(Redirected from Koryak Autonomous Okrug)
'Koryak Okrug' (, ''Koryaksky okrug'';
Koryak: Чав’чываокруг), or 'Koryakia', is an administrative division of
Kamchatka Krai,
Russia.
[1] It was a
federal subject of
Russia (an
autonomous okrug of
Kamchatka Oblast) until
July 1,
2007, when it merged with Kamchatka Oblast. Prior to merger, it was called 'Koryak Autonomous Okrug' (Коря́кский автоно́мный о́круг).
With a population of 25,157 (
2002 Census), about a quarter of them
Koryaks, it had the
smallest population of all
Russian federal subjects, despite being
ranked 17th in size, at 301,500 km².
The
urban-type settlement of
Palana was the administrative center of Koryakia
Administrative divisions
Demographics
''Population'':
The population was 25,157 according to the
2002 Census and was estimated to be 23,800 in 2005.
''Vital statistics'' (2005):
★ Births: 294 (birth rate 12.5)
★ Deaths: 466 (death rate 19.8)
''Ethnic groups'':
About 40% of the total population is indigenous, the 6,710
Koryaks being the largest such group. They are, however, outnumbered by the 12,719 ethnic
Russians. According to the
2002 Census the ‘national composition’ was •
Russian 50.56% •
Koryak 26.67% •
Chukchi 5.61% •
Itelmen 4.69% •
Ukrainian 4.09% •
Even 2.99% •
Tatar 0.86% •
Belarusians 0.56% •
Kamchadal 0.53% • and a few other groups of less than one hundred persons each. In addition 0.76% of the inhabitants declined to state their nationality on the census questionnaire.
[2]
Historical figures are shown below:
| census 1939 | census 1959 | census 1970 | census 1979 | census 1989 | census 2002 |
|---|
| Koryaks | 6,855 (27.2%) | 5,010 (18.2%) | 5,893 (19.1%) | 5,660 (16.2%) | 6,572 (16.5%) | 6,710 (26.7%) |
| Chukchis | 1,267 (5.0%) | 1,062 (3.9%) | 1,164 (3.8%) | 1,222 (3.5%) | 1,460 (3.7%) | 1,412 (5.6%) |
| Itelmens | 801 (3.2%) | 900 (3.3%) | 970 (3.1%) | 1,002 (2.9%) | 1,179 (3.0%) | 1,181 (4.7%) |
| Evens | 714 (2.8%) | 520 (1.9%) | 613 (2.0%) | 476 (1.4%) | 713 (1.8%) | 751 (3.0%) |
| Russians | 13,794 (54.8%) | 16,674 (60.6%) | 19,522 (63.1%) | 22,493 (64.5%) | 24,773 (62.0%) | 12,719 (50.6%) |
| Ukrainians | 847 (3.4%) | 1,310 (4.8%) | 1,186 (3.8%) | 1,999 (5.7%) | 2,896 (7.3%) | 1,029 (4.1%) |
| Others | 882 (3.5%) | 2,049 (7.4%) | 1,569 (5.1%) | 1,999 (5.7%) | 2,347 (5.9%) | 1,355 (5.4%) |
2006 earthquake
Main articles: 2006 Kamchatka earthquakes
On
April 20,
2006, Russia's
Kamchatka Peninsula was struck by a major
earthquake. The 7.7-magnitude tremblor had its epicenter near the village of
Tilichiki. The Koryakia branch of the
Russian Office of Emergency Situations said some area residents were injured but there were no fatalities.
The quake occurred at about noon local time Friday, so residents were awake and not caught in their beds.
The
United States Geological Survey reported a series of at least fifty smaller aftershocks in the area and immediately offshore. They ranged from 4.1 to 6.5 magnitudes on the
Richter scale.
Bruce Presgrave, a geophysicist with the U.S.G.S. in
Colorado, said the quake was relatively shallow. He estimated that about 2,000 people live close enough to the epicenter to have felt its full force.
Reference
1. Федеральный конституционный закон №2-ФКЗ от 12 июля 2006 года "Об образовании в составе Российской Федерации нового субъекта Российской Федерации в результате объединения Камчатской области и Корякского автономного округа". Статья 5. (Federal Constitutional Law #2-FKZ of July 12, 2006 ''On Creation of a New Federal Subject Within the Russian Federation as a Result of the Merger of Kamchatka Oblast and Koryak Autonomous Okrug''. Article 5)
2.