North Asia or Northern Asia is the northern region of Asia, which is defined in geographical terms and consists of three federal districts of Russia: Ural, Siberian, and the Far Eastern. The region forms the bulk of the Asian part of Russia. North Asia is bordered by the Arctic Ocean to its north; by Eastern Europe to its west; by Central Asia and East Asia to its south; and by the Pacific Ocean and Northern America to its east. It covers an area of 13,100,000 square kilometres (5,100,000 sq mi), or 8.8% of Earth's total land area; and is the largest subregion of Asia by area, occupying approx. 29.4% of Asia's land area, but is also the least populated, with a population of around 37 million, accounting for merely 0.74% of Asia's population.
Area | 13,100,000 km2 (5,100,000 sq mi) |
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Population | 37 million (2021 census) |
Population density | 2.6 per km2 (7.4 per mi2) |
GDP (PPP) | $1.3 trillion (2022) |
GDP (nominal) | $600 billion (2022) |
GDP per capita | $16,000 (2022) |
Ethnic groups | Majority Slavic Minority Tungusic, Mongolic, Turkic, and other indigenous peoples of Siberia |
Religions | Majority Orthodox Christian |
Demonym | Siberian, North Asian |
Countries | Russia |
Languages | Official languages Other languages
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Time zones | 8 time zones
|
Internet TLD | .ru |
Calling code | Zone 7 |
Largest cities | List
|
UN M49 code | 151 – Eastern Europe150 – Europe001 – World |
North Asia | |
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Russian name | |
Russian | Северная Азия |
Romanization | Severnaya Aziya |
Topographically, the region is dominated by the Eurasian Plate, except for its eastern part, which lies on the North American, Amurian, and Okhotsk Plates. It is divided by three major plains: the West Siberian Plain, Central Siberian Plateau, and Verhoyansk-Chukotka collision zone. The Uralian orogeny in the west raised Ural Mountains, the informal boundary between Asia and Europe. Tectonic and volcanic activities are frequently occurred in the eastern part of the region as part of the Ring of Fire, evidenced by the formation of island arcs such as the Kuril Islands and ultra-prominent peaks such as Klyuchevskaya Sopka, Kronotsky, and Koryaksky. The central part of North Asia is a large igneous province called the Siberian Traps, formed by a massive eruption which occurred 250 million years ago. The formation of the traps coincided with the Permian–Triassic extinction event.
Geographically, North Asia is a subregion of Asia. Historically, it has been home to various East Asian-related ethnic groups from a diverse range of language families, including the Ainu, Chukotko-Kamchatkan, Mongolic, Nivkh, Tungusic, Turkic, Uralic, Yeniseian, Yukaghir, and Eskaleut peoples. However, due to the Russian conquest of Siberia, the entirety of North Asia was colonised and incorporated into Russia. Consequently, some international organisations classify North Asia as part of Eastern Europe along with European Russia, rather than as a part of Asia. European cultural influences, specifically Russian, are predominant in the entire region, due to it experiencing Russian emigration from Europe starting from the 16th century.Slavs and other Indo-Europeans make up the vast majority of North Asia's population, and over 85% of the region's population is of European descent. Whereas the indigenous peoples comprise only about 5% of the North Asian population.
History
The region was first populated by hominins in the Late Pleistocene, approximately 100,000 years ago, and modern humans are confirmed to arrived in the region by 45,000 years ago with the first humans in the region having West Eurasian origins.
Its Neolithic culture is characterized by characteristic stone production techniques and the presence of pottery of eastern origin. The Bronze Age began during the 3rd millennium BCE, with influences of Indo-Iranian cultures as evidenced by the Andronovo culture. During the 1st millennium BCE, polities such as the Scythians and Xiongnus emerged in the region, who often clashed with its Persian and Chinese neighbors in the south.
The Göktürks dominated southern Siberia during the 1st millennium CE, while in the early 2nd millennium, the Mongol Empire and its successor states ruled the region. The Khanate of Sibir was one of the last independent Turkic states in North Asia before its conquest by the Tsardom of Russia in the 16th century. Russia would then gradually annex the region into its territory until the Convention of Peking was signed in 1860.
After the October Revolution in 1917, the region was contested between the Bolsheviks and Whites until the Soviet Union asserted full control in 1923. The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 left Russia as the administrator of the region.
Geography
For geographical and statistical reasons, the United Nations geoscheme and various other classification schemes will not subdivide countries, and thus place all of Russia in Europe or the Eastern Europe subregion. There are no mountain chains in North Asia to prevent air currents from the Arctic flowing down over the plains of Siberia and Turkestan.
The plateau and plains of North Asia comprise the West Siberian Lowlands; the Angara Shield, with the Taymyr Peninsula, the coastal lowlands (the East Siberian Lowland and the North Siberian Lowland), and the Central Siberian Plateau (the Anabar Plateau, the Lena Plateau, the Lena-Angara Plateau, the Putorana Plateau, the Tunguska Plateau, and the Vilyuy Plateau); and the Central Yakutian Lowland.Western Siberia is usually regarded as the Northwest Asia, Kazakhstan also sometimes included there. However, Northwest Asia sometimes refers to the South Caucasus or its nearby areas.[citation needed]
Geomorphology
The geomorphology of Northern Asia in general is imperfectly known, although the deposits and mountain ranges are well known.
To compensate for new sea floor having been created in the Siberian basin, the whole of the Eurasian Plate has pivoted about a point in the New Siberian Islands, causing compression in the Verkhoyansk mountains, which were formed along the eastern margin of the Angara Shield by tectonic uplift during the Mesozoic Era. There is a southern boundary to this across the northern margin of the Alpine folds of Afghanistan, India, Nepal, and Bhutan, which at the east of Brahmaputra turns to run south towards the Bay of Bengal along the line of the Naga Hills and the Arakan Yoma, continues around Indonesia, and follows the edge of the continental shelf along the eastern seaboard of China. The Eurasian Plate and the North American Plate meet across the neck of Alaska, following the line of the Aleutian Trench, rather than meeting at the Bering Straits.
Northern Asia is built around the Angara Shield, which lies between the Yenisey River and the Lena River. It developed from fragments of Laurasia, whose rocks were mainly Precambrian crystalline rocks, gneisses, and schists, and Gondwana. These rocks can be found in the Angara Shield, Inner Mongolian-Korean Shield, Ordes Shield, and Southeast Asia Shield. The fragments have been subject to orogenesis around their margins, giving a complex of plateaux and mountain ranges. One can find outcrops of these rocks in unfolded sections of the Shields. Their presence has been confirmed below Mesozoic and later sediments.
There are three main periods of mountain building in Northern Asia, although it has occurred many times. The outer fold mountains that are on the margins of the Shields and that only affected Asia north of the line of the Himalayas, are attributed to the Caledonian and Hercynian orogenies of the late Palaeozoic Era. The Alpine orogeny caused extensive folding and faulting of Mesozoic and early Tertiary sediments from the Tethys geosyncline. The Tibetan and Mongolian plateaux, and the structural basins of Tarim, Qaidam, and Junggar, are delimited by major east–west lithospheric faults that were probably the results of stresses caused by the impact of the Indian Plate against Laurasia. Erosion of the mountains caused by this orogeny has created a large amount of sediment, which has been transported southwards to produce the alluvial plains of India, China, and Cambodia, and which has also been deposited in large amounts in the Tarim and Dzungarian basins.
Lena Sakha Republic Laptev Sea New Siberian Islands Kolyma Verkhoyansk Range | ||
Urals Federal District Ob Irtysh Altai Tian Shan Syr Darya Taklamakan Himalayas Pamir Hindukush Tibetan | ||
Physical map of Northern Asia (with parts of Central and East Asia) |
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Northern Asia was glaciated in the Pleistocene, but this played a less significant part in the geology of the area compared to the part that it played in North America and Europe. The Scandinavian ice sheet extended to the east of the Urals, covering the northern two thirds of the Ob Basin and extending onto the Angara Shield between the Yenisei River and the Lena River. There are legacies of mountain glaciation to be found on the east Siberian mountains, on the mountains of the Kamchatka Peninsula, on the Altai, on Tian Shan, and on other small areas of mountains, ice caps remain on the islands of Severnaya Zemlya and Novaya Zemlya, and several Central Asian mountains still have individual glaciers. North Asia itself has permafrost, ranging in depths from 30 to 600 metres and covering an area of 9.6 million km2.
Several of the mountainous regions are volcanic, with both the Koryak Mountains and the Kamchatka Peninsula having active volcanoes. The Anadyr Plateau is formed from igneous rocks. The Mongolian Plateau has an area of basaltic lavas and volcanic cones.
The Angara Shield also underlies the lowlands of the Ob River, but to the south and east in the Central Asian mountains and in the East Siberian Mountains there are folded and faulted mountains of Lower Palaeozoic rocks.
Demographics
Most estimates are that there are around 33 million Russian citizens living east of the Ural Mountains, a widely recognized but informal geographical divide between Europe and Asia. Of these Russian citizens of Siberia, most are Slavic-origin Russians and Russified Ukrainians. The Turkic peoples who are native to some parts of Siberia and native Tungusic and Mongolic peoples are now a minority in North Asia due to the Russification process during the last three centuries. Russian census records indicate they make up only an estimated 10% of the region's population, with the largest being the Buryats numbering at 445,175, and the Yakuts at 443,852. According to the 2002 census, there are 500,000 Tatars in Siberia, but 300,000 of them are Volga Tatars who settled in Siberia during periods of colonization. Other ethnic groups that live in the region and make a significant portion include ethnic Germans numbering about 400,000.
In 1875, Chambers reported the population of North Asia to be 8 million. Between 1801 and 1914, an estimated 7 million settlers moved from European Russia to Siberia, 85% during the quarter-century before World War I.
Largest cities or towns in North Asia 2010 Census | |||||||||
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Rank | Region | Pop. | |||||||
Novosibirsk Yekaterinburg | 1 | Novosibirsk | Siberia | 1,633,595 | Chelyabinsk Krasnoyarsk | ||||
2 | Yekaterinburg | Ural (region) | 1,544,376 | ||||||
3 | Chelyabinsk | Ural (region) | 1,189,525 | ||||||
4 | Krasnoyarsk | Siberia | 1,187,771 | ||||||
5 | Omsk | Siberia | 1,125,695 | ||||||
6 | Tyumen | Ural (region) | 847,488 | ||||||
7 | Barnaul | Siberia | 630,877 | ||||||
8 | Khabarovsk | Russian Far East | 617,441 | ||||||
9 | Irkutsk | Siberia | 617,264 | ||||||
10 | Vladivostok | Russian Far East | 603,519 |
Administration
Federal Subjects | Capital | Area km2 | Population 2010 |
---|---|---|---|
Kurgan Oblast | Kurgan | 71,000 | 910,807 |
Sverdlovsk Oblast | Yekaterinburg | 194,800 | 4,297,747 |
Tyumen Oblast | Tyumen | 143,520 | 3,395,755 |
Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug (Yugra) | Khanty-Mansiysk | 534,800 | 1,532,243 |
Chelyabinsk Oblast | Chelyabinsk | 87,900 | 3,476,217 |
Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug | Salekhard | 750,300 | 522,904 |
Ural Federal District | Yekaterinburg | 1,818,500 | 12,080,526 |
Altai Republic | Gorno-Altaysk | 92,900 | 206,168 |
Altai Krai | Barnaul | 168,000 | 2,419,755 |
Irkutsk Oblast | Irkutsk | 774,800 | 2,248,750 |
Kemerovo Oblast | Kemerovo | 95,700 | 2,763,135 |
Krasnoyarsk Krai | Krasnoyarsk | 2,366,800 | 2,828,187 |
Novosibirsk Oblast | Novosibirsk | 177,800 | 2,665,911 |
Omsk Oblast | Omsk | 141,100 | 1,977,665 |
Tomsk Oblast | Tomsk | 314,400 | 1,047,394 |
Tuva Republic | Kyzyl | 168,600 | 307,930 |
Republic of Khakassia | Abakan | 61,600 | 532,403 |
Siberian Federal District | Novosibirsk | 4,361,800 | 17,178,298 |
Amur Oblast | Blagoveshchensk | 361,900 | 830,103 |
Republic of Buryatia | Ulan-Ude | 351,300 | 971,021 |
Jewish Autonomous Oblast | Birobidzhan | 36,300 | 176,558 |
Zabaykalsky Krai | Chita | 431,900 | 1,107,107 |
Kamchatka Krai | Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky | 464,300 | 322,079 |
Magadan Oblast | Magadan | 462,500 | 156,996 |
Primorsky Krai | Vladivostok | 164,700 | 1,956,497 |
Sakha Republic | Yakutsk | 3,083,500 | 958,528 |
Sakhalin Oblast | Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk | 87,100 | 497,973 |
Khabarovsk Krai | Khabarovsk | 787,600 | 1,343,869 |
Chukotka Autonomous Okrug | Anadyr | 721,500 | 50,526 |
Far Eastern Federal District | Vladivostok | 6,952,600 | 8,371,257 |
North Asia | – | 13,132,900 | 37,630,081 |
See also
- Arctic Region
- Far North
- European Russia
- Asia
- Geography of Asia
- Northeast Asia
- Russian Far East
- Ural region
- Siberian High, a semipermament anticyclone
References
- Валовой региональный продукт по субъектам Российской Федерации в 2016–2022 гг., rosstat.gov.ru
- Haywood, A. J. (2010). Siberia: A Cultural History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199754182.
- "ВПН-2010". Perepis-2010.ru. Archived from the original on 2012-01-18. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
- "ВПН-2010". Gks.ru. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
- "Национальный состав населения". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
- Slon V, Viola B, Renaud G, Gansauge M, Benazzi S, Sawyer S, Hublin J, Shunkov MV, Derevianko AP, Kelso J, Prüfer K, Meyer M, Pääbo S (July 2017). "A fourth Denisovan individual". Science Advances. 3 (7): e1700186. Bibcode:2017SciA....3E0186S. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1700186. PMC 5501502. PMID 28695206.
- Callaway, Ewen & Nature magazine (23 October 2014). "45,000-Year-Old Man's Genome Sequenced". Scientific American. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
- Fu, Q; Li, H; Moorjani, P; Jay, F; Slepchenko, SM; Bondarev, AA; Johnson, PL; Aximu-Petri, A; Prüfer, K; de Filippo, C; Meyer, M; Zwyns, N; Salazar-García, DC; Kuzmin, YV; Keates, SG; Kosintsev, PA; Razhev, DI; Richards, MP; Peristov, NV; Lachmann, M; Douka, K; Higham, TF; Slatkin, M; Hublin, JJ; Reich, D; Kelso, J; Viola, TB; Pääbo, S (October 23, 2014). "Genome sequence of a 45,000-year-old modern human from western Siberia". Nature. 514 (7523): 445–49. Bibcode:2014Natur.514..445F. doi:10.1038/nature13810. PMC 4753769. PMID 25341783.
- Kılınç, Gülşah Merve; Kashuba, Natalija; Yaka, Reyhan; Sümer, Arev Pelin; Yüncü, Eren; Shergin, Dmitrij; Ivanov, Grigorij Leonidovich; Kichigin, Dmitrii; Pestereva, Kjunnej (2018-06-12). "Investigating Holocene human population history in North Asia using ancient mitogenomes". Scientific Reports. 8 (1): 8969. Bibcode:2018NatSR...8.8969K. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-27325-0. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5997703. PMID 29895902.
- Dupuy, Paula Doumani (2016-06-02). "Bronze Age Central Asia". Online Only -- Archaeology. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935413.013.15. ISBN 978-0-19-993541-3.
- William Chambers and Robert Chambers (1875). Chambers's Information for the People. London and Edinburgh: W. & R. Chambers. pp. 274–276. ISBN 9780665469145.
- Edwin Michael Bridges (1990). "Northern Asia". World Geomorphology. Cambridge University Press. pp. 124–126. ISBN 978-0-521-28965-8.
- "Ukrainians in Russia's Far East try to maintain community life Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine". The Ukrainian Weekly. 4 May 2003.
- "Фотоатлас "Сибирские татары"". February 27, 2002. Archived from the original on 2002-02-27.
- "Siberian Germans". Encyclopedia.com.
- Fisher, Raymond H. (1958). "Reviewed work: The Great Siberian Migration: Government and Peasant in Resettlement from Emancipation to the First World War, Donald W. Treadgold". The American Historical Review. 63 (4): 989–990. doi:10.2307/1848991. JSTOR 1848991.
- "Оценка численности постоянного населения по субъектам Российской Федерации". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved 20 July 2024.
- Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2011). Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Том 1 [2010 All-Russian Population Census, vol. 1]. Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года [2010 All-Russia Population Census] (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service.
External links
- Media related to North Asia at Wikimedia Commons
North Asia or Northern Asia is the northern region of Asia which is defined in geographical terms and consists of three federal districts of Russia Ural Siberian and the Far Eastern The region forms the bulk of the Asian part of Russia North Asia is bordered by the Arctic Ocean to its north by Eastern Europe to its west by Central Asia and East Asia to its south and by the Pacific Ocean and Northern America to its east It covers an area of 13 100 000 square kilometres 5 100 000 sq mi or 8 8 of Earth s total land area and is the largest subregion of Asia by area occupying approx 29 4 of Asia s land area but is also the least populated with a population of around 37 million accounting for merely 0 74 of Asia s population North AsiaArea13 100 000 km2 5 100 000 sq mi Population37 million 2021 census Population density2 6 per km2 7 4 per mi2 GDP PPP 1 3 trillion 2022 GDP nominal 600 billion 2022 GDP per capita 16 000 2022 Ethnic groupsMajority Slavic Minority Tungusic Mongolic Turkic and other indigenous peoples of SiberiaReligionsMajority Orthodox ChristianDemonymSiberian North AsianCountries RussiaLanguagesOfficial languages RussianOther languages AinuChukotko KamchatkanEskimo AleutMongolicTungusicTurkicUralicYeniseianYukaghirOthersTime zones8 time zones UTC 5 MSK 2UTC 6 MSK 3UTC 7 MSK 4UTC 8 MSK 5UTC 9 MSK 6UTC 10 MSK 7UTC 11 MSK 8UTC 12 MSK 9Internet TLD ruCalling codeZone 7Largest citiesList BarnaulChelyabinskIrkutskKemerovoKhabarovskKrasnoyarskNovokuznetskNovosibirsk largest OmskTomskTyumenVladivostokYakutskYekaterinburgChitaUN M49 code151 Eastern Europe 150 Europe 001 WorldNorth AsiaRussian nameRussianSevernaya AziyaRomanizationSevernaya Aziya Topographically the region is dominated by the Eurasian Plate except for its eastern part which lies on the North American Amurian and Okhotsk Plates It is divided by three major plains the West Siberian Plain Central Siberian Plateau and Verhoyansk Chukotka collision zone The Uralian orogeny in the west raised Ural Mountains the informal boundary between Asia and Europe Tectonic and volcanic activities are frequently occurred in the eastern part of the region as part of the Ring of Fire evidenced by the formation of island arcs such as the Kuril Islands and ultra prominent peaks such as Klyuchevskaya Sopka Kronotsky and Koryaksky The central part of North Asia is a large igneous province called the Siberian Traps formed by a massive eruption which occurred 250 million years ago The formation of the traps coincided with the Permian Triassic extinction event Geographically North Asia is a subregion of Asia Historically it has been home to various East Asian related ethnic groups from a diverse range of language families including the Ainu Chukotko Kamchatkan Mongolic Nivkh Tungusic Turkic Uralic Yeniseian Yukaghir and Eskaleut peoples However due to the Russian conquest of Siberia the entirety of North Asia was colonised and incorporated into Russia Consequently some international organisations classify North Asia as part of Eastern Europe along with European Russia rather than as a part of Asia European cultural influences specifically Russian are predominant in the entire region due to it experiencing Russian emigration from Europe starting from the 16th century Slavs and other Indo Europeans make up the vast majority of North Asia s population and over 85 of the region s population is of European descent Whereas the indigenous peoples comprise only about 5 of the North Asian population HistoryMap of Northern Asia in 1921 The region was first populated by hominins in the Late Pleistocene approximately 100 000 years ago and modern humans are confirmed to arrived in the region by 45 000 years ago with the first humans in the region having West Eurasian origins Its Neolithic culture is characterized by characteristic stone production techniques and the presence of pottery of eastern origin The Bronze Age began during the 3rd millennium BCE with influences of Indo Iranian cultures as evidenced by the Andronovo culture During the 1st millennium BCE polities such as the Scythians and Xiongnus emerged in the region who often clashed with its Persian and Chinese neighbors in the south The Gokturks dominated southern Siberia during the 1st millennium CE while in the early 2nd millennium the Mongol Empire and its successor states ruled the region The Khanate of Sibir was one of the last independent Turkic states in North Asia before its conquest by the Tsardom of Russia in the 16th century Russia would then gradually annex the region into its territory until the Convention of Peking was signed in 1860 After the October Revolution in 1917 the region was contested between the Bolsheviks and Whites until the Soviet Union asserted full control in 1923 The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 left Russia as the administrator of the region GeographyKamchatka PeninsulaPutorana Plateau For geographical and statistical reasons the United Nations geoscheme and various other classification schemes will not subdivide countries and thus place all of Russia in Europe or the Eastern Europe subregion There are no mountain chains in North Asia to prevent air currents from the Arctic flowing down over the plains of Siberia and Turkestan The plateau and plains of North Asia comprise the West Siberian Lowlands the Angara Shield with the Taymyr Peninsula the coastal lowlands the East Siberian Lowland and the North Siberian Lowland and the Central Siberian Plateau the Anabar Plateau the Lena Plateau the Lena Angara Plateau the Putorana Plateau the Tunguska Plateau and the Vilyuy Plateau and the Central Yakutian Lowland Western Siberia is usually regarded as the Northwest Asia Kazakhstan also sometimes included there However Northwest Asia sometimes refers to the South Caucasus or its nearby areas citation needed Geomorphology The geomorphology of Northern Asia in general is imperfectly known although the deposits and mountain ranges are well known To compensate for new sea floor having been created in the Siberian basin the whole of the Eurasian Plate has pivoted about a point in the New Siberian Islands causing compression in the Verkhoyansk mountains which were formed along the eastern margin of the Angara Shield by tectonic uplift during the Mesozoic Era There is a southern boundary to this across the northern margin of the Alpine folds of Afghanistan India Nepal and Bhutan which at the east of Brahmaputra turns to run south towards the Bay of Bengal along the line of the Naga Hills and the Arakan Yoma continues around Indonesia and follows the edge of the continental shelf along the eastern seaboard of China The Eurasian Plate and the North American Plate meet across the neck of Alaska following the line of the Aleutian Trench rather than meeting at the Bering Straits Northern Asia is built around the Angara Shield which lies between the Yenisey River and the Lena River It developed from fragments of Laurasia whose rocks were mainly Precambrian crystalline rocks gneisses and schists and Gondwana These rocks can be found in the Angara Shield Inner Mongolian Korean Shield Ordes Shield and Southeast Asia Shield The fragments have been subject to orogenesis around their margins giving a complex of plateaux and mountain ranges One can find outcrops of these rocks in unfolded sections of the Shields Their presence has been confirmed below Mesozoic and later sediments There are three main periods of mountain building in Northern Asia although it has occurred many times The outer fold mountains that are on the margins of the Shields and that only affected Asia north of the line of the Himalayas are attributed to the Caledonian and Hercynian orogenies of the late Palaeozoic Era The Alpine orogeny caused extensive folding and faulting of Mesozoic and early Tertiary sediments from the Tethys geosyncline The Tibetan and Mongolian plateaux and the structural basins of Tarim Qaidam and Junggar are delimited by major east west lithospheric faults that were probably the results of stresses caused by the impact of the Indian Plate against Laurasia Erosion of the mountains caused by this orogeny has created a large amount of sediment which has been transported southwards to produce the alluvial plains of India China and Cambodia and which has also been deposited in large amounts in the Tarim and Dzungarian basins Gulf of Ob Novaya Zemlya Kara Sea Yenisey Ob Taymyr Peninsula Severnaya Zemlya Arctic Ocean Central Siberian Plateau Siberian Federal District Lena Sakha Republic Laptev Sea New Siberian Islands Kolyma Verkhoyansk RangeUrals Federal District Kazakhstan Ob Irtysh Altai Tian Shan Syr Darya Taklamakan Himalayas Pamir Hindukush Tibetan Lake Baikal Mongolia Gobi North China Plain Yangtze Plain Plateau Stanovoy Range Manchuria Korea Sakhalin Amur Sea of Okhotsk Japan PacificPhysical map of Northern Asia with parts of Central and East Asia Northern Asia was glaciated in the Pleistocene but this played a less significant part in the geology of the area compared to the part that it played in North America and Europe The Scandinavian ice sheet extended to the east of the Urals covering the northern two thirds of the Ob Basin and extending onto the Angara Shield between the Yenisei River and the Lena River There are legacies of mountain glaciation to be found on the east Siberian mountains on the mountains of the Kamchatka Peninsula on the Altai on Tian Shan and on other small areas of mountains ice caps remain on the islands of Severnaya Zemlya and Novaya Zemlya and several Central Asian mountains still have individual glaciers North Asia itself has permafrost ranging in depths from 30 to 600 metres and covering an area of 9 6 million km2 Several of the mountainous regions are volcanic with both the Koryak Mountains and the Kamchatka Peninsula having active volcanoes The Anadyr Plateau is formed from igneous rocks The Mongolian Plateau has an area of basaltic lavas and volcanic cones The Angara Shield also underlies the lowlands of the Ob River but to the south and east in the Central Asian mountains and in the East Siberian Mountains there are folded and faulted mountains of Lower Palaeozoic rocks DemographicsRussians in Vladivostok on Russia s Pacific Coast Most estimates are that there are around 33 million Russian citizens living east of the Ural Mountains a widely recognized but informal geographical divide between Europe and Asia Of these Russian citizens of Siberia most are Slavic origin Russians and Russified Ukrainians The Turkic peoples who are native to some parts of Siberia and native Tungusic and Mongolic peoples are now a minority in North Asia due to the Russification process during the last three centuries Russian census records indicate they make up only an estimated 10 of the region s population with the largest being the Buryats numbering at 445 175 and the Yakuts at 443 852 According to the 2002 census there are 500 000 Tatars in Siberia but 300 000 of them are Volga Tatars who settled in Siberia during periods of colonization Other ethnic groups that live in the region and make a significant portion include ethnic Germans numbering about 400 000 In 1875 Chambers reported the population of North Asia to be 8 million Between 1801 and 1914 an estimated 7 million settlers moved from European Russia to Siberia 85 during the quarter century before World War I Largest cities or towns in North Asia 2010 CensusRank Region Pop Novosibirsk Yekaterinburg 1 Novosibirsk Siberia 1 633 595 Chelyabinsk Krasnoyarsk2 Yekaterinburg Ural region 1 544 3763 Chelyabinsk Ural region 1 189 5254 Krasnoyarsk Siberia 1 187 7715 Omsk Siberia 1 125 6956 Tyumen Ural region 847 4887 Barnaul Siberia 630 8778 Khabarovsk Russian Far East 617 4419 Irkutsk Siberia 617 26410 Vladivostok Russian Far East 603 519AdministrationSubdivisions of Asian Russia Siberia Federal Subjects Capital Area km2 Population 2010Kurgan Oblast Kurgan 71 000 910 807Sverdlovsk Oblast Yekaterinburg 194 800 4 297 747Tyumen Oblast Tyumen 143 520 3 395 755Khanty Mansi Autonomous Okrug Yugra Khanty Mansiysk 534 800 1 532 243Chelyabinsk Oblast Chelyabinsk 87 900 3 476 217Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug Salekhard 750 300 522 904Ural Federal District Yekaterinburg 1 818 500 12 080 526Altai Republic Gorno Altaysk 92 900 206 168Altai Krai Barnaul 168 000 2 419 755Irkutsk Oblast Irkutsk 774 800 2 248 750Kemerovo Oblast Kemerovo 95 700 2 763 135Krasnoyarsk Krai Krasnoyarsk 2 366 800 2 828 187Novosibirsk Oblast Novosibirsk 177 800 2 665 911Omsk Oblast Omsk 141 100 1 977 665Tomsk Oblast Tomsk 314 400 1 047 394Tuva Republic Kyzyl 168 600 307 930Republic of Khakassia Abakan 61 600 532 403Siberian Federal District Novosibirsk 4 361 800 17 178 298Amur Oblast Blagoveshchensk 361 900 830 103Republic of Buryatia Ulan Ude 351 300 971 021Jewish Autonomous Oblast Birobidzhan 36 300 176 558Zabaykalsky Krai Chita 431 900 1 107 107Kamchatka Krai Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky 464 300 322 079Magadan Oblast Magadan 462 500 156 996Primorsky Krai Vladivostok 164 700 1 956 497Sakha Republic Yakutsk 3 083 500 958 528Sakhalin Oblast Yuzhno Sakhalinsk 87 100 497 973Khabarovsk Krai Khabarovsk 787 600 1 343 869Chukotka Autonomous Okrug Anadyr 721 500 50 526Far Eastern Federal District Vladivostok 6 952 600 8 371 257North Asia 13 132 900 37 630 081See alsoAsia portalGeography portalRussia portalSiberia portalArctic Region Far North European Russia Asia Geography of Asia Northeast Asia Russian Far East Ural region Siberian High a semipermament anticycloneReferencesValovoj regionalnyj produkt po subektam Rossijskoj Federacii v 2016 2022 gg rosstat gov ru Haywood A J 2010 Siberia A Cultural History Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199754182 VPN 2010 Perepis 2010 ru Archived from the original on 2012 01 18 Retrieved 2016 04 03 VPN 2010 Gks ru Retrieved 2016 04 03 Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved 30 December 2022 Slon V Viola B Renaud G Gansauge M Benazzi 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Investigating Holocene human population history in North Asia using ancient mitogenomes Scientific Reports 8 1 8969 Bibcode 2018NatSR 8 8969K doi 10 1038 s41598 018 27325 0 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5997703 PMID 29895902 Dupuy Paula Doumani 2016 06 02 Bronze Age Central Asia Online Only Archaeology doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199935413 013 15 ISBN 978 0 19 993541 3 William Chambers and Robert Chambers 1875 Chambers s Information for the People London and Edinburgh W amp R Chambers pp 274 276 ISBN 9780665469145 Edwin Michael Bridges 1990 Northern Asia World Geomorphology Cambridge University Press pp 124 126 ISBN 978 0 521 28965 8 Ukrainians in Russia s Far East try to maintain community life Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine The Ukrainian Weekly 4 May 2003 Fotoatlas Sibirskie tatary February 27 2002 Archived from the original on 2002 02 27 Siberian Germans Encyclopedia com Fisher Raymond H 1958 Reviewed work The Great Siberian Migration Government and Peasant in Resettlement from Emancipation to the First World War Donald W Treadgold The American Historical Review 63 4 989 990 doi 10 2307 1848991 JSTOR 1848991 Ocenka chislennosti postoyannogo naseleniya po subektam Rossijskoj Federacii Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved 20 July 2024 Russian Federal State Statistics Service 2011 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda Tom 1 2010 All Russian Population Census vol 1 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda 2010 All Russia Population Census in Russian Federal State Statistics Service External linksMedia related to North Asia at Wikimedia Commons