Misplaced Pages

Ala-Köl

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Ala-Köl ( Kyrgyz : Ала-Көл , also Алакөл, Russian : Ала-Куль , romanized :  Ala-Kul ) is a rock-dammed lake in the Terskey Alatau mountain range in the Ak-Suu District of the Issyk-Kul Region in Kyrgyzstan . It lies at an altitude of 3,532 m (11,588 ft). It is 2.8 km (1.7 mi) long and 600–700 m (2,000–2,300 ft) wide. Its area is 1.5 km (0.58 sq mi).

#222777

4-403: A Russian traveller named Putimtsoff was the first to knowingly visit the lake in 1811. He gave a good description of it, mentioning rocks of different colours in the lake, and the furious winds blowing around the lake. Thirty years later Alexander von Schrenk explored the lake and its surroundings. Literally, the name Ala-Köl would mean 'variegated lake,' although it probably takes its name from

8-615: The University of Dorpat ( Tartu ), later spending several years as an assistant at the botanical garden in St. Petersburg . He was habilitated for mineralogy at Dorpat, where from 1849 he served as a lecturer. From 1858 he spent the next ten years at his wife's manor in Pühajärve ( Heiligensee ), Livonia , returning to Dorpat in 1868, where he died several years later. Known for his expeditions to Central Asia and northern Russia, he

12-562: The Ala-Таu mountains lying further north. This Kyrgyzstan location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Alexander von Schrenk Alexander Gustav von Schrenk (4 February 1816 – 25 June 1876) was a Baltic German -Russian naturalist born near Tula in what was then the Russian Empire . He was a brother to zoologist Leopold von Schrenck (1826–1894). From 1834 to 1837, he studied sciences at

16-876: Was the author of Reise nach dem Nordosten des europäischen Rußlands, durch die Tundren der Samojeden, zum arktischen Uralgebirge , a two-volume work involving a journey to the Arctic that was later translated into English. While traveling in the historic region of Dzhungaria in Central Asia, he identified numerous new species of plants and insects. Schrenk was co-founder of the Dorpater Naturforschergesellschaft ( Tartu Naturalists' Society ). The species Picea schrenkiana (Schrenk's spruce), in 1841, and Tulipa schrenkii (Schrenck's tulip) are named in his honor. Also in 1841, botanists Fisch. and C.A.Mey. published Schrenkia , which

#222777