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
   
 

West Asia

The landmass of West Asia, also referred to as the Middle East or South-west Asia, has a unique geographic position as a nexus joining Asia, Europe, and Africa. The region is composed of three major physiographic divisions: (1) the mountains and plateaus of the north, (2) a central depression aligned to the Persian Gulf, and (3) a peninsular mass with ranges along the south-west margin. The northern high ranges are recently folded segments of the great alpine system of Eurasia. The main ranges diverge from the central nucleus represented by the Armenian knot. Those in the peninsula are fragments of ancient stable block marked by fracture and rifting. The highlands of West Asia have been grouped into the Iran plateau, Trans-Caucasus, Anatolia, and Arabia and are described in an anti-clockwise sequence (Figure 2 and Annex B).

Figure 2: West Asia

 

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