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Physical Environment
The configuration of the Asian mountain
system has been determined by tectonic forces, the principal
one being the impact of the Gondwana Plate thrusting
beneath the Angara Plate. This collision is expressed
in the great axes of folding spanning the continent
east-west and then sweeping south to north through the
island chain along the Pacific Rim. The basement of
these Tertiary mountains is of Cenozoic formation, less
than 20 million years old. The youthfulness of the mountains
is evident from their extreme elevation and high relief.
Older Paleozoic and Mesozoic formations in the north-west
and eastern Australia also have fold mountains, but
these have been long eroded into plateaus and peneplains
with some ranges as ancient ribs. As a general pattern,
the folded structure of the Cenozoic formations has
a rough surface configuration, while those of the Paleozoic
and Mesozoic systems are broken or smooth (Table 4).
Apart from structure and relief, other
major components that influence physical environment
are climate, soils, and vegetation. The mountains of
Asia encompass a wide variety of climatic regions as
they span a great latitudinal range. This is evident
from three extreme regions. The first is one of high
altitude at the core of the continent where the climate
varies with elevation, latitude, and exposure, tending
mostly towards temperate to alpine. The second extreme
relates to the subarctic one in eastern Russia with
low precipitation and very long winters. The third one
relates to the tropical islands of South-East Asia where
all months are warm or hot with diurnal rain. Other
climatic variations are the semi-arid to arid of the
west, wet and dry tropical of the south, and the temperate
marine climate of South Australia and New Zealand (Table
4).
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© Madhukar
Rana |
| 20. A Varied Topography, Kabhrepalanchowk,
Nepal |
The dominant soils of highland Asia
are mostly of a mountainous type that is shallow and
that may be grass-covered or barren depending on the
climate of the elevation zone. Other prevalent types
are the chernozemic of the North-West supporting grasslands,
the desertic in the West, and the podzolic of the South
and South-East. In terms of vegetation type, most of
Central and West Asia are xerophytic with patches of
grass. Another extensive type is the mixed forest of
deciduous and evergreen species along the southern slopes
of the Himalayan Range and much of North-East Asia.
South-East Asia is the domain of broad-leaved evergreen
forests. The extremes are represented by the boreal
taiga of the extreme north and savanna grasslands of
Australia.
Asian mountains have great environmental
diversity (Plate 20), ranging from cold and hot deserts
to tropical rain forests. Yet, whatever the bio-climatic
regime, superior elevation and steep slopes are their
distinctive features. Elevation exposes them to erosive
elements and slope facilitates the gravitational flow
of materials downhill. Thus, mountain areas are intensely
affected by processes of surface erosion, either of
water or wind. This has led to the erroneous notion
that the mountains are fragile. In fact, mountains
represent a high energy area with much mass wasting
without which there would be no depositional material
for the adjoining plains. Therefore, it seems more realistic
to consider mountains as dynamic landforms.
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