Urkash

Urkash (Орқаш Уркаш) is a lake in Kamysty District, Kostanay Region, Kazakhstan.

The nearest inhabited place is Urkash village, located 20 km to the west. Salt has been mined at the lake since the 19th century, mostly for household purposes.

Geography
Urkash is located in a sector of scattered small lakes of the western Turgay Plateau. Lakes of the area are both fresh water and saline. Most of the Urkash lakeshore is rocky, but the southern coastline is flat and marshy. The Kazakhstan–Russia border lies about 60 km to the west. Lake Zharsor, the second largest lake of the area, lies about 8 km to the ENE. The lake is fed by groundwater and snow. River Sarybalkash is the main inflow of the lake. Its waters are salty.

Flora and fauna
Urkash belongs to the Zharsor-Urkash Lake System a 41250 ha Ramsar site since 2007. The southern shore of the lake is covered with reeds. The Zharsor-Urkash Lake System, of which the lake is a part, is a regular stopping site of the critically endangered siberian crane. The lake also provides a place for the nesting, migration and molting of wetland bird species, such as the white-fronted goose, common crane, little stint and curlew sandpiper.