OASES. 305 
_ It may, therefore, be said that the kurgan remains of most favored oases, 
those where water was easily led and found its way in flood, have been eroded and 
buried, wholly obliterated unless they were occupied over 0.57 of the time since 
their foundation. Or, any such city, founded 5,000 years ago and not occupied 
at least 3,000 years, has vanished. Such must have been the fate of those where 
the plains are always aggrading; but along the borders in the region of uptilting 
piedmonts, where oases of type 1b and type IV abound, aggradation was apparently 
so counteracted by crustal movement that during dry periods some areas rose 
above it altogether. It is to that process we owe the preservation above ground 
of both kurgans at Anau. The piedmont on which they rest appears to have been 
uplifted so nearly as fast as the plain aggraded that during all of 10,000 years no 
more than 20 feet of sediments has risen around the North Kurgan, though during 
that time it seems likely that about 80 feet have been deposited farther out in the 
desert. As a check upon the logic of our equations, it is interesting to solve for 
occupation on the North Kurgan. Knowing the total remnantthickness of culture, 
60 feet, and assuming Professor Pumpelly’s estimate of time since foundation, 100 
centuries, we have: taking the remnant height, h=!1G—E (t—l), 64=1 X 2—0.8 
(100—1/) or 2.8/=144 and /=51.5 centuries. Then its original thickness, /G, 
would have been 2 X 51.5 =103 feet, of which it has lost by erosion 43 feet. This, 
taken in view of the deformation testified by its profile, the upper part having 
withered to a rounded form leaving a base under ground of twice the diameter of 
that above ground, seems a conservative estimate. There is, however, no reason 
to suppose that it had ever attained a thickness of 103 feet at any one time. This 
accumulation may have resulted during several periods of occupation, between 
which it was abandoned to erosion. That part of its growth was during reoccupa- 
tion of comparatively recent times is evidenced by quantities of late pottery and 
débris, deep-buried in the wash under its surrounding plain, having drifted down 
there from above, though now absent on top. 
An examination of the surface and gully-sections of 20 or 30 kurgans on the 
zone of constant aggradation, revealed no indication of anything over 1,000 to 3,000 
years old, and such was Mr. Huntington’s experience in his study of 20 or more 
kurgans north of Merv. To one having a general idea about rates of erosion and 
aggradation in this region, it is no surprise that nearly all the kurgans of Central 
Asia seem to belong in the last 2,000 or 3,000 years. ‘There can be very few as old 
as the North Kurgan at Anau still above ground. 
But the very fact that Central Asia has been progressively drying up has 
helped prevent a universal burial of oases of type Ia, those on far-out deltas, 
because streams and their canals contracted, leaving their oases beyond both water 
supply and sedimentation. Many kurgans, then, still rise above the desert for the 
very reason for which they were abandoned. Another set-back against burial 
has been warping. The region of Samarkand has been warped into a low dome 
about 40 miles across, through which the Zerafshan distributaries—many of them 
artificial—have cut their channels to a depth of 50 to roo feet in the highest or 
middle part, some of them reuniting beyond. Now, it is only with canals many 
