Hoh Xil

Hoh Xil or Kekexili, (Mongolian for "Blue Ridge", also Aqênganggyai for "Lord of Ten Thousand Mountains"), is an isolated region in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau. On July 7, 2017, the Hoh Xil in Qinghai was listed among the World Heritage Sites as "the largest and highest plateau in the world".[1]

Qinghai Hoh Xil
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Hoh Xil in August
LocationQinghai
CriteriaNatural: (vii)(x)
Reference1540
Inscription2017 (41st session)
Area3,735,632 ha (9,230,950 acres)
Buffer zone2,290,904 ha (5,660,950 acres)
Coordinates35°22′49″N 92°26′21″E
Location in Qinghai
Hoh Xil
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese可可西里
Traditional Chinese可可西里
Literal meaningBlue ridge (in Mongolic)
Tibetan-origin name
Simplified Chinese阿卿贡嘉
Traditional Chinese阿卿貢嘉
Literal meaningLord of ten thousand mountains
Tibetan name
Tibetanཧོ་ཧོ་ཞི་ལི
ཨ་ཆེན་གངས་རྒྱལ
Mongolian name
Mongolian CyrillicХөх шил
Mongolian scriptᠬᠥᠬᠡ ᠰᠢᠯ

Geography

The region covers 83,000 square kilometres at an average elevation of 4,800 metres above sea level, stretches in a meridional (east-west) direction between the Tanggula and Kunlun mountain chains in the border areas of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, northwest China's Qinghai Province and China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The southeastern part of the Hoh Xil, drained by the Chumar River (楚瑪爾河), is one of the major headwater sources of the Yangtze River. The rest of the region is endorheic, with drainage to numerous isolated lakes; this area is sometimes described by hydrologists as the "Hoh Xil lake district".[2] 45,000 square kilometres of the Hoh Xil region, at an average elevation of 4,600 metres, were designated a national nature reserve in 1995. The UNESCO World Heritage Site is encompassed of the western half of Zhidoi County and western part of Qumarlêb County in Qinghai. Bukadaban Feng is considered part of Hoh Xil.[3]

Geology

Hoh Xil is volcanic. The surrounding Northern Tibet volcanic field contains a number of late-Cenozoic volcanoes. Several Hawaiian-style volcanoes are present in this area. Bamaoqiongzong covers an area of 300 km2 and contains a perfectly preserved edifice NE of the summit and a lava flow that overlies Quaternary lake deposits . The Bamaoqiongzong area contains peralkaline phonolitic and foiditic rocks. Yongbohu contains five dacitic, trachyandesitic and andesitic vents. Qiangbaqian covers a broad area along the southern border of the Kunlun mountain range. A cone in the Kekexili caldera, once thought to be observed in eruption on a satellite photo in 1973, is now considered not to have been historically active.[4][5]Synonyms & Subfeatures tab}})

Wildlife

Despite the harsh climate, Hoh Xil is home to more than 230 species of wild animals, 20 of which are under Chinese state protection, including the wild yak, wild donkey, white-lip deer, brown bear and the endangered Tibetan antelope or chiru. The abundant plateau pika, a small burrowing rodent, is the main food of the region's brown bears; the bears also feed on the yak and antelope.[6] The hitherto little-known region, as well the struggling Tibetan antelope, or chiru, became household names in China upon the release of the film Kekexili: Mountain Patrol in 2004. Zhuonai Lake (卓乃湖) in Hoh Xil is known as a gathering place for the Tibetan antelope.[7]

Transportation

The Qingzang Railway and China National Highway 109 run along the eastern boundary of the reserve.[8] The Fenghuoshan Tunnel, presently the world's highest railway tunnel (1338 m long, with entrances located at an elevation of 4905 metres above sea level), was constructed in the area.

See also

References

  1. https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1540/
  2. Zheng, Mianping (1997), An introduction to saline lakes on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, Volume 76 of Monographiae biologicae, Springer, p. 21, ISBN 0-7923-4098-1
  3. 可可西里:与天相接的生命守护人 [Hoh Xil: Ecological Preservation Volunteers who Touch the Sky]. zt.gog.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 23 April 2018. 可可西里地区山峦绵延起伏,{...}有青海第一高峰布喀达板峰
  4. http://www.volcano.si.edu/volcano.cfm?vn=304040
  5. "Unnamed". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution.
  6. Xu Aichun, Jiang Zhigang, Li Chunwang, Guo Jixun, Wu Guosheng, Cai Ping, "Summer Food Habits of Brown Bears in Kekexili Nature Reserve, Qinghai: Tibetan Plateau, China". Ursus, Vol. 17, No. 2 (2006), pp. 132-137
  7. http://www.qhnews.com/kkxl/system/2011/07/13/010410737.shtml
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2005-06-11. Retrieved 2005-05-05.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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