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
   
 

The Pamir

The name Pamir, or the Bam-i-dunya (Roof of the World) of Persian writers, is actually derived from the broad valleys in south-east Tadzhikstan, but since has come to include all the mountains between the Amu Darya (Oxus) River and Alay Range. The Pamir knot is the convergence area of several high ranges. These include the Hindu Kush from the south-west, the Karakoram from the south-east,the Kun Lun from the east, and the Tien Shan from the north-east. Geologically rich and complex (Plate 12), the area's strike lines make a sharp arcuate facing north towards Ferghana. This high mountain complex between the Tarim and Karakum basins is inclined to the west and drained by the Amu Darya. Most of the area lies in Tadzhikstan but the highest summit, Muztag Ata (7,719m), is in a north-south range in China.

© Pitamber Sharma
12. A view of the mountains from Ala Archa National Park, west of Bishkek, Kyrghyzstan

Tadzhikstan is dominated by mountainous relief, as 61.5 per cent of its land surface exceeds 2,000m in elevation. These uplands support only 5.7 per cent of the country's total population due to the severity of the climate (Belkin 1992). The central part is in the form of an enclosed plateau where the Karakul Lake is situated. Westwards, parallel ranges trend towards the south-west. These also have numerous high peaks, of which Pik Communizma (7,495m) is prominent. Among these ranges, the Alayskiy Khrebet marks the northern limit of the Pamir. The area has extensive snowfields and many glaciers. The climate is cold and arid and vegetation sparse. The land is deeply dissected and also affected by intensive seismic processes. It is equally diverse in ethnic composition. The Tadzhik are early migrants from Persia, and they are mostly agriculturists. The Kazakh, Kyrghyz, Turkman, and Uzbek belong to later waves of Mongoloid herders of horses and sheep with their traditional central Asian yurts. The Tadzhik in the north-west are more sedentary and depend on irrigation for crops and fruit cultivation. The Kyrghyz are mostly nomadic and keep flocks of sheep, cattle, and yaks.

Under the Soviet regime, the Central Asian republics were much affected by centralized planning. This not only involved a colonial type of exploitation of minerals and forest resources but also the organized migration of people (Badenkov 1990). This is evident from the composition of the populations of the Republics. Uzbekistan has a population that is 75 per cent Uzbek and ten per cent Tadzhik and Kazakh. In Kyrghyzstan, 58 per cent of the population is Kyrgyhz followed by 14 per cent Uzbek, while Kazakhstan has 46 per cent Kazakh and the majority are from other groups. Since the transition from central planning to a market economy, there has been both increase in product diversity and revival of old traditions.

 

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