Reference Edition
Field Reference for Natural PlacesGeography Atlas
West Siberian Basin Record

Ob River

The Ob River is a major north-flowing Siberian river system formed in the Altai foothill region and draining the West Siberian Plain to the Gulf of Ob and Kara Sea. Its physical geography is shaped by mountain-fed headwaters, the Ob-Irtysh tributary network, very low-gradient floodplains, extensive wetlands, seasonal ice, and an Arctic coastal outlet.

Why This Record Matters

A lowland Arctic river across western Siberia

The Ob adds a West Siberian river model to the atlas, showing how Altai runoff and broad plain drainage become a wetland-rich Arctic watercourse.

TypeArctic lowland basin

A large river system carrying water northward from interior Eurasia to the Kara Sea margin.

Main SettingWest Siberian Plain

The river crosses one of northern Asia's broad lowland drainage regions.

Geographic RoleOb-Irtysh drainage axis

The main river and Irtysh tributary connect mountain, steppe, forest, wetland, and Arctic terrain.

Linked LandscapesFloodplain, wetlands, gulf

Low relief, seasonal flooding, peatland surfaces, and a long estuarine outlet define the lower system.

Overview

What the Ob River is

The Ob River is one of the principal river systems of western Siberia. It forms where the Biya and Katun rivers meet in the Altai foothill region, then flows generally north across Russia's West Siberian Plain.

As a physical geography record, the Ob is best understood as a broad basin rather than a single channel. Its route links mountain-margin runoff, the long Irtysh tributary system, lowland floodplains, taiga and peatland terrain, frozen-season hydrology, and a northern outlet through the Gulf of Ob to the Kara Sea.

Source Region

Altai foothills and headwater junctions

The upper Ob begins near the northern side of the Altai Mountains, where the Biya and Katun rivers combine. These headwater streams drain higher terrain before the main river enters lower, flatter country.

This source arrangement gives the basin a strong contrast between upland runoff and downstream plain flow. The upper river has a clearer mountain-margin identity, while the middle and lower river become increasingly tied to wide valleys, floodplain storage, low banks, and slow gradients.

Basin Form

West Siberian Plain drainage

The West Siberian Plain is central to the Ob's geography. Across this broad lowland, small elevation differences strongly influence drainage patterns, waterlogging, floodplain width, and the spread of wetlands beside the main river and its tributaries.

The Ob-Irtysh system gathers water from a large part of interior Eurasia. The Irtysh, rising far to the southeast before joining the Ob, extends the basin's reach through mountain, steppe, and forest-margin landscapes before the combined system turns toward the Arctic coast.

Headwaters

Biya and Katun confluence

Mountain-fed source rivers meet near the Altai foothills to form the upper Ob.

Middle Basin

Ob-Irtysh network

Large tributaries expand the drainage system across western Siberia and adjacent interior basins.

Outlet

Gulf of Ob

The lower river enters a long estuarine gulf connected to the Kara Sea.

Hydrology

Floodplains, ice, and wetland storage

The Ob's flow is strongly seasonal. Snowmelt and spring thaw raise water levels across the basin, while winter ice cover alters channel behavior and can contribute to ice-jam flooding when thaw advances unevenly along the river.

Low relief makes floodplain storage especially important. Water spreads across side channels, backwaters, marshes, and peatland margins, so the river's physical record includes saturated ground and shallow floodplain water as much as the main channel itself.

Climate

Continental cold and northward transition

The basin spans strong continental climate zones, from southern interior source regions and tributary plains to colder taiga and subarctic lowlands. Long winters, snow storage, short thaw seasons, and summer rainfall all shape the timing of runoff.

Farther north, permafrost, tundra margins, river ice, and shallow coastal waters become more important. These cold-region controls help distinguish the Ob from temperate or monsoon river systems with warmer year-round flow conditions.

Outlet

Gulf of Ob and Kara Sea margin

The lower Ob enters the Gulf of Ob, a long inlet of the Kara Sea on the Arctic Ocean margin. This outlet is not a compact delta like some river mouths; it is a broad transition where freshwater discharge, sediment, seasonal ice, and shallow marine conditions interact along a northern lowland coast.

The gulf completes the river's movement from Altai-adjacent source terrain through the West Siberian Plain to the Arctic shelf. That full sequence makes the Ob a useful atlas counterpart to the Lena River, another large Siberian river with cold-region hydrology and a northward outlet.