Asia - geography.
Publié le 26/05/2013
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the Himalayas, the world’s highest mountain system.
The Pacific Ocean plate drifted westward, scraping along the Eurasian plate and slipping under its coastal edge.
This created the islands of Japan, Taiwan, the Kurils, theRyūky ūs, and the Philippines.
Southeast Asia lies at the intersection of the Eurasian, Pacific Ocean, and Indian Ocean plates.
Over time the contact between these platescreated the mountain ranges of mainland Southeast Asia.
The continued slow movement of the plates causes friction and instability deep below the Earth’s surface,producing volcanoes and earthquakes.
B Surrounding Waters and Islands
Asia is bounded on three sides by oceans: the Arctic to the north, the Pacific to the east, and the Indian to the south.
Many seas, bays, and gulfs indent the continent’scoastline, which is 62,000 km (39,000 mi) long.
The most prominent seas along the northeastern rim of Asia are the Bering Sea in the far north between Asia and North America; the Sea of Okhotsk, located west of theKamchatka Peninsula and north of the Kuril Islands; the Sea of Japan (East Sea), which fills the gap between Japan and the Asian mainland; and the Yellow Sea, situatedbetween China and Korea.
The Kuril Islands, Japan’s major islands of Hokkaid ō, Honsh ū, Shikoku, and Ky ūsh ū and Taiwan run along a thread from north to south.
The South China Sea lies adjacent to Southeast Asia, linking mainland countries to the Philippines and Indonesia.
The Gulf of Tonkin sits between Vietnam and China’sHainan Island, while the narrow Strait of Malacca separates the Indonesian island of Sumatra from the Malay Peninsula.
Java Island lies across the Java Sea from Borneo,the world’s third largest island after Greenland and New Guinea.
To the southeast is the Timor Sea separating the Asian island of Timor from the Australian continent.
The Indian subcontinent is flanked by the Bay of Bengal on the east and the Arabian Sea on the west.
The island of Sri Lanka and the much smaller Maldives and NicobarIslands trail away to the south.
The Arabian Sea’s Gulf of Aden, the Red Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Black Sea form an arc along the western rim of Asia, providing natural boundaries with Africaand Europe.
The Suez Canal, an artificial waterway excavated in the mid-19th century, provides a passage for ships between the Mediterranean and Red seas.
The PersianGulf provides Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Kuwait access to the Arabian Sea.
C Plains and Deserts
Plains occupy more land area in Asia than any other type of physical feature.
Most of the western and northeastern parts of Russian Asia consist of plains.
Other large plainsinclude those of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in Southwest Asia, the Ganges River in northern India, the Mekong River in Southeast Asia, and the Yangtze River in China.
Deserts are a feature of the Asian interior north of the Himalayas and large parts of Southwest Asia, especially the Arabian Peninsula.
There the Syrian Desert, a plateaustrewn with rock and gravel, spreads through southern Syria, northeastern Jordan, and western Iraq.
Farther to the south, in southern Saudi Arabia, lies the Rub‘ al Khali(Empty Quarter).
It is the largest continuous body of sand in the world.
Large deserts are also spread throughout Central Asia.
The Garagum (Turkic for “black sand”) occupies most of Turkmenistan.
Southern Kazakhstan and northernUzbekistan share the Qyzylkum (Turkic for “red sand”), which lies southeast of the Aral Sea.
Stretching east across Mongolia and into China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region is the Gobi, a cold, high plateau with an average elevation of 900 m (3,000 ft).Southwest of the Gobi is the Takla Makan Desert in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China.
Both deserts are in the rain shadow of the Himalayas, which blocks themovement of moist air from the Indian Ocean.
D Mountain Ranges
International ClimbingMost of Kyrgyzstan lies in the lofty Tian Shan range amid many permanently snowcapped mountains.
For their treks to the top,mountaineers from abroad prepare at international climbing camps such as this one.Corbis
Asia’s mightiest mountain ranges radiate in great sweeping arcs from the Pamirs of Central Asia, a highland region where Tajikistan, Afghanistan, and China intersect.Southeast of the Pamirs are the Himalayas, spanning 2,400 km (1,500 mi) from the border between India and Pakistan in the west to the border between India andMyanmar in the east.
The Karakorum Range lies just north of the western Himalayas.
These two ranges contain all but two of the world’s highest peaks, including MountEverest, which lies on the border between Tibet and Nepal.
Smaller mountain ranges extend southward from the eastern Himalayas into the Indochinese Peninsula.
East and northeast of the Pamir knot, the Kunlun Mountains and the Tian Shan extend for more than 1,600 km (1,000 mi) into China.
To the west, extending into centralAfghanistan, is the Hindu Kush.
Ranges connected to the Hindu Kush then extend into northern Iran, where they are known as the Elburz Mountains.
A branch of the Elburzbecomes the Caucasus Mountains between Europe and Asia.
A low range of mountains extends southwestward from the Pamir knot into western Pakistan, where they are known as the Sulaim ān Range.
These mountains then continuenorthwestward through Iran into southern Turkey, where they are known as the Taurus Mountains.
Other important mountain ranges of Asia, such as the low Nan Ling hills in central and southern China, are not directly connected to the high mountain chains that meet atthe Pamirs.
E Plateaus
Several plateaus lie between the mountain ranges of Central Asia.
The highest is the Tibetan Plateau, often referred to as the Roof of the World, which is bounded by theKunlun Mountains and the Himalayas.
About 1,300,000 sq km (500,000 sq mi) of this plateau lies at an elevation above 4,300 m (14,000 ft).
The principal plateaus of.
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Liens utiles
- Asia - Geography.
- Religions of South Asia - geography.
- Religions of Europe and Northern Asia - geography.
- Religions of East Asia - geography.
- Religions of Central Asia - geography.