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0077 Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.2
Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.2 / Page 77 (Color Image)

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doi: 10.20676/00000178
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ward over the Hunger Steppe and Fergana plains, i. e., widening in proportion
to the height of mountains drained. This alluvial zone, furthermore, extends
into the great Sand, where it is penetrated by the rivers Tedjen, Murg-ab, and
Zerafshan, and where it is divided by the rivers Syr and Amu crossing to the Aral
Sea. Now, it is a fact of significance that all five of these large rivers, as well as
many smaller ones that still reach, or have recently reached, well out onto the
plains, have cut channels from 10 to 100 feet or more in depth to where they
debouch over deltas. It is, moreover, characteristic of these channels that they
vary in depth in such a way as to indicate a varied warping of the plains. And
though most of them are still occupied by streams, there are many instances of
channels now always dry, but so recently abandoned by the streams now ending
many miles above in a shrunken condition that ground-water still survives, obtain-
able in shallow wells of the nomads. On our large-scale Russian maps there are
remarkable fragments of such channels so far removed from present alluviation
that it is difficult, sometimes impossible, to say what river they belonged to.
Others appear to have been the work of distributaries cutting into the plains
they had once overflowed. Where distributaries have been thus incised, we have
definite proof of crustal movement. Our most striking examples of distributaries
cut into a warped plain are afforded by the Zerafshan, while of those cut into the
zone of uptilted piedmonts we find most remarkable examples along the southern
border of the Fergana plains.

The vast alluvial zone of this basin was built by its rivers when they wan-
dered freely. Now most of them are relatively fixed. That the Turkoman
Trough was at one time the Amu's flood-plain, when that river flowed to the
Caspian, building the immense deltas characterizing the coast south of Krasno-
vodsk, seems more than likely. That would be postglacial. Then it and doubt-
less most of the large rivers were unconfined and spread a large portion of their
load on the plains, whereas silt of the Amu and Syr of to-day is mostly in transit
to the Aral. This period of free-shifting rivers with unconstrained alluviation
was followed by warping. Here we must remember the postglacial uplift of
mountains, the peripheral uplift of our fourth erosion cycle. The warping of
plains, uptilting of their margins, and uplift of their border ranges fall logically
together into one cycle of a basin's differential movements. As a confirmation
of this idea we have the corresponding increase of aridity, shrinkage of sea-water
area, contraction of streams, shrinkage of living loess, and expansion of flying
sands, and, finally, depopulation of oases.

RECENT CHANGES IN THE COURSE OF THE OXUS (AMU DARYA).

The archeologic and historic period of this basin is treated under "Physi-
ography of Oases," chapter xv, this report, but there has been so much dis-
cussion about historic changes of river courses, especially of the Oxus, that a
physiography of the basin must take up the problem. Élisée Reclus states: