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trans-alay+range Latitude and Longitude:

39°20′00″N 72°55′00″E / 39.3333°N 72.9167°E / 39.3333; 72.9167
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trans-Alay Range
Kyrgyz: Чоң Алай кырка тоосу
Russian: Заалайский хребет
Trans-Alay Range and Alay Valley
Highest point
Peak Lenin Peak
Elevation7,134 m (23,406 ft)
Coordinates 39°20′00″N 72°55′00″E / 39.3333°N 72.9167°E / 39.3333; 72.9167
Dimensions
Length250 km (160 mi) E-W
Width40 km (25 mi) N-S
Naming
Language of nameky
Geography
Trans-Alay Range is located in Tajikistan
Trans-Alay Range
Location in Tajikistan
Country Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan
Region Osh Province, Gorno-Badakshan
Geology
Age of rock Paleozoic and Mesozoic
Type of rock Limestone and schist

The Trans-Alay Range ( Kyrgyz: Чоң Алай кырка тоосу, romanizedChong Alay kyrka toosu; Russian: Заалайский хребет, romanizedZaalaisky Khrebet; also 'Trans Alai') is the northernmost range of the Pamir Mountain System.

Geography

The Trans-Alay is located in the area where the Pamirs and the Tian Shan come together. This heavily glaciated range forms the border between Gorno-Badakshan region in Tajikistan and Osh Region, Kyrgyzstan, stretching eastwards until the border with China. To the north lies the Alay Valley and to the south, the river Muksu. [1]

Peaks

The highest peak in the range is 7,134 m high Lenin Peak. [2] The Kyzylart and Ters-Agar mountain passes geographically divide the range into three parts: the western —highest peak Sat Peak [ de] (5,900 m), the central —with some of the highest summits, including Lenin Peak, Dzerzhinsky Peak [ de] (6717 m), Oktyabrsy Peak [ de] ( 6780 m), and Marshal Zhukov Peak (6,842 m), [3] and the eastern — highest peak Kurumdy I summit (6,614 m). [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ошская область:Энциклопедия [Encyclopedia of Osh Oblast] (in Russian). Frunze: Chief Editorial Board of Kyrgyz Soviet Encyclopedia. 1987. p. 448.
  2. ^ Yevgeniy Gippenreiter, Vladimir Shataev, Six and Seventhousanders of the Tien Shan and the Pamirs, in: Alpine Journal 1996
  3. ^ "Pik Marshal Zhukov". Peakware.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 13 March 2018.



trans-alay+range Latitude and Longitude:

39°20′00″N 72°55′00″E / 39.3333°N 72.9167°E / 39.3333; 72.9167
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trans-Alay Range
Kyrgyz: Чоң Алай кырка тоосу
Russian: Заалайский хребет
Trans-Alay Range and Alay Valley
Highest point
Peak Lenin Peak
Elevation7,134 m (23,406 ft)
Coordinates 39°20′00″N 72°55′00″E / 39.3333°N 72.9167°E / 39.3333; 72.9167
Dimensions
Length250 km (160 mi) E-W
Width40 km (25 mi) N-S
Naming
Language of nameky
Geography
Trans-Alay Range is located in Tajikistan
Trans-Alay Range
Location in Tajikistan
Country Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan
Region Osh Province, Gorno-Badakshan
Geology
Age of rock Paleozoic and Mesozoic
Type of rock Limestone and schist

The Trans-Alay Range ( Kyrgyz: Чоң Алай кырка тоосу, romanizedChong Alay kyrka toosu; Russian: Заалайский хребет, romanizedZaalaisky Khrebet; also 'Trans Alai') is the northernmost range of the Pamir Mountain System.

Geography

The Trans-Alay is located in the area where the Pamirs and the Tian Shan come together. This heavily glaciated range forms the border between Gorno-Badakshan region in Tajikistan and Osh Region, Kyrgyzstan, stretching eastwards until the border with China. To the north lies the Alay Valley and to the south, the river Muksu. [1]

Peaks

The highest peak in the range is 7,134 m high Lenin Peak. [2] The Kyzylart and Ters-Agar mountain passes geographically divide the range into three parts: the western —highest peak Sat Peak [ de] (5,900 m), the central —with some of the highest summits, including Lenin Peak, Dzerzhinsky Peak [ de] (6717 m), Oktyabrsy Peak [ de] ( 6780 m), and Marshal Zhukov Peak (6,842 m), [3] and the eastern — highest peak Kurumdy I summit (6,614 m). [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ошская область:Энциклопедия [Encyclopedia of Osh Oblast] (in Russian). Frunze: Chief Editorial Board of Kyrgyz Soviet Encyclopedia. 1987. p. 448.
  2. ^ Yevgeniy Gippenreiter, Vladimir Shataev, Six and Seventhousanders of the Tien Shan and the Pamirs, in: Alpine Journal 1996
  3. ^ "Pik Marshal Zhukov". Peakware.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 13 March 2018.



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