
The shallow Sea of Azov is clearly distinguished from the deeper Black Sea.
The 'Sea of Azov' ( - ''Azovskoye more''; - ''Azovs'ke more'', ) is a northern section of the
Black Sea, linked to the larger body through the
Strait of Kerch. It is bounded on the north by
Ukraine, on the east by
Russia and on the west by the
Crimean
peninsula.
The
Black Sea deluge theory dates the genesis of the Sea of Azov to
5600 BC, and there are traces of
Neolithic settlement in the area now covered by it. In antiquity, it was known as the Maeotian Lake or Maeotian Sea (
Greek '' and
Latin ''Palus Maeotis''), after the tribe of
Maeotae which inhabited the
Maeotian marshes to the east from the sea.
The current name is popularly said to come from a certain
Polovtsian prince named ''Azum'' or ''Asuf'', who was killed defending a town in this region in 1067. Most scholars derive the name from the city of
Azov, or
Azak, meaning "low" in Turkish, a reference to its location.
The sea is 340 km long and 135 km wide and has an area of 37,555 km² (14,500 mi²). The main rivers flowing into it are the
Don and
Kuban; they ensure that the waters of the sea have comparatively low salinity and are almost fresh in places, and also bring in huge volumes of silt. To the west also lie the 110 km
Arabat Spit and the highly saline marshy inlets of the
Sivash.
The Sea of Azov is the shallowest sea in the world with an average depth of 13 metres and maximum depth of 15.3 metres; where silt has built up, such as the
Gulf of Taganrog, the average depth is less than 1 metre. The prevailing current in the sea is a
counter-clockwise swirl. In the winter large portions of the sea can be ice-bound.
Significant ports on the sea are
Berdyansk,
Mariupol,
Rostov-na-Donu,
Taganrog and
Yeysk. Two canals enter the sea — the
Volga-Don Canal and a link to the
Caspian Sea through the
Manych Canal. The sea has a number of significant fisheries and has been exploited for gas and
oil extraction.
Historically, the sea has had a rich variety of marine life, with over 80 fish 300 invertebrate species identified. But diversity and numbers have been reduced by over-fishing and increasing levels of
pollution.
Crimean War 1854-56
A naval campaign between the Allied navies of
Britain and
France against Russia took place in the Sea of Azov between May and November 1855. The British awarded a bar,
'Azoff', to the
British Crimean War medal to commemorate the campaign.
References