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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TUM-VAN |
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TURGAI , a province of Russian Central Asia, formerly a part of the Kirghiz steppe, and now included in the governor -generalship of the Steppes, bounded by the province of Uralsk and the governments of Orenburg and Tobolsk on the W. and N., by Akmolinsk on the E., and by Syr-darya and the Sea of Aral on the S. This territory, which has an area of 176,219 sq. m.nearly as large as that of Caucasia and Transcaucasia taken togetherbelongs to the Aral-Caspian depression. It has, however, the Mugojar Hills on its western border and includes a part of the southern Urals; and from Akmolinsk it is separated by a range of hills which run between the two largest rivers of the Kirghiz steppethe Turgai and the Sary-su. In the north it includes the low belt of undulating land which stretches north-east
The Mugojar Hills consist of an undulating plateau
plateau
recent
The climate of Turgai is exceedingly dry and continental. Orsk, a town of Orenburg, on its north-western border, has a January as cold as that of the west coast of Novaya Zemlya (4 F.), while in July it is as hot as July in Morocco (73 ) ; the corresponding figures for Irgiz, in the centre of the province, are 7 and 77 At Irgiz and Orsk the annual rainfall is somewhat under to in. and 12 in. respectively (3 in. in summer). The west winds are parched before they reach the Turgai steppes, and the north- east
spring the grass vegetation is luxuriant, and geese and cranes are attracted in vast numbers from the heart of the steppe by the fields of the Kirghiz. The. jerboa (Dipus jaculus) and the marmot (Spermophilus rufescens) are characteristic of the fauna; another species of marmot (Arctomys bobac) and the steppe fox (Canis corsac) are common; and the saiga antelope of Central Asia is occasionally met with. Farther south the black earth disappears and with it the feather grass, its place being taken by its congener, Stipa c illata. Trees disappear, and among the bushes along the banks of the rivers willows and the pseudo-acacia or Siberian pea tree (Caragana micro phyla) are most prevalent. In the middle parts of the province the clayey soil is completely clothed with wormwood (A rtemisia fragrans and A. monogyna), with a few grassy plants on the banks of the rivers and lakes (Lasiagrostis splendens, Alhagi camelorum and A. kirghizorum, (Alone portulacoides, Halimodendrum argenteum) ; while large areas consist of shifting sands, saline clays clothed with various Salsolaceae, and the desiccated beds of old lakes. Such lakes as still exist,'' See P. S. Nazarov, in " Recherches zoologiques dens les steppes des Kirghizes," in Bull . sot. des natur, de Moscow (1886), No. 4.notwithstanding the rapid desiccation now going on, are surrounded by thickets of reedsthe retreat of wild boars. Turgai is thus the borderland between the flora of Europe and that of Central Asia.The population was estimated in 1906 at 511,800, composed mainly of Kirghiz, though Russians have immigrated in large numbers. The province is divided into four districts, the chief
capital ; Ak-tyubinsk in the district
district
The principal crops are rye, wheat, oats, barley and potatoes. Livestock breeding is the leading occupation of the Kirghiz. Camels are bred and kept by the nomads both for their own personal use and for the transport of goods between Bokhara, Khiva and Russian Turkestan. Considerable quantities of cattle and various animal products are exported to Orenburg, Orsk and Troitsk, and to Ust-Uisk and Zverinogolovsk, where large fairs are held. The Kirghiz of the southern parts migrate in winter to the better sheltered parts of the province of Syr-darya, while in the summer some 30,000 kibitkas (felt tents) of nomads come from the neighbouring provinces to graze their cattle on the grassy steppes of Turgai. Salt is obtained from the lakes. There are a few oil-works, tanneries and flour-mills, and the Kirghiz are active in the making of carpets and felt goods. Education is a little more advanced than in the other steppe provinces; the system of " migratory schools " has been introduced for the Kirghiz. See Y. Talferov, The Turgai Province (1896), in Russian. (P. A. K.; J. T. BE.) End of Article: TURGAI If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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