Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Tian Shan

System of mountain ranges in Central Asia


System of mountain ranges in Central Asia

FieldValue
nameTian Shan
other_nameTengir-Too, Tengri Tagh, 天山
photoAlpine meadows and snow-covered peaks in Khan Tengri Nature Park, Tien Shan.jpg
photo_captionSnow-covered peaks of central Tian Shan behind alpine meadows, with Nansen Peak (5,697 m) in the middle
mapContinental Asia#China
country
highestJengish Chokusu
elevation_m7439
range_coordinates
coordinates
ageMesozoic and Cenozoic
embedded{{designation listembed=yes
designation1WHS
designation1_offnameXinjiang Tianshan
designation1_date2013 (37th session)
designation1_typeNatural
designation1_criteriavii, ix
designation1_number[1414](https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1414)
designation1_free1nameRegion
designation1_free1valueAsia
designation2WHS
designation2_offnameWestern Tien-Shan
designation2_date2016 (40th session)
designation2_typeNatural
designation2_criteriax
designation2_number[1490](https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1490)
designation2_free1nameRegion
designation2_free1valueAsia

The Tian Shan, also known as the Tengri Tagh or Tengir-Too, is a large system of mountain ranges in Central Asia. The highest peak is Jengish Chokusu at 7439 m high and located in Kyrgyzstan. Its lowest point is at the Turpan Depression, which is 154 m below sea level.

The Tian Shan is sacred in Tengrism. Its second-highest peak is known as Khan Tengri, which can be translated as "Lord of the Spirits". At the 2013 Conference on World Heritage, the eastern portion of Tian Shan in western China's Xinjiang Region was listed as a World Heritage Site. The western portion in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan was then listed in 2016.

Geography

thumb|Tian Shan with the ancient [[Silk Road]]

The Tian Shan range is located north and west of the Taklamakan Desert and directly north of the Tarim Basin. It straddles the border regions of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Xinjiang in Northwest China. To the south, it connects with the Pamir Mountains, while to north and east, it meets the Altai Mountains of Mongolia.

The Tian Shan range extends eastwards for approximately 2,900 kilometers from Tashkent, Uzbekistan. It forms part of the Himalayan orogenic belt, resulting from the collision of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates during the Cenozoic era. The range encompasses the Bogda Shan in the east, as defined by both Western and Chinese cartography.

The Tian Shan's highest peak is Jengish Chokusu (also known as Victory Peak), shared by Kyrgyzstan and China. At 7439 m high, it is the highest point in Kyrgyzstan. The Tian Shan's second highest peak, Khan Tengri (King Heaven), straddles the Kazakhstan-Kyrgyzstan-China tripoint and at 7010 m, is the highest point of Kazakhstan. Mountaineers class these as the two northernmost peaks surpassing 7000 m in the world.

The Torugart Pass, at 3752 m, marks the border between Kyrgyzstan and Xinjiang. The lower-altitude, forested Alatau ranges in the northern Tian Shan is home to Turkic-speaking pastoral tribes.

The Tian Shan is separated from the Tibetan Plateau by the Taklimakan Desert and the Tarim Basin to the south. The Syr Darya, Ili River and Tarim River originate in the Tian Shan. The Aksu Canyon is a prominent feature in the mountain range's northwestern section.

Continuous permafrost typically forms in the Tian Shan at elevations above 3,500-3,700 meters. Discontinuous permafrost can be found as low as 2,000 meters in specific locations influenced by unique topographical and climatic conditions, though it generally occurs between 2,700 and 3,300 meters altitude.

The Tian Shan's glaciers are rapidly receding, losing 27% or 5.4 billion tons of ice since 1961— nearly four times the global average of 7%. By 2050, half of the remaining ice is projected to disappear.

Russian explorer Peter Semenov was one of the first Europeans to extensively document the Tian Shan in the 1850s, ultimately changing his family name to refer to the mountains.

{{Anchor|Kuruk Tagh|Kuruk-tagh}} Ranges

The Tian Shan have a number of named ranges which are often mentioned separately (all distances are approximate):

  • Barkol Tagh (Barkol Shan)
  • Bei Shan
  • Bogda Shan
  • Borohoro Shan
  • Irenchabirga
  • Qarliq Tagh (Qarlik Shan, Karkik Tagh, Karlik Shan, Harlik Shan)
  • Kyrgyz Ala-Too Range (Kyrgyz Alatau, Kyrgyz Range, Alexander Range)
  • Kakshaal Too (Kokschaal Tau, Qaqşaal Too)
  • Küngöy Ala-Too Range (Kungej-Alatau, Kungey Alatau, Kungoy Ala-Too, Küngei Alataw. Kungey Alataw)
  • Ketmen Ridge
  • Kuruk Tagh (Quruq Tagh, Kuruktagh, Kuluketage, Kuruktage Shan)
  • Talas Alatau (Talas Alatow, Talas Ala-Too)
  • Suusamyr Too
  • Terskey Alatoo (Terskey Alatau, Terskej Alatau, Teskey Alatoo)
  • Trans-Ili Alatau (Ile Alatau, Ile Alatauy, Zailiisky Alatau, Transili Alatau)

In China the Tian Shan starts from about 600 to east of Ürümqi, north of Kumul City (Hami) with the Qarlik Tagh and the Barkol Mountains. Then the Bogda Shan (god mountains) run from 350 to east of Ürümqi. Then there is a low area between Ürümqi and the Turfan Depression. The Borohoro Mountains start just south of Ürümqi and run west-northwest 450 km separating Dzungaria from the Ili River basin. Their north end abuts on the 200 km Dzungarian Alatau which runs east northeast along Sino-Kazakh border. They start 50 km east of Taldykorgan in Kazakhstan and end at the Dzungarian Gate. The Dzungarian Alatau in the north, the Borohoro Mountains in the middle and the Ketmen Ridge in the south make a reversed Z or S, the northeast enclosing part of Dzungaria and the southwest enclosing the upper Ili valley.

Map of Tian Shan

In Kyrgyzstan the mainline of the Tian Shan continues as Narat Range from the base of the Borohoros west 570 km to the point where China, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan meet. Here is the highest part of the range – the Central Tian Shan, with Peak Pobeda (Kakshaal Too range) and Khan Tengri. West of this, the Tian Shan split into an 'eye', with Issyk Kul Lake in its center. The south side of the lake is the Terskey Alatau and the north side the Kyungey Ala-Too (shady and sunny Ala-Too). North of the Kyungey Ala-Too and parallel to it is the Trans-Ili Alatau in Kazakhstan just south of Almaty. West of the eye, the range continues 400 km as the Kyrgyz Ala-Too, separating Chüy Region from Naryn Region of Kyrgyzstan and then Kazakhstan from the upper valley of the river Talas, the south side of which is the 200 km Talas Ala-Too Range ('Ala-too' is a Kyrgyz spelling, while ‘Alatau’ is a Kazakh spelling). At the east end of the Talas Alatau the Suusamyr Too range runs southeast enclosing the Suusamyr Valley or plateau.

As for the area south of the Fergana Valley there is an 800 km group of mountains that curves west-southwest from south of Issyk Kul Lake separating the Tarim Basin from the Fergana Valley. The Fergana Range runs northeast towards the Talas Ala-Too and separates the upper Naryn basin from Fergana proper. The southern side of these mountains merge into the Pamirs in Tajikistan (Alay Mountains and Trans-Alay Range). West of this is the Turkestan Range, which continues almost to Samarkand.

Ice Age

The Tian Shan plateau, stretching 100 to 120 km wide, is located on the northern margin of the Tarim Basin between the Kokshaal-Tau mountain chain to the south and the Terskey Alatau mountain chain to the north. The Kokshaal-Tau extends for 570 km from Pik Dankowa in the west to Pik Pobeda in the east-northeast. This mountain chain, along with the parallel Terskey Alatau and the Tian Shan plateau in between, were covered by connected ice-stream-networks and a plateau glacier during glacial times. The only remaining interglacial remnant of this glaciation is the 61 km long South Inylschek glacier. The outlet glacier tongues of the plateau glacier flowed northward down to Lake Issyk Kul, calving in this 160 km long lake.

Similarly, strong glaciation was present in the high mountain area of the Kungey Alatau, which stretches for 230 km north of Issyk Kul and connects to the mountain foreland near Alma Ata. The glacial glaciers from the Kungey Alatau also calved into Lake Issyk Kul, with the Ak-Sai valley glacier developing a mountain foreland glacier. The Chon-Kemin valley was glaciated up to its inflow into the Chu valley.

Altogether, the glacial Tian Shan glaciation occupied an area of approximately 118,000 square kilometers. The glacier snowline was about 1200m lower during the last ice age than it is today. This would result in a depression of the average annual temperature of 7.2 to 8.4 °C for the Last Glacial Maximum compared with today, assuming a comparable precipitation ratio.

Ecology

Koldeneng Valley in [[Ili Prefecture

The Tian Shan holds important forests of Schrenk's spruce (Picea schrenkiana) at altitudes of over 2000 m; the lower slopes have unique natural forests of wild walnuts and apples.

The Tian Shan in its immediate geological past was kept from glaciation due to the "protecting" warm influence of the Indian Ocean monsoon climate. This defined its ecological features which could sustain its distinctive ecosphere. The mountains were subjected to constant geological changes with constantly evolving drainage systems which affected the patterns of vegetation, as well as exposing fertile soil for newly emerging seedlings to thrive in.

Tulips originated in the Tian Shan Mountains. The plant then made its way to Turkey via the Silk Road and became a symbol of the Ottoman Empire.

Ancestors of important crop vegetation were established and thrived in the area, among them: apricots (Prunus armeniaca), pears (Pyrus spp.), pomegranates (Punica granatum), figs (Ficus), cherries (Prunus avium) and mulberries (Morus). The Tian Shan region also included important animals like bears, deer, and wild boar, which helped to spread seeds and expand ecological diversity.

Among the vegetation colonizing the Tian Shan came, likely via birds from the east, the ancestors of what we know as the "sweet" apple. The fruit probably then looked like a tiny, long-stalked, bitter apple something like Malus baccata, the Siberian crab. The pips may have been carried in a bird's crop or clotted onto feet or feathers.

The strain of Y. pestis which caused the bubonic plague now know as the Black Death may have originated in the Tian Shan, spreading along the Silk Road and killing half of Europe's population in the mid 1300s.

Climate

Tian Shan has an alpine climate (Köppen climate classification ETH).

|Jan record high C = 0.4 |Feb record high C = 2.2 |Mar record high C = 8.5 |Apr record high C = 13.2 |May record high C = 15.5 |Jun record high C = 15.6 |Jul record high C = 19.2 |Aug record high C = 18.5 |Sep record high C = 16.4 |Oct record high C = 11.2 |Nov record high C = 6.5 |Dec record high C = 3.2 |Jan record low C = -39.7 |Feb record low C = -34.7 |Mar record low C = -31.2 |Apr record low C = -24.6 |May record low C = -18.8 |Jun record low C = -12.9 |Jul record low C = -6.9 |Aug record low C = -14.4 |Sep record low C = -17.5 |Oct record low C = -21.8 |Nov record low C = -36.4 |Dec record low C = -35.5 |access-date = April 14, 2024 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20240414033857/https://www.nodc.noaa.gov/archive/arc0216/0253808/2.2/data/0-data/Region-2-WMO-Normals-9120/Kyrgyzstan/CSV/Tian-Shan_36982.csv |archive-date = 2024-04-14}}}}

Religion

Tengrism

In Tengrism, Khan Tengri, is the lord of all spirits and the religion's supreme deity, and it is the name given to the second highest peak of Tian Shan.

Name

One of the earliest historical references to these mountains may be related to the Xiongnu word Qilian (), which, according to Tang commentator Yan Shigu, is the Xiongnu word for "sky" or "heaven". Sima Qian, in the Records of the Grand Historian, mentioned Qilian in relation to the homeland of the Yuezhi, and the term is believed to refer to the Tian Shan rather than the range 1500 km further east now known as the Qilian Mountains. The name of the Otgontenger in Mongolia has the same meaning.

Notes

References

Citations

Sources

  • The Contemporary Atlas of China. 1988. London: Marshall Editions Ltd. Reprint 1989. Sydney, NSW: Collins Publishers Australia.
  • The Times Comprehensive Atlas of the World. Eleventh Edition. 2003. London, England: Times Books Group Ltd.

References

  1. Prichard, James. (1844). "History of the Asiatic Nations".
  2. "Ensemble Tengir-Too".
  3. (1980). "Natural Wonders of the World". Reader's Digest Association, Inc..
  4. Wilkinson, Philip. (2 October 2003). "Myths and Legends". Stacey International.
  5. "新疆天山成功申遗".
  6. "Western Tien-Shan". United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
  7. Gorbunov, A.P.. (1993). "PERMAFROST: Sixth International Conference. Proceedings. July 5–9, Beijing, China". South China University of Technology Press.
  8. Naik, Gautam. (August 17, 2015). "Central Asia Mountain Range Has Lost a Quarter of Ice Mass in 50 Years, Study Says". Wall Street Journal.
  9. (2000). "Pamir and Tian Shan. Contribution of the Quaternary History. International Workshop at the University of Bayreuth".
  10. Kuhle, M.. (1994). "Proceedings of the International Symposium on the Karakorum and Kunlun Mountains (ISKKM), Kashi, China, June 1992". China Meteorological Press.
  11. (1994). "Würm Glaciation of Lake Issyk-Kul Area, Tian Shan Mts.: A Case Study in Glacial History of Central Asia". [[GeoJournal]].
  12. Kuhle, M.. (2004). "Quaternary Glaciations - Extent and Chronology". Elsevier.
  13. Janik, Erika. (October 25, 2011). "How the apple took over the planet". [[Salon (website).
  14. Great Courses: 'The Botanist's Eye'(DVD 2 chapter 7) by Catherine Kleier, PhD from California Polytechnic State University.
  15. Juniper, Barrie E.. (2007). "The Mysterious Origin of the Sweet Apple: On its way to a grocery counter near you, this delicious fruit traversed continents and mastered coevolution". American Scientist.
  16. Hunt, Katie. (June 15, 2022). "DNA analysis reveals source of Black Death". CNN.
  17. link. [[China Meteorological Administration]]
  18. 班固. (2015-08-20). "漢書: 顏師古註 Hanshu: Yan Shigu Commentary".
  19. Liu, Xinru. (Fall 2001). "Migration and Settlement of the Yuezhi-Kushan: Interaction and Interdependence of Nomadic and Sedentary Societies". Journal of World History.
  20. (2000). "The Tarim Mummies: Ancient China and the Mystery of the Earliest Peoples from the West". Thames & Hudson.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Tian Shan — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report