Asia Pacific Mountain Network
   
     
   
 
Foreword
Preface
Abstract
 
Introduction
  Purpose
  Definition
  Asian Context
   
South Asia
  The Karakoram
  The Himalaya
  The North-East
  The Peninsula
  The North-West
   
West Asia
  The Iran Plateau
  Trans-Caucasia
  Anatolia
  Arabia
   
Central Asia
  The Tibetan Plateau
  Hengduan
  Kun Lun
  The Pamir
  Tien Shan
  Altai
  The Urals
   
North-East Asia
  Eastern Russia
  North and East China
  The Korean Peninsula
  The Japanese Archipelago
   
South-East Asia
  The Continental Interior
  Peninsular
  Insular
   
Australasia
  New Guine
  Australia
  New Zealand
   
Thematic Overview
  Physical Environment
  Cultural Diversity
  Economic Frontier
   
 

Purpose

Mountains everywhere constitute a dominant feature of the landscape and pose a challenge to human endeavour. Since the dimension of human endeavour covered in this survey is basically economic, there is minimal treatment of mountain peaks and the exploits of alpinists. The basic approach to this enquiry is to portray mountain areas as composite entities encompassing both pedestals and pinnacles. Much of current mountain research, whether for scientific or application purposes, tends to be either too sectoral or too area specific. Even in the case of geography, a discipline supposed to study phenomena of places, the recent emphasis is on behavioural aspects without considering physical factors (Soffer 1982). Unidisciplinary investigations may enrich systematic knowledge, but their lack of areal context creates problems in terms of comparability and replicability. Hence, the rationale for a synthesis of diverse factors to produce a general systems' overview for comparative analysis. The main purpose of this study is to establish a broad spatial framework for mountain areas in the Asia-Pacific region. This has necessitated positioning their physical, cultural, and economic aspects into a holistic regional setting. Such a composite landscape is based on description of the geological structure, physiographic expression, natural environment, and human occupancy. The output is a set of regional templates of coherent spatial phenomena that facilitate the contextualisation of specialised investigation and research.

© Author
1. What is a Mountain?
Mount Everest from the south. The highest peak in the world at 8,848m peeps over Nuptse-Lhotse ridge in Khumbu, Nepal. Strong westerly winds deflect the cumulus clouds from the highest summits. The alps in the foreground provide summer pasture for yaks.

The mountains of Asia are spread over a vast area and an investigation of such dimensions needs to reconcile the hierarchy of scale. In this context, the three levels of building blocks visualised are: (1) individual ranges as micro-components, (2) their grouping as meso-regions, and (3) finally, the continent as the macro-realm. The intermediate meso-level constitutes the logical vantage point of convergence for micro-analysis and macro-synthesis. Therefore, the focus of this study is on the regional level.

The next six chapters provide a description of Asian mountain and hill ranges according to geographic grouping. There is an obvious imbalance in information about the regions owing to the lack of access to publications about areas outside the Himalayas. Moreover, there is a greater amount of literature on the Himalayas than on other areas because the region has a longer history than the other mountain regions of Asia in terms of exploration and adventure. Surfing the Internet yielded some information, but this was mainly on tourism and mountaineering rather than about scientific facts. As an example, the Asia-Pacific section of IUCN's `The Regional Mountain Profiles' includes 59 mountains of Asia but, of these, 42 are ranges, 11 individual peaks, and six are given by territorial names in Indonesia (IUCN 1988). Hence, providing balanced information about different areas of this region meant pruning out materials on the Himalayas and fleshing out information on other mountain areas through map interpretation.

The survey describes over 110 mountain/hill ranges spread over 37 countries. Since demographic information and economic (statistical) indicators follow administrative/political units, it was not possible during this exercise to disaggregate these by mountain areas. The emphasis, therefore, has been on giving a qualitative account of selected salient features. Finally, mountain areas provide a refuge for relict cultures. This is apparent from the mountain glossary (Appendix I) of indigenous terms for physical features and land use which contains terms from 35 languages.

 

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