The Lop Desert, or the Lop Depression, is a
desert
A desert is a landscape where little precipitation occurs and, consequently, living conditions create unique biomes and ecosystems. The lack of vegetation exposes the unprotected surface of the ground to denudation. About one-third of the la ...
extending from
Korla eastwards along the foot of the
Kuruk-tagh (meaning Dry Mountain) to the former
terminal Tarim Basin in the
Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of
China
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a country in East Asia. With population of China, a population exceeding 1.4 billion, it is the list of countries by population (United Nations), second-most populous country after ...
. It is an almost perfectly flat expanse with no topographic relief.
Lake Bosten in the northwest lies at an altitude of , while the Lop Nur in the southeast is only 250 m lower.
The desert lies within a
sediment basin that was separated from the Taklamakan basin in the
Pliocene and lowered towards the east by a tectonic
dip-slip fault.
The rivers
Tarim and
Konqi used to flow in the rift valley between both basins towards the south until they dried up around 1971 at Tikanlik. The road 218 from
Korla to
Qakilik follows the river beds. The desert is bounded in the west by this road, in the north by the
Kuruk Tagh mountain range, in the east by the Bei Shan range (between
Barkol Tagh and
Bogda Shan), in the southeast by the
Kumtag Desert and in the south by the Aqikkol valley.
Geography
The Lop Desert is on the whole flat, but with three slightly more depressed areas which might form lakes if filled with water - the
Lop Nur dried basin,
Kara-Koshun dried basin and the Taitema Lake basin.
These formed, at one time or another, the terminal lakes of the
Tarim-Konque-
Qarqan river system. The Tarim River changes its course through time, and therefore the location of the terminal lake also changes, causing some confusion amongst the early explorers as to the exact location of Lop Nur, and the lake was thus referred to as the "Wandering Lake."
In the past Lop Nur was a huge marsh in the eastern part of Xinjiang. Now the region is a broad, unbroken expanse of
clay
Clay is a type of fine-grained natural soil material containing clay minerals (hydrous aluminium phyllosilicates, e.g. kaolinite, ). Most pure clay minerals are white or light-coloured, but natural clays show a variety of colours from impuriti ...
intermingled with
sand. The clay, mostly of a yellow or yellow-grey color, is hard and thickly sprinkled with fine
gravel. There are benches, flattened ridges and tabular masses of consolidated clay (
yardangs) that are in a distinctly defined laminae, three stories being sometimes superimposed one upon the other, while their vertical faces are abraded, and often undercut, by the wind. The formations themselves are separated by parallel gullies or wind furrows, 6 to 20 feet deep, all sculptured in the direction of the prevailing northeast to southwest wind. There is no drifting sand or
sand dunes, except in the south towards the outlying foothills of the
Altyn-Tagh.
Climate
The climate of Lop Desert is extremely arid, a study in 1984 gives a mean annual precipitation of generally less than ,
in another study in 2008 it was recorded as .
In the depression centre below in elevation, aridity can be expected to be much more extreme. Relative humidity of the atmosphere frequently dropped to zero, with air temperature as high as . Annual evaporation was estimated in 1984 to be between and , meaning that a lake with about in water depth will dry out within less than two years if cut off entirely from its feeding source. In 2008 the annual evaporation was reported as .
Historically there were periods when the area was more favorable to farming and settlement than today. Studies showed that the area experienced seven major climate changes since the end of the
Pleistocene
The Pleistocene ( ; referred to colloquially as the ''ice age, Ice Age'') is the geological epoch (geology), epoch that lasted from to 11,700 years ago, spanning the Earth's most recent period of repeated glaciations. Before a change was fin ...
.
Lop Nur
There are numerous indications that suggest the presence of an extensive lake in this region which is now completely desiccated. These indications include
salt-stained depressions of a lacustrine appearance; traces of former lacustrine shorelines, more or less parallel and concentric; the presence in places of vast quantities of fresh water
mollusc
Mollusca is a phylum of protostome, protostomic invertebrate animals, whose members are known as molluscs or mollusks (). Around 76,000 extant taxon, extant species of molluscs are recognized, making it the second-largest animal phylum ...
shells (species of ''
Lymnaea'' and ''
Planorbis''); the existence of belts of dead
poplars; patches of dead
tamarisks and extensive beds of withered
reeds, all of these are always on top of the
yardangs, never in the wind-etched furrows.
In ''
Hanshu'' (the
Book of Han, a history of China completed in 111), where it was called Puchang Hai (蒲昌海), the lake was suggested to be of a great size, with a dimension of 300 to 400 ''
li'', roughly , in length and breadth. It was also called Yan Ze (鹽澤) in ''
Shiji'', which means "salt marsh", indicating that the lake was salty. The lake had already shrunk considerably by the
Qing dynasty
The Qing dynasty ( ), officially the Great Qing, was a Manchu-led Dynasties of China, imperial dynasty of China and an early modern empire in East Asia. The last imperial dynasty in Chinese history, the Qing dynasty was preceded by the ...
. It had shifted its location to
Kara-Koshun by the latter half of the nineteenth century, then back again to Lop Nur in 1921 through human intervention. The building of dams by Chinese garrisons in the twentieth century blocked the water from the rivers feeding in to Lop Nur and it is now primarily salt flats.
[
] The dried-up Lop Nur basin is covered with a salt crust from thick.
Flora and fauna
Natural vegetation is sparse in the region and poor in the number of species. A scientific expedition to the Lop Nur region in 1979-1982 collected only 36 species of plants, belonging to 13 families (mainly
Chenopodiaceae and
Compositae) and 26 genera. The expedition also collected only 127 species of animals (23 mammals, 91 birds, 7 reptiles, and 1 amphibian).
Archaeologist
Sven Hedin who travelled in the region in the late nineteenth as well as the twentieth century was able to travel by boat up the rivers to the lake and saw a multitude of wildlife.
However, many wild animals, such as tiger, wolf and wild hog which had been found by former explorers, have now disappeared. Nevertheless, it is still one of the last refuges of
wild Bactrian camel (Camelus ferus) in the world. These wild camels may be found in the reed oases on the north edge of the desert.
Poplars forests and
tamarix shrubs used to be extensively distributed along the lower Tarim River Valley forming the so-called "Green Corridor", but as the lower Tarim River has been drying since 1972 due to the construction of dams, they have greatly deteriorated and some have disappeared. The
Lop Nur Wild Camel National Nature Reserve was created in 2001 to preserve wild Bactrian camels and other wildlife in the region.
Sand storms
The whole of this region is swept bare of sand by the terrific
sand storm
A dust storm, also called a sandstorm, is a meteorological phenomenon common in arid and semi-arid regions. Dust storms arise when a Outflow boundary, gust front or other strong wind blows loose sand and dirt from a dry surface. Fine particles ...
s (
burans) of the spring months and the particles of wind-blown sand act like a sand blast. Abrasion of the rocks forms
yardangs. The desert itself is abraded, filed,
eroded and carried bodily away into the network of lakes in which the
Tarim River wanders. The sand also blows across the lower, constantly shifting waterways of the Tarim River and deposits itself onto gigantic dunes that choke the eastern end of the
Taklamakan Desert.
The extreme weather and ever moving sand dunes have resulted in the deaths of hundreds of people. The esteemed biologist
Peng Jiamu disappeared in the desert in 1980.
[
]
See also
*
Tarim Basin
*
Lake Bosten
Footnotes
External links
Surveying the Lop DesertThe Silk Road: Two Thousand Years in the Heart of Asia - The Silk RoadWild West China: The Taming of XinjiangCentral Asia and Tibet - Surveying the Lop Desert
{{Deserts
Deserts of China
Geography of Xinjiang
Sites along the Silk Road