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

  • mogolan

    Reviewed 13thNovember2018

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

  • Mike J

    Reviewed 12thJune2019

    We visited this very interesting “museum” on the ancient but still operating water system which provides free water for the local residents at specific times each day. The workmanship is extraordinary bearing in mind how long ago this system was first built.

  • ValerieM7651

    Reviewed 29thMay2017

    A must do, if you want to discover how they manage to have water in Turpan ! The site is also very nice, and the small musée very well done. It explains super well the system.

  • benquintens

    Reviewed 27thJuly2012

    it gives a good idea of the system, but such an important system deserves a better exhibition who is also infested by too many souvenir shops ( a Chinese desease?)

  • mohomed28

    Reviewed 2ndOctober2018

    Nothing real. Some fake exhibition of canals and pipes. I saw real karez at tugok village which was way better.

  • C-Liz1

    Reviewed 4thApril2017

    The Museum is small, but the water system is amazed. Karez systems are the crystallization of ancient Chinese people's diligence and intelligence. Karez systems are the life source of Turpan. In a sense, without them, there would be no Turpan culture. It is worth to...More

  • Margaretha T

    Reviewed 29thJuly2015

    most intresting to be informed about the karezes and what they mean today for the peolpe and how it was long time ago when they were built. That gives you an idea of the changes of the environmental changes.

  • Nico M

    Reviewed 5thNovember2014

    The Karez System is an interesting site to understand how the underground irrigation system was built and used to transport water from the mountains to this area in the middle of the desert. It's pretty impressive that 2000 years ago, without the technology we have...More

  • 703maryt

    Reviewed 24thJune2019

    You enter from the parking lot across the street and take a pedestrian underpass to get to the museum side. The walkway to the museum building has old digging equipment and life of the ancient workers doing their jobs. The building is small but houses...More

  • StephanieP511

    Reviewed 14thSeptember2016

    It was amazing to see this farming paradise in the middle of the desert. This cite teaches you how farmers thousands of years ago figured out a way to access the underground aquifers so they could farm in the desert. Most of the ways of...More

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