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Zeravshan

 
 
Zeravshan (zyĕrəfshän'), river, c.460 mi (740 km) long, rising in the Turkistan Range of the Pamir-Alai mountain system, in Tajikistan. It flows westward through the agricultural Zeravshan valley, then into Uzbekistan, past Samarkand and Bukhara, and disappears in the desert near the Amu Darya, N of Chärjew. The valley, irrigated by the Katta-Kurgan reservoir, is one of the chief oases of Central Asia and is on the site of the ancient Sogdiana. The Zeravshan Mountains, forming the southern watershed of the river, rise to c.18,480 ft (5,630 m). The range has coal and ore deposits.


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Zeravshan River in Ayni District, Tajikistan.
Location of Zeravshan River in Central Asia.

Zeravshan River (also Zarafshan or Zarafshon, Tajik: Дарёи Зарафшон, Uzbek: Zarafshon, from the Persian word زر افشان, zar afshān, meaning "the sprayer of gold") is a river in Central Asia. Its name, "sprayer of gold" in Persian, refers to the presence of gold-bearing sands in the upper reaches of the river. To the ancient Greeks it was known as the 'Polytimetus'. It was also formerly known as Sughd River.

It rises at 39°30′N 70°35′E / 39.5°N 70.583°E / 39.5; 70.583 on the fringes of the Pamirs in Tajikistan, flowing due west for some 300 km, passing Penjikent before entering Uzbekistan at 39°32′N 67°27′E / 39.533°N 67.45°E / 39.533; 67.45, where it turns west-to-north-west, flowing past the legendary city of Samarkand, which is entirely dependent on the oasis thus created, until it bends left again to the west north of Navoiy and further to the south-west, passing Bukhara before it loses itself in the desert beyond the city of Karakul (Qorako‘l), not quite reaching the Amu Darya, of which it was formerly a tributary.

See also


References

Further reading

  • В.В. Бартольд "К Истории Орошения в Туркестане" (Collected Works, Vol.3) (Москва) 1965
  • V.V. Barthold "Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion" (London) 1968
  • Robert Lewis "Early Irrigation in West Turkestan" Annals of the Association of American Geographers Vol.56 №.3 (Sept. 1966) pp467-491
  • Edgar Knobloch "Beyond the Oxus" (London) 1972

 
 
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Zeravshan
Turkestan (Russian history)
Bukhara (city, Uzbekistan)

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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
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