Tsaidam Basin

Tsaidam Basin

 

(also Caidam), a tectonic depression in Central Asia, in China. The Tsaidam Basin is bounded by the Altyn Tagh and Nan Shan mountains on the north and northeast and the Kunlun Mountains on the south and southwest. It measures approximately 700 km in length and varies in width from 100 km to 300 km; it rises to elevations of 2,600–2,900 m. The northwestern part is a sand and clay plain with gentle slopes and ridges containing badland sections; landforms created by wind erosion are common. The southeastern part of the plain is lower and separated from the northwestern part by an escarpment with elevations to 100 m. In this part there are incrusted solonchaks, up to 1,600 sq km in area, on the site of ancient lakes. At the foot of the mountains there are sloping plains formed by the joined alluvial fans of rivers and intermittant streams.

The climate is sharply continental, with the average January temperature varying from –11° to –15°C and the average July temperature varying from 15° to 18°C. The region receives 25–50 mm of precipitation annually, although the east receives as much as 150 mm. Precipitation occurs primarily in summer, as there is usually no snow in winter. The northwestern part of the basin is practically waterless. In the southeast the solonchak depressions contain intermittant lakes such as Dawsan Nor and Hollosun Nor, which only fill with water as a result of summer flash flooding of the intermittant rivers flowing from the Kunlun.

Vegetation in the northwest includes isolated bushes of saltworts, oxytropis, and reamuria and sparse thickets of the saxaul Haloxylon persicum, usually in the channels of intermittant streams. Wandering dunes are frequently secured by bushes of the genera Tamarix and Nitraria. Sedge-grass meadows and reed swamps occur in places with high ground-water tables in the foothill belt of the southeast. The plain has deposits of petroleum at Golmo and Mangyai, as well as salt deposits.

V. M. SINITSYN