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Sea of Azov

 
Dictionary: A·zov   (ăz'ôf, ā'zôf, ə-zôf') pronunciation, Sea of


The northern arm of the Black Sea between southwest Russia and southeast Ukraine. The shallow sea has important fisheries.

 

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Inland sea in Europe between Ukraine and Russia. It is connected to the Black Sea by Kerch Strait. About 210 mi (340 km) long and 85 mi (135 km) wide, it occupies an area of 14,500 sq mi (37,600 sq km). With a maximum depth of only about 46 ft (14 m), it is the world's shallowest sea. It is fed by the Don and Kuban rivers, and at their entrance in the Taganrog Gulf, its depth is 3 ft (1 m) or less. In the west lies the Arabat Spit, a 70-mi- (113 – km-) long sandbar that separates the Sea of Azov from the Syvash, a system of marshy inlets dividing the Crimean Peninsula from the Ukrainian mainland.

For more information on Sea of Azov, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Sea of Azov
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Azov, Sea of, Gr. Maiotis, Lat. Palus Maeotis, ancient Rus. Surozhskoye, northern arm of the Black Sea, c.14,000 sq mi (36,300 sq km), shared by S European Russia and E Ukraine. The shallow sea (maximum depth 45 ft/13 m) is connected with the Black Sea by the Kerch Strait. Its chief arms are the Gulf of Taganrog (in the northeast) and the Sivash Sea (in the west), which is nearly isolated from the Sea of Azov by Arabat Tongue, a narrow sandspit. The Don and Kuban rivers flow into the sea, supplying it with an abundance of freshwater but also depositing the silt that tends to make the sea more shallow. The Sea of Azov has important fisheries and accounts for a large portion of the freshwater catch of Russia and Ukraine. The major ports are Rostov-na-Donu, Taganrog, Zhdanov, Kerch, and Berdyansk. The sea's importance increased with the opening of the Volga-Don Canal; the Manych Canal connects the Sea of Azov with the Caspian Sea.


WordNet: Sea of Azov
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a bay of the Black Sea
  Synonym: Sea of Azof


Wikipedia: Sea of Azov
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Sea of Azov
Sea of Azov - The shallow Sea of Azov is clearly distinguished from the deeper Black Sea.
The shallow Sea of Azov is clearly distinguished from the deeper Black Sea.
Black Sea map.png
Coordinates 46°N 37°E / 46°N 37°E / 46; 37Coordinates: 46°N 37°E / 46°N 37°E / 46; 37
Primary sources Don and Kuban
Max length 340 km (210 mi)
Max width 135 km (84 mi)
Surface area 37,555 km2 (14,500 sq mi)
Average depth 13 m (43 ft)
Max depth 15.3 m (50 ft)
The Sea of Azov near the Eysk Spit.

The Sea of Azov (Russian: Азо́вское мо́ре - Azovskoye more; Ukrainian: Озівськe or Азо́вське мо́ре - Ozivs'ke or Azovs'ke more, Crimean Tatar: Azaq deñizi) is the world's shallowest sea, linked by the Strait of Kerch to the Black Sea to the south. It is bounded on the north by Ukraine, on the east by Russia and on the west by the Crimean peninsula. The Don River flows into it.

Contents

Geology and bathymetry

The sea is 340 kilometres (210 mi) long and 135 kilometres (84 mi) wide and has an area of 37,555 square kilometres (14,500 sq mi). The main rivers flowing into it are the Don and Kuban; they ensure that the waters of the sea have comparatively low salinity and are almost fresh in places, and also bring in huge volumes of silt. To the west also lie the 110 kilometres (68 mi) long Arabat Spit and the highly saline marshy inlets of the Sivash.

The Sea of Azov is the shallowest sea in the world with an average depth of 13 metres (43 ft) and maximum depth of 15.3 metres (50 ft); where silt has built up, such as the Gulf of Taganrog, the average depth is less than 1 metre (3 ft). The prevailing current in the sea is a counter-clockwise swirl. Salinity varies from 1 to 15 parts per thousand (compared to 30 to 40 for the oceans) across the sea and with season.[1]

The shallowness and low salinity of the sea make it vulnerable to freezing during winter. Formation of sea ice can occur temporarily at any time from late December to mid-March. Under the present climate, the sea no longer freezes over, although during the 18th and 19th centuries and as far as the late 1970s, it was normally frozen over every year by early February. [2]

The current name is popularly said to come from a Polovtsian prince named Azum or Asuf, who was killed defending a town in this region in 1067.

Hydrology and hydrochemistry

The current vertical profile of the Sea of Azov exhibits oxygenated surface waters and anoxic bottom waters, with the anoxic waters forming in a layer 0.5 to 4 metres (1.6–13 ft) in thickness. The occurrence of the anoxic layer is attributed to seasonal eutrophication events associated with increased sedimantary input from the Don and Kuban Rivers. This sedimentary input stimulates biotic activity in the surfaces layers, which photosynthesize under aerobic conditions. Once expired, the dead organic matter sinks to the bottom of the sea where bacteria and microorganisms, using all available oxygen, consume the organic matter, leading to anoxic conditions. Studies have shown that in the Sea of Azov, the exact vertical structure is dependent on wind strength and sea surface temperature, but typically a 'stagnation zone' lies between the oxic and anoxic layers[3].

Great Cormorants on the Belosarayskaya Spit.

Fauna

Historically, the sea has had a rich variety of marine life, with over 80 fish and 300 invertebrate species identified. But diversity and numbers have been reduced by over-fishing and water-intense large-scale cultivation of cotton, causing increasing levels of pollution.[4] [5]

History

The Kerch peninsula

The Black Sea deluge theory dates the genesis of the Sea of Azov to 5600 BC, and there are traces of Neolithic settlement in the area now covered by it. In antiquity, it was known as Lake Mæotis[6][7], the Maeotian Lake or the Maeotian Sea (Greek ἡ Μαιῶτις λίμνη and Latin Palus Maeotis), after the tribe of Maeotae which inhabited the Maeotian marshes to the east from the sea.

Deluge theory

In 1997, William Ryan and Walter Pitman from Columbia University published a theory that a massive flood through the Bosporus occurred in ancient times. They claim that the Black and Caspian Seas were vast freshwater lakes, but then about 5600 BC, the Mediterranean spilled over a rocky sill at the Bosporus, creating the current communication between the Black and Mediterranean Seas. Subsequent work has been done both to support and to discredit this theory, and archaeologists still debate it. This has led some to associate this catastrophe with prehistoric flood myths.

Crimean War 1854-56

A naval campaign between the Allied navies of Britain and France against Russia took place in the Sea of Azov between May and November 1855. The British awarded a bar, 'Azoff', to the British Crimean War medal to commemorate the campaign.

References

  1. ^ "Climatological Atlas of the Sea of Azov". National Oceanographic Data Centre. http://www.nodc.noaa.gov/OC5/AZOV2006/HTML/s_climatology.html. Retrieved 2008-01-06. 
  2. ^ Sea ice survey - annual, University of Wisconsin Space Science and Engineering Centre
  3. ^ Debolskaya, E. I., E. V. Yakushev, et al. (2008). "Analysis of the hydrophysical structure of the Sea of Azov in the period of the bottom anoxia development." Journal of Marine Systems 70(3-4): 300-307.
  4. ^ Alien invaders in our seas Jessica Lindström Battle, WWF,Gland, SwSwitzerland, 02-14-2004. Accessed: 04-24-2008]
  5. ^ Reisner, Mark, "Cadillac Desert," Penguin 1987
  6. ^ Lordkipanidze, Otar (2000) Phasis: The River and City in Colchis Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart, p. 25, ISBN 3-515-07271-3
  7. ^ Vasiliev, Alexander Alexandrovich (1936) The Goths in the Crimea Mediaeval Academy of America, Cambridge, Mass., p.17, OCLC 1043381

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Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sea of Azov" Read more

 

Mentioned in

  • Kuban (river of southwest Russia)
  • Taman (peninsula of southwest Russia projecting westward)
  • Donets Basin (industrial region of eastern Ukraine)
  • Mariupol' (city of southeast Ukraine on the Sea of Azov)