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Jangtang (Northern Plain)

Literally the Northern Plains, this is a Tibetan way of referring to the vast high plateau extending across  northern and western parts of Tibet. Its environment consists of vast hilly plains, large salt lakes, and a steppe-like environment mostly above the tree line. It is renowned for its high-altitude wildlife, while its limited population consists entirely of nomadic groups. Nowadays the region is divided between China and India: the largest part belongs to the Tibet Autonomous Region (China), while a portion of it belongs to Ladakh (Jammu & Kashmir, India). It appears to have supported a pre-Buddhist civilization prior to the rise of the Tibetan empire in the seventh century, and during that time was presumably a more hospitable environment that has changed over the centuries due the gradually rising elevation of the Tibetan plateau.

Jangtang
Jangtang (Northern Plain)

Taken from url: http://places.kmaps.virginia.edu/descriptions/18.xml

Collection Essays on Places
Visibility Public - accessible to all site users (default)
Author Quentin Devers, David Germano
Places
UID mandala-texts-47946
DOI