water flows down during the spring flood, when the level of large rivers rises by 7-12 m(in the lower reaches of the Yenisei even up to 15-18 m). For a long time (in the south - five, and in the north - eight months), West Siberian rivers are frozen in ice. Therefore, the winter months account for no more than 10% of the annual runoff.

The rivers of Western Siberia, including the largest ones - the Ob, Irtysh and Yenisei, are characterized by slight slopes and low flow rates. So, for example, the fall of the Ob channel in the section from Novosibirsk to the mouth for 3000 km equals only 90 m, and the speed of its flow does not exceed 0.5 m / sec.

The most important waterway of Western Siberia is the river Ob with its large left tributary Irtysh. The Ob is one of the greatest rivers in the world. Its basin area is almost 3 million sq. km 2, and the length is 3676 km... The Ob basin is located within several geographic zones; in each of them the nature and density of the river network are different. So, in the south, in the forest-steppe zone, the Ob receives relatively few tributaries, but in the taiga zone, their number increases markedly.

Below the confluence of the Irtysh, the Ob turns into a powerful stream with a width of up to 3-4 km... Near the mouth of the river, in some places, the width of the river reaches 10 km, and depth - up to 40 m... This is one of the most abundant rivers in Siberia; she brings an average of 414 to the Gulf of Ob per year km 3 water.

The Ob is a typical flat river. Its channel slopes are small: the drop in the upper part is usually 8-10 cm, and below the mouth of the Irtysh does not exceed 2-3 cm by 1 km currents. During the spring and summer, the Ob runoff near Novosibirsk is 78% of the annual; near the estuary (near Salekhard), the distribution of runoff by seasons is as follows: winter - 8.4%, spring - 14.6%, summer - 56% and autumn - 21%.

Six rivers of the Ob basin (Irtysh, Chulym, Ishim, Tobol, Ket and Konda) have a length of more than 1000 km; the length of even some tributaries of the second order sometimes exceeds 500 km.

The largest of the tributaries is Irtysh whose length is 4248 km... Its origins lie outside the Soviet Union, in the mountains of the Mongolian Altai. On a significant part of its turning, the Irtysh crosses the steppes of Northern Kazakhstan and has almost no tributaries up to Omsk. Only in the lower reaches, already within the taiga, several large rivers flow into it: Ishim, Tobol, etc. The Irtysh is navigable throughout the entire length, but in the upper reaches in summer, during a period of low water level, navigation is difficult due to numerous rifts.

Along the eastern border of the West Siberian Plain flows Yenisei- the most abundant river in the Soviet Union. Its length is 4091 km(if we count the Selenga River as the source, then 5940 km); the basin area is almost 2.6 mln. km 2. Like the Ob, the Yenisei basin is stretched in the meridional direction. All its large right tributaries flow through the territory of the Central Siberian Plateau. From the flat swampy watersheds of the West Siberian Plain, only shorter and less watery left tributaries of the Yenisei begin.

The Yenisei originates in the mountains of the Tuva ASSR. In the upper and middle reaches, where the river crosses the spurs of the Sayan and the Central Siberian plateau, formed by bedrocks, rapids are found in its channel (Kazachinsky, Osinovsky, etc.). After the confluence of the Nizhnaya Tunguska, the current becomes calmer and slower, and sandy islands appear in the channel, dividing the river into channels. The Yenisei flows into the wide Yenisei Bay of the Kara Sea; its width near the mouth, located near the Brekhov Islands, reaches 20 km.

The Yenisei is characterized by large fluctuations in the costs of the seasons of the year. Its minimum winter consumption near the mouth is about 2500 m 3 / sec, the maximum during the flood period exceeds 132 thous. m 3 / sec with an average annual of about 19 800 m 3 / sec... For a year, the river brings to its mouth more than 623 km 3 water. In the lower reaches, the depth of the Yenisei is very significant (in some places 50 m)... This makes it possible for sea-going vessels to climb up the river by more than 700 km and reach Igarka.

The West Siberian Plain contains about one million lakes, the total area of ​​which is more than 100 thousand sq. km 2. According to the origin of the basins, they are divided into several groups: occupying the primary irregularities of the flat relief; thermokarst; moraine-glacial; lakes of river valleys, which, in turn, are divided into floodplain and oxbow lakes. Peculiar lakes - "fogs" - are found in the Urals part of the plain. They are located in wide valleys, overflow in spring, sharply reducing their size in summer, and by autumn, many of them disappear altogether. In the forest-steppe and steppe regions of Western Siberia, there are lakes that fill suffusion or tectonic basins.

Soils, vegetation and fauna

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the Nature of the World section, and also read the book by V.P. Nazarov "Song and Cry of Mother Earth", dedicated to the beauty of nature and environmental problems of Western Siberia and illustrated by the author's photographs.

The flat relief of Western Siberia contributes to a pronounced zoning in the distribution of soils and vegetation cover. Within the country are gradually replacing one another tundra, forest-tundra, forest-swamp, forest-steppe and steppe zones. Geographic zoning thus resembles, in general terms, the zoning system of the Russian Plain. However, the zones of the West Siberian Plain also have a number of local specific features that noticeably distinguish them from similar zones in Eastern Europe. Typical zonal landscapes are located here on dissected and better drained upland and riverine areas. In poorly drained interfluvial spaces, the flow from which is difficult, and the soils are usually highly moistened, marsh landscapes prevail in the northern provinces, and landscapes formed under the influence of saline groundwater in the south. Thus, the character and density of the relief dissection play a much greater role here than on the Russian Plain in the distribution of soils and vegetation cover, which determine significant differences in the soil moisture regime.

Therefore, in the country there are, as it were, two independent systems of latitudinal zoning: the zoning of drained areas and the zoning of undrained interfluves. These differences are most clearly manifested in the nature of the soils. So, in the drained areas of the forest bog zone, strongly podzolized soils are formed under the coniferous taiga and sod-podzolic soils under birch forests, and in the neighboring undrained areas, powerful podzols, bog and meadow-bog soils are formed. The drained areas of the forest-steppe zone are most often occupied by leached and degraded chernozems or dark gray podzolized soils under birch groves; in undrained areas, they are replaced by boggy, saline or meadow chernozem soils. On the upland areas of the steppe zone, either ordinary chernozems, characterized by increased obesity, low thickness and lingual (heterogeneity) of the soil horizons, or chestnut soils predominate; in poorly drained areas, spots of malt and solodized solonetzes or solonetzic meadow-steppe soils are common among them.

Fragment of a section of swampy taiga of the Surgut Polesye (after V. I. Orlov)

There are some other features that distinguish the zones of Western Siberia from the zones of the Russian Plain. In the tundra zone, which extends much farther north than on the Russian Plain, large areas are occupied by Arctic tundra, which are absent in the mainland regions of the European part of the Union. The woody vegetation of the forest-tundra is represented mainly by Siberian larch, and not spruce, as in the regions lying to the west of the Urals.

In the forest bog zone, 60% of the area of ​​which is occupied by bogs and weakly drained boggy forests 1, pine forests prevail, occupying 24.5% of the forested area, and birch forests (22.6%), mainly secondary. Smaller areas are covered with moist dark coniferous taiga from cedar (Pinus sibirica), fir (Abies sibirica) and ate (Picea obovata)... Broad-leaved species (with the exception of linden, which is rarely found in the southern regions) are absent in the forests of Western Siberia, and therefore there is no zone of broad-leaved forests.

1 It is for this reason that the zone is called forest swamp in Western Siberia.

The increase in the continentality of the climate causes a relatively abrupt, compared to the Russian Plain, transition from forest-bog landscapes to dry steppe spaces in the southern regions of the West Siberian Plain. Therefore, the width of the forest-steppe zone in Western Siberia is much smaller than on the Russian Plain, and of the tree species it contains mainly birch and aspen.

The West Siberian Plain is entirely part of the transitional Euro-Siberian zoogeographic subregion of the Palaearctic. There are 478 known species of vertebrates, including 80 species of mammals. The fauna of the country is young and in its composition does not differ much from the fauna of the Russian Plain. Only in the eastern half of the country there are some eastern, Zanisei forms: the Dzungarian hamster (Phodopus sungorus), chipmunk (Eutamias sibiricus) etc. In recent years, the fauna of Western Siberia has been enriched by the muskrat acclimatized here (Ondatra zibethica), a hare (Lepus europaeus), American mink (Lutreola vison), Teleut squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris exalbidus), and a carp was brought to its reservoirs (Cyprinus carpio) and bream (Abramis brama).

Natural resources

See photos of the nature of the West Siberian Plain: the Taz Peninsula and the Middle Ob in the Nature of the World section, and also read the book by V.P. Nazarov "Song and Cry of Mother Earth", dedicated to the beauty of nature and environmental problems of Western Siberia and illustrated by the author's photographs.

The natural resources of Western Siberia have long served as the basis for the development of various sectors of the economy. There are tens of millions of hectares of good arable land here. Especially of great value are the land areas of the steppe and forest of the steppe zones with their climate favorable for agriculture and highly fertile chernozems, gray forest and non-solonetsous chestnut soils, which occupy more than 10% of the country's area. Due to the flatness of the relief, the development of lands in the southern part of Western Siberia does not require large capital expenditures. For this reason, they were one of the priority areas for the development of virgin and fallow lands; in recent years, more than 15 mln. ha new lands, increased production of grain and industrial crops (sugar beet, sunflower, etc.). The lands located to the north, even in the southern taiga zone, are still underutilized and are a good reserve for development in the coming years. However, this will require significantly higher expenditures of labor and funds for drainage, stubbing and clearing of land from shrubs.

Of high economic value are the pastures of the forest-swamp, forest-steppe and steppe zones, especially flooded meadows along the shares of the Ob, Irtysh, Yenisei and their large tributaries. The abundance of natural meadows here creates a solid base for the further development of animal husbandry and a significant increase in its productivity. Of great importance for the development of reindeer husbandry are reindeer reindeer pastures of the tundra and forest-tundra, which occupy more than 20 million cubic meters in Western Siberia. ha; more than half a million domesticated deer graze on them.

A significant part of the plain is occupied by forests - birch, pine, cedar, fir, spruce and larch. The total forested area in Western Siberia exceeds 80 mln. ha; timber stock of about 10 billion m 3, and its annual growth is over 10 million. m 3. The most valuable forests are located here, which provide timber for various sectors of the national economy. Forests are most widely used at present along the Ob valleys, the lower reaches of the Irtysh and some of their navigable or floating tributaries. But many forests, including especially valuable tracts of kondovaya pine, located between the Urals and the Ob, are still poorly developed.

Dozens of large rivers of Western Siberia and hundreds of their tributaries serve as important shipping routes connecting the southern regions with the extreme north. The total length of navigable rivers exceeds 25 thousand. km... The length of the rivers along which timber is rafting is approximately the same. The country's deep rivers (Yenisei, Ob, Irtysh, Tom, etc.) have large energy resources; when fully utilized, they could provide more than $ 200 billion. kWh electricity per year. The first large Novosibirsk hydroelectric power station on the Ob River with a capacity of 400 thous. kw entered service in 1959; above it, a reservoir with an area of ​​1070 km 2. In the future, it is planned to build a hydroelectric power station on the Yenisei (Osinovskaya, Igarskaya), in the upper reaches of the Ob (Kamenskaya, Baturinskaya), on Tom (Tomskaya).

The waters of the large West Siberian rivers can also be used for irrigation and watering of the semi-desert and desert regions of Kazakhstan and Central Asia, which are already experiencing a significant shortage of water resources. Currently, design organizations are developing the main provisions and a feasibility study for the transfer of a part of the Siberian rivers' runoff to the Aral Sea basin. According to preliminary studies, the implementation of the first stage of this project should provide an annual transfer of 25 km 3 waters from Western Siberia to Central Asia. To this end, it is planned to create a large reservoir on the Irtysh, near Tobolsk. From it to the south along the Tobol valley and along the Turgai depression into the Syrdarya basin to the reservoirs created there, the Ob-Caspian canal with a length of more than 1500 km... The rise of water to the Tobol-Aral watershed is supposed to be carried out by a system of powerful pumping stations.

At the next stages of the project, the volume of water transferred annually can be increased to 60-80 km 3. Since the waters of the Irtysh and Tobol will no longer be enough for this, the work of the second stage provides for the construction of dams and reservoirs on the upper Ob, and possibly on the Chulym and Yenisei.

Naturally, the withdrawal of tens of cubic kilometers of water from the Ob and Irtysh should affect the regime of these rivers in their middle and lower reaches, as well as changes in the landscapes of the territories adjacent to the projected reservoirs and transfer channels. Predicting the nature of these changes now occupies a prominent place in the scientific research of Siberian geographers.

Quite recently, many geologists, based on the notion of the uniformity of the thick unconsolidated sediments that compose the plain and the seeming simplicity of its tectonic structure, very carefully evaluated the possibility of discovering any valuable minerals in its depths. However, the geological and geophysical studies carried out in recent decades, accompanied by the drilling of deep wells, have shown the erroneousness of the previous ideas about the country's poverty in mineral resources and allowed a completely new view of the prospects for the use of its mineral resources.

As a result of these studies, more than 120 oil fields have already been discovered in the strata of the Mesozoic (mainly Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous) deposits of the central regions of Western Siberia. The main oil-bearing areas are located in the Middle Ob region - in Nizhnevartovskoye (including the Samotlor field, which can produce oil up to 100-120 mln. t / year), Surgut (Ust-Balykskoye, West Surgutskoye, etc.) and Yuzhno-Balyksky (Mamontovskoye, Pravdinskoye, etc.) regions. In addition, there are deposits in the Shaim region, in the Ural part of the plain.

In recent years, in the north of Western Siberia - in the lower reaches of the Ob, Taz and Yamal - the largest natural gas fields have also been discovered. Potential reserves of some of them (Urengoysky, Medvezhy, Zapolyarny) amount to several trillion cubic meters; gas production at each can reach 75-100 billion. m 3 per year. In general, the forecasted gas reserves in the bowels of Western Siberia are estimated at 40-50 trillion. m 3, including in categories A + B + C 1 - more than 10 trillion. m 3 .

Oil and gas fields in Western Siberia

The discovery of both oil and gas fields is of great importance for the development of the economy of Western Siberia and neighboring economic regions. Tyumen and Tomsk regions are turning into important regions of the oil-producing, oil-refining and chemical industries. Already in 1975 more than 145 mln. T oil and tens of billions of cubic meters of gas. To deliver oil to the regions of consumption and processing, the Ust-Balyk - Omsk oil pipelines were built (965 km), Shaim - Tyumen (436 km), Samotlor - Ust-Balyk - Kurgan - Ufa - Almetyevsk, through which oil got access to the European part of the USSR - to the places of its greatest consumption. For the same purpose, the Tyumen-Surgut railway and gas pipelines were built, along which natural gas from West Siberian fields goes to the Urals, as well as to the central and northwestern regions of the European part of the Soviet Union. In the last five-year period, the construction of the giant Siberia-Moscow super gas pipeline was completed (its length is more than 3000 km), through which gas from the Medvezhye field is supplied to Moscow. In the future, gas from Western Siberia will go through pipelines to the countries of Western Europe.

Deposits of brown coal, confined to the Mesozoic and Neogene deposits of the marginal regions of the plain (Severo-Sosvinsky, Yenisei-Chulymsky and Ob-Irtysh basins), have also become known. Western Siberia also possesses colossal peat reserves. In its peat bogs, the total area of ​​which exceeds 36.5 mln. ha, concluded a little less than 90 billion. T air-dry peat. This is almost 60% of all peat resources in the USSR.

Geological studies have led to the discovery of deposits and other minerals. In the southeast, in the Upper Cretaceous and Paleogene sandstones of the environs of Kolpashev and Bakchar, large deposits of oolitic iron ores have been discovered. They lie relatively shallow (150-400 m), the iron content in them is up to 36-45%, and the predicted geological reserves of the West Siberian iron ore basin are estimated at 300-350 billion. T, including in one Bakcharskoye field - 40 billion. T... Numerous salt lakes in the south of Western Siberia contain hundreds of millions of tons of table salt and Glauber's salt, as well as tens of millions of tons of soda. In addition, Western Siberia has huge reserves of raw materials for the production of building materials (sand, clay, marls); along its western and southern outskirts, there are deposits of limestone, granite, diabase.

Western Siberia is one of the most important economic and geographical regions of the USSR. About 14 million people live on its territory (the average population density is 5 people per 1 km 2) (1976). In the cities and workers' settlements there are machine-building, oil refining and chemical plants, enterprises of the timber, light and food industries. Various branches of agriculture are of great importance in the economy of Western Siberia. It produces about 20% of the marketable grain of the USSR, a significant amount of various industrial crops, a lot of oil, meat and wool.

The decisions of the 25th Congress of the CPSU outlined a further gigantic growth of the economy of Western Siberia and a significant increase in its importance in the economy of our country. In the coming years, within its limits, it is planned to create new energy bases based on the use of deposits of cheap coal and hydropower resources of the Yenisei and Ob, to develop the oil and gas industry, to create new centers of mechanical engineering and chemistry.

The main directions of development of the national economy plan to continue the formation of the West Siberian territorial-production complex, to turn Western Siberia into the main base of the USSR for oil and gas production. In 1980, 300-310 mln. T oil and up to 125-155 bln. m 3 natural gas (about 30% of gas production in our country).

It is planned to continue the construction of the Tomsk petrochemical complex, to commission the first stage of the Achinsk oil refinery, to launch the construction of the Tobolsk petrochemical complex, to build oil gas processing plants, a system of powerful pipelines for transporting oil and gas from the northwestern regions of Western Siberia to the European part of the USSR and to oil refineries in the eastern regions of the country, as well as the Surgut-Nizhnevartovsk railway and begin construction of the Surgut-Urengoy railway. The tasks of the five-year plan envisage accelerating the exploration of oil, natural gas and condensate deposits in the Middle Ob region and in the north of the Tyumen region. Logging, grain and livestock production will also increase significantly. In the southern regions of the country, it is planned to carry out a number of large reclamation measures - to irrigate and water large tracts of lands in Kulunda and Irtysh, to begin construction of the second stage of the Aleisk system and the Charysh group water pipeline, to build drainage systems in Baraba.

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See also " Dictionary of Physical Geography", which has the following sections:

The West Siberian Plain is one of the largest flat areas in the world, covering approximately 80% of Western Siberia.

Features of nature

The total area of ​​the West Siberian Plain is surpassed only by the Amazonian. The plain stretches from the coast of the Kara Sea to the south to the north of Kazakhstan. The total area of ​​the West Siberian Plain becomes about 3 million. km 2. It is dominated by broad gently-stepped and flat interfluves, which are separated by terraced valleys.

The amplitudes of the heights of the plain on average fluctuate between 20 and 200 m above sea level, but even the highest points reach 250 m. Moraine hills in the north of the plain are combined with young alluvial and sea (river) plains, in the south - with lacustrine ones.

On the lands of the West Siberian Plain, a continental climate prevails, the level of precipitation is different here: in the tundra and steppe regions - about 200 mm per year, in the taiga area it increases to 700 mm. General average temperatures are - - 16 ° C in winter, + 15 ° C in summer.

Large deep rivers flow on the territory of the plain, in particular, the Yenisei, Taz, Irtysh and Ob. There are also very large lakes (Ubinskoye, Chany), and many smaller ones, some of them are salty. Some regions of the West Siberian Plain are characterized by wetlands. The center of the northern part is continuous permafrost. In the extreme south of the plain, salt marshes and solonetzes are widespread. The western - northern territory in all respects corresponds to the temperate zone - forest-steppe, steppe, taiga, deciduous forests.

Flora of the West Siberian Plain

The flat relief significantly contributes to the zoning in the distribution of the vegetation cover. The zoning of this territory has significant differences in comparison with similar zones in Eastern Europe. Due to the difficulties in the flow, in the north of the plains, in the wetlands, mainly lichens, mosses and shrubs grow. Southern landscapes are formed under the influence of groundwater with an increased salinity level.

About 30% of the area of ​​the plain is occupied by massifs of conifers, many of which are swampy. Smaller areas are covered with dark coniferous taiga - spruce, fir and cedar. Broad-leaved wood species are rarely found in the southern regions. In the southern part, there are very widespread birch forests, many of which are secondary.

Fauna of the West Siberian Plain

More than 450 species of vertebrates live in the vastness of the West Siberian Plain, of which 80 species belong to mammals. Many species are protected by law, as they belong to the category of rare and endangered species. Recently, the fauna of the plain has been significantly enriched by acclimatized species - muskrat, European hare, Teleut squirrel, American mink.

The reservoirs are inhabited mainly by carp and bream. In the eastern part of the West Siberian Plain, there are some eastern species: chipmunk, Dzungarian hamster, etc. In most cases, the fauna of this territory is not much different from the fauna of the Russian Plain.

There are two great plains in Eurasia. The one in the east stretches from the mountains of Southern Siberia to the eternal ice of the Kara Sea, from the Yenisei to the Urals. The boundless and incredible wealth of nature is she, the West Siberian Plain.

Borders and area

Western Siberia is an incredibly huge territory. From the Arctic Ocean, it stretches for 2.5 thousand kilometers to the steppes of Kazakhstan, from the Urals and to the Yenisei it stretches for 1.5 thousand kilometers. Almost 80% of all Siberia is located on a plain consisting of two flat, bowl-shaped depressions and full of wetlands. These depressions are separated from each other by the Siberian Uval, raised to 175-200 meters. In the southeast, the height of the West Siberian Plain is gradually increasing, the foothills of the Salair, Gornaya Shoria, Altai and Kuznetsk Alatau appear. The area of ​​this great plain is over 2.4 million square kilometers.

Geological development

The western part of the Siberian Plain was formed in the Precambrian. Evolving gradually during the Paleozoic, folded structures were formed along the edges of the platform. Docking with other parts of the mainland, they formed a single area. However, such a "patchwork" origin gives reason to interpret the nature of the slab in two ways. Quite often, given the facts, it is called heterogeneous, but at the same time, bearing in mind that most of the plain was formed in the Paleozoic, it is considered Epipaleozoic. And right there, bearing in mind the main role of the Hercynian folding, the slab is called epi-Hercynian.

Simultaneously with the formation of the basement, from the Paleozoic to the Early Jurassic, a cover of the future plain was created. The cover formation was completed by the Meso-Cenozoic. This not only blocked the border zones of the folded structures, but, thus, significantly increased the territory of the plate.

Geographic zoning

The West Siberian Plain includes five zones: tundra, forest-tundra, steppe, forest-steppe and forest. In addition, it includes mountainous and low-mountain areas. Probably, in no other place it is impossible to trace such a correct manifestation of zonal natural phenomena as here.

Tundra occupies the north of the Tyumen region, which occupied Yamal and the Gydan Peninsula. Its area is 160 thousand square kilometers. The tundra is completely covered with moss and lichen, interspersed with hypnum-herbaceous, lichen-sphagnum and large hillocky marsh landscape.

Forest tundra runs from the tundra to the south in an almost flat strip of 100-150 kilometers. As a kind of transitional area from tundra to taiga, it looks like a mosaic of swamps, bushes and woodlands. In the north of the zone, crooked larch trees grow, located in the river valleys.

Forest zone occupies a strip of about a thousand kilometers. The north and middle of Tyumen, the Tomsk region, the north of the Novosibirsk and Omsk regions fit into this strip. The forest is subdivided into northern, southern and middle taiga and birch-aspen forests. Most of it is wood with dark needles - Siberian fir, spruce and cedar.

Forest-steppe located next to deciduous forests. The main representatives of the zone are meadows, swamps, salt marshes and small areas of forests. The forest-steppe is rich in birch and aspen.

Steppe covered the south of the Omsk region, the west of Altai and the south-west of the Novosibirsk region. The zone is represented by striped pine forests.

The rather significant height of the West Siberian Plain in the mountainous area makes it possible to develop altitudinal zonation. The main place is given to forests. In addition, there is a black taiga characteristic of the mountains of Siberia. In the middle of this taiga is the "linden island" - a forest area of ​​150 square kilometers. Most scientists regard this site as tertiary vegetation.

Geology and orography

In places where the West Siberian Plain is located, the West Siberian Plate is considered the basis. This plate is based on the Paleozoic basement, which is currently located at a depth of about 7 kilometers. The most ancient rocks come to the surface only in mountainous areas and are hidden in other places by sedimentary rocks. The West Siberian Plain is a fairly young plunging platform. The magnitude and rate of subsidence of different areas vary greatly, therefore the thickness of the cover of loose sediments is also very diverse.

The nature, amount and size of icing in antiquity are still not clearly understood. Still, it is generally accepted that glaciers occupied the entire part of the plain north of 60 degrees. It is the small number of glaciers that explains the fact that their melting did not leave large moraine accumulations.

Natural resources

Since the cover of the plate is formed by sedimentary rocks, there is no need to expect a large amount of fossils here. There are only exogenous deposits - the so-called sedimentary fossils. Among them you can see oil in the south of the plain, gas in the north, coal, peat, iron ore, and evaporites.

Climate

The West Siberian Plain, the geographical position of which gives it such an opportunity, has very interesting climatic characteristics. The fact is that the plain is located almost at the same distance both from the Atlantic and from the center of continental Eurasia. In most of the plain, the climate is temperate continental. Due to its northern openness, Western Siberia receives a large number of arctic masses, bringing cold in winter and not allowing the full manifestation of summer. Thus, the January temperature from south to north ranges from -15 to -30 degrees, while the July temperature ranges from +5 to +20. The greatest temperature difference - 45 degrees - is observed in the north-east of Siberia.

Causes of the severity of the climate

Such a rather harsh climate has formed for several reasons.

The West Siberian Plain is located mostly in temperate latitudes, which causes a rather small amount of solar radiation that enters the territory.

The considerable distance from the Pacific and Atlantic oceans made it possible to develop a continental climate.

The flat relief of the West Siberian Plain allows large amounts of Arctic air to travel further south than in other regions, while allowing warm currents from Central Asia and Kazakhstan to flow deep into the north.

Mountains that fenced off the plain from the west from the Atlantic air currents and from the southeast from Central Asia.

Relief

The West Siberian Plain has long been considered an "exemplary" low-lying plain. The reason for this is the fact that almost over the entire surface its absolute height is below 200 meters. Above this there are only small areas. For a long time on the maps, the entire plain was painted in a uniform color, not taking into account these small elevations. However, upon closer examination, it became clear that orography is not so simple. Plains with a height of more than 100 meters stand out very clearly.

Biodiversity

The West Siberian Plain is located in such climatic conditions that contribute to the formation of too little diversity for such large territories. The poor choice of higher plants is especially noticeable. On average, the flora in this region is almost 1.5 times poorer than in neighboring regions. This difference is especially noticeable in the taiga and tundra zones. The nature of Western Siberia is the most diverse for the region.

The reason for such a limited flora is the same glaciation, which turned out to be devastating for the region. In addition, mountain refigiums that could feed the migratory flow are at a sufficient distance.

Animal world

Despite the considerable length of the West Siberian Plain, the fauna here also cannot boast of a variety. The only exception can be considered only Western Siberia, on the territory of which a fairly large number of different animals live. For example, mammals in this area have been identified over 80 species from four main orders. Of this set, 13 species are common with Eastern Siberia, 16 with the European part of Russia, 51 common for the entire territory of Eurasia. There are no unique animals that would live only where the West Siberian Plain is located.

Inland waters

The rivers The West Siberian Plains mainly belong to the Kara Sea basin. All of them mostly feed on melting snow, thus referring to the West Siberian type of intra-annual runoff. High water in this type is more extended in time, but at the same time the water consumption in this period is practically indistinguishable from the rest of the time. The reason for this is the natural regulation of the flow. Accordingly, the runoff in the summer is replenished by the waters of floodplains and bogs, in which the flood water was "saved". In the winter period, only the groundwater saturation method remains, which almost catastrophically reduces the oxygen content in the water. For this reason, fish living in rivers are forced to accumulate in pools, which is why they are almost constantly half asleep.

The groundwater regions are included in the West Siberian hydrogeological basin. The characteristics of these waters are fully consistent with the zonal distribution. Considering the direction of the West Siberian Plain, it becomes clear that most of these waters are located almost on the surface, while remaining very cold. However, moving to the south, it becomes clear that the depth of the waters, and their temperature, and saturation with minerals, also increase. The water in the south is saturated with calcium, sulfate, and chlorides. In the very south, there are so many of these compounds in the water that its taste becomes salty and bitter.

Swamps with the existing low-lying relief, they are one of the dominant components of the water masses of the plain. Their area and degree of waterlogging are very large. Some researchers believe that the marshes of the region are aggressive, not only remaining in their original form, but also gradually expanding, capturing new territories. This process is currently irreversible.

Administrative division

The West Siberian Plain, the geographical position of which assumes a rather varied administrative use, accommodates many regions and territories. So, these are Tomsk, Novosibirsk, Tyumen, Omsk, Kemerovo regions. Partially this also includes the Sverdlovsk, Kurgan and Chelyabinsk regions. In addition, parts of the Krasnoyarsk and Altai Territories are located on the plain. The largest city is Novosibirsk, it has about 1.5 million inhabitants. The city is located on the Ob River.

Economic use

On the territory of Western Siberia, the most developed industries are mining and timber industries. Today this territory supplies over 70% of all oil and natural gas produced in our country. Coal - more than 30% of the all-Russian production. And about 20% of the timber that our country harvests.

A huge oil and gas production complex operates in Western Siberia today. The largest deposits of natural gas and oil are found in the sedimentary rocks. The area of ​​land rich in these minerals is more than two million square kilometers. Until the 60s, the landscapes of Siberia were almost not affected by industry, but now they are dotted with pipelines, power lines, drilling sites, roads, spoiled by oil spills, killed by burning, blackened with soaked forests, which arose as a result of the use of outdated technologies in transportation and production fossils.

Do not forget that this region, like no other, is rich in rivers, swamps and lakes. This increases the rate of spread of chemical pollutants that enter the Ob from small sources. Then the river carries them out to sea, bringing death and destroying entire ecosystems, even far from the mining complex.

In addition, the plains of the Kuznetsk mountain region are rich in coal deposits. Production in this region accounts for about 40% of all coal reserves in our country. The largest coal mining centers are Prokopyevsk and Leninsk-Kuznetsky.

Thus, the West Siberian Plain is not only a refuge for many species of plants and animals, but also plays a huge role in the economic and industrial life of our country. Without huge reserves of natural resources, which are the source of production of products necessary for human life, people would simply not be able to live in such a harsh and not too suitable for life climate.


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