Classroom lesson · The Caspian Sea Coast · 🇮🇷 Iran

The Caspian Sea Coast

Beaches on the world's biggest lake - called a sea because it is so vast

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Iran's northern border runs along the Caspian Sea - the world's largest lake by area, so huge that ancient travellers called it a sea. The Iranian coast is lined with sandy beaches, rice paddies, tea plantations and fishing villages. The mountains rise steeply from the shore, making it one of the most dramatically beautiful coastlines in Asia.

Tell me more

The Caspian Sea is completely landlocked, meaning no rivers from it flow out to an ocean. It is surrounded by five countries - Iran, Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan - and covers an area almost as big as Japan. Because it is so old and cut off from the world's oceans, it has developed its own unique collection of wildlife, including the Caspian seal, several types of sturgeon, and many rare fish found nowhere else.

Along Iran's Caspian shore, the climate is warm and very rainy compared to the rest of the country. The narrow strip of lowland between the mountains and the sea is where most of Iran's rice and tea is grown. Visitors from the hot, dry cities of the interior come here for their holidays, enjoying the lush green countryside and the wide, calm beaches. In the evenings, the smell of grilled fish and freshly brewed tea fills the little seaside towns.

The Caspian has been an important trade and travel route for thousands of years. Silk Road caravans used mountain passes to reach the Caspian ports, and from there goods - spices, silk, precious stones - were shipped north to Russia and beyond. Today fishermen still go out in small wooden boats early in the morning, just as their great-great-grandparents did, returning with nets full of fish for the markets.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01The Caspian has its own unique fish because it has been cut off from the oceans for millions of years. Can you think of other places on Earth where animals developed differently because they were isolated?
  2. 02Five countries share the Caspian Sea. What challenges and opportunities might that create for the people who live along its shores?
  3. 03The same stretch of coastline is both a holiday beach and a working fishing port. How might a fisherman's morning feel different from a tourist's morning in the same place?
Try this

Classroom activity

On a world map, find the Caspian Sea and outline its shape. Then find the countries surrounding it and write their names. Compare its area to a country you know - is it bigger or smaller than your own country? Mark where the Silk Road caravans might have crossed to reach the Caspian ports.