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Tian-Shan : ウィキペディア英語版
Tian Shan

The Tian Shan (, Old Turkic: 𐰴𐰣 𐱅𐰭𐰼𐰃, ''Tenğri tağ'', Mongolian: ''Тэнгэр уул(Tenger uul)''), is a large system of mountain ranges located in Central Asia. The highest peak in the Tian Shan is Jengish Chokusu, .
The Chinese name for Tian Shan may be derived from the Xiongnu language name Qilian (Tsilien; ), which was described by Sima Qian in the ''Records of the Grand Historian'' as the homeland of the pre-Xiongnu peoples of the region, the Yuezhi, and has been said to refer to the Tian Shan rather than to the range further east now known by this name. The Tannu-Ola mountains in Tuva () bear the same name ("heaven/celestial mountains" or "god/spirit mountains").
==Geography==
Tian Shan lies to the north and west of the Taklamakan Desert and directly north of the Tarim Basin in the border region of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and northwest China. In the south it links up with the Pamir Mountains and to north and east it meets the Altai Mountains of Mongolia.
In Western cartography such as National Geographic, the eastern end of the Tian Shan is usually understood to be east of Ürümqi, with the range to the east of that city known as the Bogda Shan as part of the Tian Shan. Chinese cartography from the Han Dynasty to the present agrees, with the Tian Shan including the Bogda Shan and Barkol ranges.
The Tian Shan are a part of the Himalayan orogenic belt, which was formed by the collision of the Indian and Eurasian plates in the Cenozoic era. They are one of the longest mountain ranges in Central Asia and stretch some eastward from Tashkent in Uzbekistan.
The highest peak in the Tian Shan is the Victory Peak (пик Победы in Russian or Jengish Chokusu in Kyrgyz) which, at , is also the highest point in Kyrgyzstan and is on the border with China.
The Tian Shan's second highest peak, Khan Tengri (Lord of the Spirits), straddles the Kazakhstan-Kyrgyzstan border and at is the highest point of Kazakhstan. Mountaineers class these as the two most northerly peaks over in the world.
The Torugart Pass, at , is located at the border between Kyrgyzstan and China's Xinjiang province. The forested Alatau ranges, which are at a lower altitude in the northern part of the Tian Shan, are inhabited by pastoral tribes that speak Turkic languages.
The Tian Shan are separated from the Tibetan Plateau by the Taklimakan Desert and the Tarim Basin to the south.
The major rivers rising in the Tian Shan are the Syr Darya, the Ili River and the Tarim River. The Aksu Canyon is a notable feature in the northwestern Tian Shan.
Continuous permafrost is typically found in the Tian Shan starting at the elevation of about 3,500-3,700 m above the sea level. Discontinuous alpine permafrost usually occurs down to 2,700-3,300 m, but in certain locations, due to the peculiarity of the aspect and the microclimate, it can be found at elevations as low as 2,000 m.
One of the first Europeans to visit and the first to describe the Tian Shan in detail was the Russian explorer Peter Semenov, who did so in the 1850s.
Glaciers in the Tian Shan Mountains have been rapidly shrinking and have lost 27%, or 5.4 billion tons annually, of its ice mass since 1961 compared to an average of 7% world wide. It is estimated that by 2050 half of the remaining glaciers will have melted.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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