Karez Well


  • karez well
  • karez well
  • karez well
  • karez well
  • karez well
  • karez well
  • karez well
  • karez well
  • karez well
  • karez well

The Turpan water system or Turfan water system (locally called karez, Uyghur: كارىز, кариз‎, ULY: kariz) in Turpan, located in the Turpan Depression, Xinjiang, China,  is a vertical tunnel system adapted by the Turpan people. The word  karez means  "well" in the local Uyghur language. Turpan has the Turpan Water Museum (a Protected Area of the People's Republic of China) dedicated to demonstrating its karez water system, as well as exhibiting other historical artifacts.

Turpan's well system  was crucial in Turpan's development as an important oasis stopover on the ancient Silk Road skirting the barren and hostile Taklamakan Desert. Turpan  owes its prosperity to the water provided by its karez well system.

Description

Turpan's karez water system is made up of a horizontal series of vertically dug wells that are then linked by underground water canals to collect water from the watershed surface runoff from the base of the Tian Shan Mountains and the nearby Flaming Mountains. The canals channel the water to the surface, taking advantage of the current provided by the gravity of the downward slope of the Turpan Depression. The canals are mostly underground to reduce water evaporation and to make the slope long enough to reach far distances being only gravity fed.

The system has wells, dams and underground canals built to store the water and control the amount of water flow. Vertical wells are dug at various points to tap into the groundwater flowing down sloping land from the source, the mountain runoff. The water is then channeled through underground canals dug from the bottom of one well to the next well and then  to the desired destination, Turpan's irrigation system. This irrigation system of special connected wells has been claimedto originate in Iran (e.g., the qanat system), to have originated indigenously, or to have been invented in other parts of China.  Both historical and archaeological research convincingly point to the origins of this technology as arriving from more western regions along with indigenous innovations.

In Xinjiang, the greatest number of karez wells are  in the Turpan Depression, where today there remain over 1100 karez wells and channels having a total length of over 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi). The local geography makes karez wells practical for agricultural irrigation and other uses. Turpan is located in the second deepest geographical depression in the world, with over 4,000 km2 (1,500 sq mi) of land below sea level and with soil that forms a sturdy basin. Water naturally flows down from the nearby mountains during the rainy season in an underground current to the low depression basin under the desert. The Turpan summer is very hot and dry with periods of wind and blowing sand.

Importance

Ample water was crucial to Turpan, so that the oasis city could service the many  caravans on the Silk Route resting there near a route  skirting the Taklamakan Desert. The caravans included merchant traders and missionaries with their armed escorts, animals including camels, sometimes numbering into the thousands, along with camel drivers, agents and other personnel, all of whom might stay for a week or more. The caravans needed pastures for their animals, resting facilities, trading bazaars for conducting business, and replenishment of food and water.

Threatened by global warming

There are 20,000 glaciers in Xinjiang – nearly half of all the glaciers in China. The water from the glaciers via the underground channels has provided a stable water source year round, independent of season, for thousands of years. But since the 1950s, Xinjiang's glaciers have retreated by between 21 percent to 27 percent due to global warming, threatening the agricultural productivity of the region.

Client’s Reviews

  • allanamyt2016

    allanamyt2016

    Reviewed 27thSeptember2017

    This tour is very educational It shows how ancient people risk their lives can design a system to find underground water,with cold frozen feet to dig underground tunnel The other fascinating thing is how they can make the tunnel straight by using the " pointing"...More

  • ramdam75

    ramdam75

    Reviewed 10thSeptember2012

    Frankly, leaving turpan without knowing what about the karez and their importance for local life would be a real loss so you should pay a visit. The museum is very basic but presents the necessary information. The surroundings are a bit overbuilt, as in many...More

  • induway

    induway

    Reviewed 25thJune2013

    It's interesting to learn about the Karez System, but the whole museum is fake and a re-enactment of the history... so lame.

  • Stuti

    Stuti

    Reviewed 7thOctober2012

    Amazing engineering but the center is so awfully designed that you don't really experience this engineering marvel, worse still you exit the center to the loud tunes of Uighur pop and salespeople racing to sell you completely random mementos.

  • mogolan

    mogolan

    Reviewed 13thNovember2018

    Although very touristic place, it is worth finding out how in such a desert place you can get water.

  • 128hilaryh

    128hilaryh

    Reviewed 10thSeptember2015

    Very interesting explanation of the Karez irrigation system. Great to see the well and to go underground. Above ground is a rather bonkers attraction with grapes etc. worth a visit with a guide to explain. Also cool in the heat of the desert.

  • l80_stephane

    l80_stephane

    Reviewed 2ndOctober2016

    Date of visit: 18/09/2016 I was expecting to go underground and walk for a couple of hours discovering the Karez system but instead of that the visit is limited to a 500m walk underneath and then stalls with vendors outside. So the visit last less...More

  • D9006BZpaulc

    D9006BZpaulc

    Reviewed 25thNovember2017

    This is an underground aqueduct system created thousands of years ago to move war water from snowpacks from nearby mountains to this oasis. The accomplishment is in fact great and the Chinese view it as rivaling the Great Wall. There is not a lot to...More

  • Greg_and_Claude

    Greg_and_Claude

    Reviewed 20thMay2016

    You don't have to be an engineer to understand and appreciate how this water collection and distribution system works. It is well described pictorially. The display is simple but very informative. Worth a visit. It is one of the three main ancient engineering feats of...More

  • merc8989

    merc8989

    Reviewed 8thNovember2012

    rated the 3rd marvel after Great Wall n Grand Canal, this describe how a desert region can survive for the past 3000 years. Water from the snow capped mountains were directed through thousand miles of man made underground tunnels. Wells n tunnels were dug all...More

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