Lake Sevan
Սևանա լիճ |
|
A view of Lake Sevan
|
| Coordinates |
40°19′N
45°21′ECoordinates: 40°19′N
45°21′E |
| Primary sources |
28 rivers and streams |
| Primary outflows |
evaporation (90%), Hrazdan |
| Basin countries |
Armenia |
| Max length |
78 km (2005) |
| Max width |
56 km (2005) |
| Surface area |
940 km² (2005), 1360 km² (1949) |
| Water volume |
58 km3 (1949) |
Lake Sevan (Armenian: Սևանա լիճ)is the largest lake
in Armenia and one of the largest high-altitude lakes in the world.
Former names of the lake include Gegharkunik (Armenian: Գեղարքունիք), Gegham Sea (Armenian: Գեղամա
ծով), and Gokcha.[1][2]
The entire lake is situated inside the eastern Armenian province of Gegharkunik. It is
fed by 28 rivers and streams. Only 10% of the outgoing water is drained by the Hrazdan
(Razdan) river, while the remaining 90% evaporates. Along with Lake Van and Lake
Urmia, Sevan was one of the three great lakes of the historical Armenian Kingdom, collectively referred to as the Seas of Armenia, and it is the only one
within the boundaries of today's Republic of Armenia. Sevanavank is the historic area near
the lake.
Before human intervention dramatically changed this ecosystem the lake was 95 metres deep,
covered an area of 1,360 km² (5% of Armenia's entire area), had a volume of 58 km³ and a
perimeter of 260 km. The lake surface was at an altitude of 1,950 m above sea level.
Intervention
In 1910 Soukias Manasserian, one of the civil
engineers behind the interventions that caused the Aral Sea disaster, published a study
Evaporating billions and stagnation of the Russian Capital, which suggested the lowering of the lake's surface to 45
metres and the use of the water for irrigation and hydroelectricity.
View of the lake from space
In the Stalin era the plan was slightly modified: the water level would be reduced by
55 metres (5 metres more than suggested by Manasserian), the perimeter would shrink to 80 km and the volume to only 5 km³. Nut
and oak trees would be planted on newly acquired land, and introducing some trout species into the remainder of the lake would
increase fishery production tenfold.
The Armenian Supreme Soviet approved the plan without consulting the local people, and
major work started in 1933. The river bed of the Hrazdan was deepened, and construction of a tunnel
40 metres below the original water level was begun. The work was delayed due to World War
II and was only finished in 1949. The water level then began to fall by more than one metre
per year.
An ecological disaster like that in the Aral Sea was avoided when the Stalinist era ended in 1956 and the project and its consequences were reviewed thoroughly. As there were difficulties with planting oaks
and nut trees, and with fishery, the Sevan Committee was established with the mission "to raise the level as much as
possible". Hydro-electric power stations on the Hrazdan would be replaced with thermal power stations. In 1962 the water level stabilized at 18 metres below the original level, but two years later the lake started to
"bloom" due to eutrophic algae.
In 1981, a 49 km tunnel was constructed, diverting water from the Arpa river (from a reservoir near Kechut) to the lake near Artsvanist. The water level in the lake rose only 1.5 metres, so another 22 km tunnel was begun from
Vorotan River (further south from Kechut). Eighteen kilometers of this tunnel were
completed before the collapse of the Soviet Union, but in 1988 Azerbaijan imposed an economic blockade on
Armenia due to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and the
work had to be stopped.
The Armenian government completed the Vorotan tunnel in 2003,
but water has not yet begun to flow into the lake. The level stabilized at 20 metres below the original, and the lake's area is
now 940 km².
Due to recent rain and other changes, the water level is again slowly rising (as of 2005).
Beaches
There are numerous beaches along the entire lake shore. The most famous cultural monument is the Sevanavank monastery near the town of Sevan at the northwestern shore.
Initially the monastery was located on an island, but the fall of the water level turned it into a peninsula. Another monastery
at the western shore is Hayrivank, and further south, in the village of Noraduz, there is a
field of khachkars, a cemetery with approximately 900
khachkars of different styles. Additional khachkars are found at Nerk'in
Getashen on the south coast. When the water level fell, many archaeological artifacts were found, 2000 years of age and
older (some as old as the early Bronze Age). Most of them are now displayed in Yerevan.
Fauna
Sevan trout (Salmo ischchan) was an endemic
species of the lake, but it is endangered as some competitors were introduced into the lake,
including common whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus) from Lake Ladoga, goldfish (Carrasius auratus), and crayfish
(Astacus leptodactylus). If the Sevan trout is likely to become extinct in
its "home" lake, it seems that it will survive in Issyk-Kul lake (Kyrgyzstan) where it was introduced in the 1970s.
The lake is an important breeding ground for the Armenian Gull (Larus armenicus)
with about 4000-5000 pairs. Other birds which visit the lake include Bewick's swan
(Cygnus columbianus), lesser white-fronted goose (Anser
erythropus), red-crested pochard (Netta rufina), ferruginous duck (Aythya nyroca) and great
black-headed gull (Larus ichthyaetus). The mouflon are suffering a great population decline due to poaching and
habitat loss. The Sevan trout, which made up thirty percent of the fish in Lake Sevan, have virtually disappeared. Another
endangered visitor to the lake is the Armenian leopard or panther (panthera pardus tullianus).
The Island Monastery
-
Originally made from three churches, the monastery was built on an island. Receding waters in the 20th century created the
current peninsula. The island was uninhabited until the end of the 8th c. CE, when monks built a chapel and a group of cells. The
monastery was founded in 874 by King Ashot I, the founder of the Bagratid Dynasty, and his daughter Mariam. Two churches remain, St. Arakelots and Astvatsatsin. The
island monastery was, according to historians of the time, used both for worship and pilgrimage, and as a place of exile for
Armenian noblemen who had fallen into disgrace. It also was the residence and headquarters for King
Ashot, from which he led a battle against invading Arabs beginning in 859 CE.
During the battles monks and clergy fought alongside the army to defeat the Arabs, but repeated
Arab and Ottoman invasions continued. The monks on the island continuously led battles to
protect the monastery, and such was the life in and around the monastery for almost 500 years until the Persians and the Ottomans divided the Armenian kingdom. The monks in Gegham-kiunik specialized in medicine, and some of their natural cures
are still used, based on herbs that grow in the wild around the lake. The monastery continued to function until the 20th century;
the last monk left in 1930. Today the monastery is maintained by the Church,
which maintains a summer retreat for seminarians on the peninsula.
References
- ^ René Grousset. The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia,
Rutgers University Press, 1970, p. 348, ISBN 0813513049
- ^ Jacques Kayaloff. The Battle of Sardarabad, Mouton, 1973, p.
211
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
See also
- Sevanavank - Island monastery in lake sevan.
- Sevan National Park
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