Gobi Desert
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Gobi Desert | |
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Length | 1,500 km (930 mi) |
Width | 800 km (500 mi) |
Area | 1,295,000 km2 (500,000 sq mi) |
Naming | |
Native name | |
Geography | |
Countries | |
State | |
Region | Inner Mongolia |
Coordinates | 42°35′N 103°26′E / 42.59°N 103.43°E |
Gobi Desert | |||||
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Chinese name | |||||
Mongolian Cyrillic | Говь | ||||
Mongolian script | ᠭᠣᠪᠢ | ||||
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The Gobi Desert (
Geography
The Gobi measures 1,600 km (1,000 mi) from southwest to northeast and 800 km (500 mi) from north to south. The desert is widest in the west, along the line joining the
in area.In its broadest definition, the Gobi includes the long stretch of desert extending from the foot of the
A relatively large area on the east side of the Greater Khingan range, between the upper waters of the
Much of the Gobi is not sandy, instead resembling exposed bare rock.
Climate
The Gobi is overall a cold desert, with frost and occasionally snow occurring on its dunes. Besides being quite far north, it is also located on a plateau roughly 910–1,520 m (2,990–4,990 ft) above sea level, which contributes to its low temperatures. An average of about 194 mm (7.6 in) of rain falls annually in the Gobi. Additional moisture reaches parts of the Gobi in winter as snow is blown by the wind from the Siberian Steppes. These winds may cause the Gobi to reach −40 °C (−40 °F) in winter to 45 °C (113 °F) in summer.[5]
However, the climate of the Gobi is one of great extremes,[2] with rapid changes of temperature[2] of as much as 35 °C (63 °F) in 24-hour spans.
(1190 m) | Ulaanbaatar (1150 m) | |
---|---|---|
Annual mean | −2.5 °C (27.5 °F) | −0.4 °C (31.3 °F) |
January mean | −26.5 °C (−15.7 °F) | −21.6 °C (−6.9 °F) |
July mean | 17.5 °C (63.5 °F) | 18.2 °C (64.8 °F) |
Extremes | −47 to 34 °C (−53 to 93 °F) | −42.2 to 39.0 °C (−44.0 to 102.2 °F) |
In southern Mongolia, the temperature has been recorded as low as −32.8 °C (−27.0 °F). In contrast, in Alxa, Inner Mongolia, it rises as high as 37 °C (99 °F) in July.
Average winter minimums are a frigid −21 °C (−6 °F), while summertime maximums are a warm 27 °C (81 °F). Most of the
Although the southeast
Conservation, ecology, and economy
The Gobi Desert is the source of many important fossil finds, including the first
Archeologists and paleontologists have done excavations in the
Despite the harsh conditions, these deserts and the surrounding regions sustain many animals species, some are even unique, including
The area is vulnerable to trampling by livestock and off-road vehicles (effects from human intervention are greater in the eastern Gobi Desert, where rainfall is heavier and may sustain livestock). In Mongolia, grasslands have been degraded by goats, which are raised by nomadic herders as source of cashmere wool.[12]
Large copper deposits are being mined by
Desertification
The Gobi Desert is expanding through desertification, most rapidly on the southern edge into China, which is seeing 3,600 km2 (1,390 sq mi) of grassland overtaken every year. Dust storms increased in frequency between 1996 and 2016, causing further damage to China's agriculture economy. However, in some areas desertification has been slowed or reversed.[15]
The northern and eastern boundaries between desert and grassland are constantly changing. This is mostly due to the climate conditions before the growing season, which influence the rate of evapotranspiration and subsequent plant growth.[16]
The expansion of the Gobi is attributed mostly to human activities, locally driven by deforestation, overgrazing, and depletion of water resources, as well as to climate change.[15]
China has tried various plans to slow the expansion of the desert, which have met with some success.
Ecoregions
The Gobi, broadly defined, can be divided into five distinct dry
- Mongolian-Manchurian grasslandto the north, the Yellow River Plain to the southeast, and the Alashan Plateau semi-desert to the southeast and east.
- Alashan Plateau semi-desert, lies west and southwest of the Eastern Gobi desert steppe. It consists of the desert basins and low mountains lying between the Gobi Altai range on the north, the Helan Mountains to the southeast, and the Qilian Mountains and northeastern portion of the Tibetan Plateau on the southwest.
- Gobi Lakes Valley desert steppe, ecoregion lies north of Alashan Plateau semi-desert, between the Gobi Altai range to the south and the Khangai Mountains to the north.
- Emin Valley steppe to the west, on the China-Kazakhstanborder.
- Desert of Lop.
Eastern Gobi desert steppe
The surface is extremely diversified, although there are no great differences in vertical elevation. Between Ulaanbaatar (48°00′N 107°00′E / 48.000°N 107.000°E) and the small lake of Iren-dubasu-nor (43°45′N 111°50′E / 43.750°N 111.833°E), the surface is greatly eroded. Broad flat depressions and basins are separated by groups of flat-topped mountains of relatively low elevation 150 to 180 m (490 to 590 ft), through which archaic rocks crop out as crags and isolated rugged masses. The floors of the depressions lie mostly between 900 and 1,000 m (3,000 and 3,300 ft) above sea-level. Further south, between Iren-dutiasu-nor and the Yellow River, comes a region of broad tablelands alternating with flat plains, the latter ranging at altitudes of 1000–1100 m and the former at 1,070 to 1,200 m (3,510 to 3,940 ft). The slopes of the plateaus are more or less steep and are sometimes penetrated by "bays" of the lowlands.[2]
As the border-range of the Hyangan is approached, the country steadily rises up to 1,370 m (4,490 ft) and then to 1,630 m (5,350 ft). Here small lakes frequently fill the depressions, though the water in them is generally salty or brackish. Both here and for 320 km (199 mi) south of Ulaanbaatar, streams are frequent and grass grows more or less abundantly. Through all the central parts, until the bordering mountains are reached, trees and shrubs are utterly absent. Clay and sand are the predominant formations; the watercourses, especially in the north, being frequently excavated 2 to 3 m (6 ft 7 in to 9 ft 10 in) deep. In many places in the flat, dry valleys or depressions farther south, beds of
The altitudes are higher, those of the lowlands ranging from 1,000 to 1,700 m (3,300 to 5,600 ft), and those of the ranges from 200 to 500 m (660 to 1,640 ft) higher, though in a few cases they reach altitudes of 2,400 m (7,900 ft). The elevations do not form continuous chains, but make up a congeries of short ridges and groups rising from a common base and intersected by a labyrinth of ravines, gullies, glens, and basins. But the
The vast desert is crisscrossed by several trade routes, some of which have been in use for thousands of years. Among the most important are those from Kalgan (at the Great Wall) to Ulaanbaatar (960 km (597 mi)); from Jiuquan (in Gansu) to Hami 670 km (416 mi); from Hami to Beijing (2,000 km (1,243 mi)); from Hohhot to Hami and Barkul; and from Lanzhou (in Gansu) to Hami.[2]
Alashan Plateau semi-desert
The southwestern portion of the Gobi (known also as the Xitao or the “Little Gobi”) encompasses the distance between the great northern loop of the Yellow River to the east, the Ejin River to the west, and the Qilian Mountains and narrow rocky chain of Longshou, 3,200 to 3,500 m (10,500 to 11,500 ft) in altitude, to the southwest. The Ordos Desert, which covers the northeastern portion of the Ordos Plateau (also near the great northern loop of the Yellow River) is part of this ecoregion within the middle basin of three great depressions into which Potanin divides the Gobi.[2]
"Topographically," says
Dzungarian Basin semi-desert
The structure here is that of the mighty
Sinkiang from the southern two-thirds. On the northern side, rivers formed from the snow and glaciers of the high mountains break through barren foothill ranges and flow out into an immense, hollow plain. Here the rivers begin to straggle and fan out, and form great marshes with dense reed-beds. Westerners call this terrain the Dzungarian desert. The Chinese also call it a desert, but the Mongols call it a 'gobi'—that is, a land of thin herbage, more suitable for camels than for cows, but capable also, if herds are kept small and moved frequently, of sustaining horses, sheep, and goats. The herbage comprises a high proportion of woody, fragrant plants. Gobi mutton is the most aromatic in the world.[20]
The Yulduz valley or valley of the Haidag-gol (43°N 83°E / 43°N 83°E–43°N 86°E / 43°N 86°E) is a mini desert enclosed by two prominent members of the Shanashen Trahen Osh mountain range, namely the chucis and the kracenard pine rallies, running perpendicular and far from one another. As they proceed south, they transcend and transpose, sweeping back on east and west respectively, with
The Kuruk-tagh is the greatly disintegrated, denuded and wasted relic of a mountain range which used to be of incomparably greater magnitude. In the west, between Lake Bosten and the Tarim, it consists of two, possibly of three, principal ranges, which, although broken in continuity, run generally parallel to one another, and embrace between them numerous minor chains of heights. These minor ranges, together with the principal ranges, divide the region into a series of long; narrow valleys, mostly parallel to one another and to the enclosing mountain chains, which descend like terraced steps, on the one side towards the depression of Lukchun and on the other towards the desert of Lop.[2]
In many cases these latitudinal valleys are barred transversely by ridges or spurs, generally elevations en masse of the bottom of the valley. Where such elevations exist, there is generally found, on the east side of the transverse ridge, a cauldron-shaped depression, which some time or other has been the bottom of a former lake, but is now nearly a dry salt-basin. The surface configuration is in fact markedly similar to that which occurs in the inter-mount latitudinal valleys of the Kunlun Mountains. The hydrography of the Ghashiun-Gobi and the Kuruk-tagh is determined by the aforementioned arrangements of the latitudinal valleys. Most of the principal streams, instead of flowing straight down these valleys, cross them diagonally and only turn west after they have cut their way through one or more of the transverse barrier ranges.[2]
To the highest range on the great swelling Grigory Grum-Grshimailo gives the name of Tuge-tau, its altitude being 2,700 m (8,858 ft) above the level of the sea and some 1,200 m (3,937 ft) above the crown of the swelling itself. This range he considers to belong to the Choltagh system, whereas Sven Hedin would assign it to the Kuruk-tagh. This last, which is pretty certainly identical with the range of Kharateken-ula (also known as the Kyzyl-sanghir, Sinir, and Singher Mountains), that overlooks the southern shore of the Lake Bosten, though parted from it by the drift-sand desert of Ak-bel-kum (White Pass Sands), has at first a west-northwest to east-southeast strike, but it gradually curves round like a scimitar towards the east-northeast and at the same time gradually decreases in elevation.[2]
At 91° east, where the principal range of the Kuruk-tagh system wheels to the east-northeast, four of its subsidiary ranges terminate, or rather die away somewhat suddenly, on the brink of a long narrow depression (in which Sven Hedin sees a northeast bay of the former great Central Asian lake of Lop-nor), having over against them the écheloned terminals of similar subordinate ranges of the
History
Prehistory
There is little information about early habitation of the Gobi desert.
Lisa Janz has proposed a system of nomenclature for early Gobi desert habitation. They are Oasis I, Oasis II, Oasis III. [21][22]
Oasis I is equivalent to the Mesolithic from 13500 cal BP to 8000 cal BP. During this time people began using oases. It is characterized by:
- micro blades
- small milling stones
- small tools
- plain, low fired, pottery with high organic content.[21]
Oasis II is equivalent to the Neolithic from 8000 cal BP to 5000 cal BP. People used the oases extensively. It was characterized by:
- micro blades
- milling stones
- chipped macro tools
- adzes
- axes
- high quality cryptocrystallines
- honeycomb imprinted, corded, string paddled, low and high fired pottery with a sand and gravel mixture. [21]
Starting around 8000 cal BP there was a warm wet phase in the Gobi desert. [22]By 7500 cal BP lake levels in the Western Gobi reached their peak. Around this time there was meadow steppe vegetation around lakes. In Ulaan Nuur there may have been shrubby riparian woodlands.[21]
Oasis III is equivalent to the Bronze Age from 5000 cal BP to 3000 cal BP. It is characterized by:
- micro blades
- chipped micro tools
- bifacially flakes arrowheads
- blades
- knives
- grinding stones
- copper slag
- high quality chalcedony
- bone beads,
- clay spindle whorls
- plain, string paddled, moulded rim, painted, geometrically incised, high and low fired pottery with mixture of sand, gravel, mica, shells, and fiber. [21]
Bronze Age
European and American exploration
The Gobi had a long history of human habitation, mostly by nomadic peoples. The name of Gobi means desert in Mongolian. The region was inhabited mostly by
The Gobi Desert as a whole was known only very imperfectly to outsiders, as information was confined to observations by individual travelers engaging in their respective itineraries across the desert. Among the European and American explorers who contributed to the understanding of the Gobi, the most important were the following:[2]
- Jean-François Gerbillon (1688–1698)
- Eberhard Isbrand Ides (1692–1694)
- Lorenz Lange (1727–1728 and 1736)
- Fuss and Alexander G. von Bunge(1830–1831)
- Hermann Fritsche (1868–1873)
- Pavlinov and Z.L. Matusovski(1870)
- Ney Elias (1872–1873)
- Nikolai Przhevalsky(1870–1872 and 1876–1877)
- Zosnovsky (1875)
- Mikhail V. Pevtsov (1878)
- Grigory Potanin (1877 and 1884–1886)
- Béla Széchenyi and Lajos Lóczy (1879–1880)
- The brothers Grigory Grum-Grshimailo (1889–1890) and M. Y. Grigory Grum-Grshimailo
- Pyotr Kuzmich Kozlov(1893–1894 and 1899–1900)
- Vsevolod I. Roborovsky (1894)
- Vladimir Obruchev (1894–1896)
- Karl Josef Futterer and Dr. Holderer (1896)
- Charles-Etienne Bonin (1896 and 1899)
- Sven Hedin (1897 and 1900–1901)
- K. Bogdanovich (1898)
- Ladyghin (1899–1900) and Katsnakov (1899–1900)
- Jacques Bouly de Lesdain and Martha Mailey, 1902[24]
- Roy Chapman Andrews from the American Museum of Natural History who led several palaeontological expeditions to the Gobi Desert in the 1920s[25]
- Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska who led Polish-Mongolian palaeontological expeditions in the 1960s.[26]
See also
- Asian Dust
- Geography of Mongolia
- Geography of China
- Green Wall of China
- List of deserts by area
- Mongolian death worm (olgoi khorkhoi), said to inhabit the Gobi in Mongolia
Citations
- ISBN 978-94-009-6082-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r public domain: Bealby, John Thomas (1911). "Gobi". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 165–169. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
- ISBN 978-0-14-303820-7.
- S2CID 162358054.
- ^ Planet Earth, BBC TV series 2006 UK, 2007 US, "Episode 5".
- ^ "Climate". The Gobi Desert.
- .
- ISBN 978-0008311070.
- JSTOR 27845359.
- S2CID 129367764.
- ^ S2CID 14708526.
- ^ Yiruhan, Ichiroku Hayashi; Nakamura, Toru; Shiyomi, Masae (2001). "Changes in the floristic composition of grasslands according to grazing intensity in Inner Mongolia, China" (pdf). Journal of Japanese Society of Grassland Science. 47 (4): 362–369.
- ^ Rio Tinto Group (2018-11-20). "Oyu Tolgoi".
- ^ "Rio set to open mammoth Mongolian mine". ABC News. 2012-11-19. Retrieved 2012-11-20.
- ^ ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-01-09.
- ^ F. Yu, K. P. Price, J. Ellis, J. J. Feddema, P. Shi (2004). "Interannual variations of the grassland boundaries bordering the eastern edges of the Gobi Desert in central Asia". International Journal of Remote Sensing. 25: 327–346.
- ^ "Focus - Can the 'Great Green Wall' stop desertification in China?". France 24. 2018-01-30. Retrieved 2021-01-09.
- ^ Claudio O. Delang, China's Soil Pollution and Degradation Problems (Routledge, 2014).
- ^ "China's efforts to halt the Gobi provide a blueprint for tackling desertification | UNCCD". www.unccd.int. Retrieved 2021-01-09.
- ^ Lattimore (1973), p. 238.
- ^ S2CID 254747847– via JSTOR.
- ^ S2CID 135148462– via Springer Nature.
- ^ Gonzalo de Salazar Serantes, “Discovery of Prehistoric Ruins in Gobi Desert”, Adoranten 1998. Tanum: Scandinavian Society for Prehistoric Art, 1998, pp 66-69
- Newspapers.com.
In 1902, while Lesdain was leading an expedition through the Gobi desert, he crossed the path of another explorer. This latter proved to be Miss Mailey who, dressed in men's clothes, commanded her expedition with assurance borne of the safe culmination of many adventures.
- ^ "Who Was Roy Chapman Andrews". Roy Chapman Andrews Society. Retrieved 2023-06-21.
- ISBN 978-0-262-61007-0.
General references
- Owen Lattimore. (1973) "Return to China's Northern Frontier". The Geographical Journal, Vol. 139, No. 2 (June 1973), pp. 233–242.
Further reading
- Bealby, John Thomas (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). pp. 165–169. .
- Cable, Mildred and French, Francesca (1943). The Gobi Desert. Landsborough Publications, London, OCLC 411792.
- Man, John (1997). Gobi: Tracking the Desert. Yale University Press, New Haven, ISBN 0-300-07609-6.
- Stewart, Stanley (2001). In the Empire of Genghis Khan: A Journey Among Nomads. HarperCollins Publishers, London, ISBN 0-00-653027-3.
- Thayer, Helen (2007). Walking the Gobi: 1,600 Mile-trek Across a Desert of Hope and Despair. Mountaineer Books, Seattle, WA, ISBN 978-1-59485-064-6.
- Younghusband, Francis (1904). The Heart of a Continent. John Murray.
External links
- Map, from "China the Beautiful" (archived 13 May 2008)