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Scientific Results of a Journey in Central Asia, 1899-1902 : vol.2 |
BASCH-TOGHRAK. |
14 THE KURUK-TAGH AND THE KURUK-DARJA.
of the water-supply, has died out. The fact of there being no forest beside watercourse No. 3 may be explained either by its being so old that its forest has been destroyed, or — and this is the more likely explanation — the river flowed that way for such a short period that the forest had no opportunity to
establish itself.
To the north of this third watercourse stretches a tract of barren schor, hard and bare, with patches of thin sand at intervals. The only vegetation that was to be discovered there consisted of a few dead toghraks, white and silvery, and the gnarled and brittle trunks of tamarisks, which in other places have entirely disappeared since they have been deprived of water. Then came a few sporadic köuruk bushes (a species of tamarisk), some with, others without, the usual mounds. These were especially numerous and luxuriant in the dry bed of a sil. * It is very seldom however that the rain-water comes down this way; when it does, it forms a transient lake south-east of the spot where we crossed it, but it never gets down to the river.
Fig. I I . BASCH-TOGHRAK.
After a region of alternating tamarisk steppe and schor, we crossed a pretty broad depression, in which was some living, though scanty, kamisch. According to my guides, this again was an old bed of the Kontsche-darja; but it was so ill-defined that I was unable to form any opinion with regard to it. Generally the natives consider that the Kum-darja has its origin at Saj-tscheke. In fact on the left side of the Kontsche there are so many old river-beds, that it is not easy to determine which is immediately connected with the Kum-darja, unless one follows up the old
* Sil = »overflow e. temporary, occasioned by a violent shower in the mountains.
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