The Karakoram, or Karakorum is a huge mountain run spreading over the outskirts of Pakistan, India, and China, with the northwest furthest point of the range reaching out to Afghanistan and Tajikistan. It is situated in the locales of Gilgit–Baltistan (Pakistan), Ladakh (India), and southern Xinjiang (China), and spans the Wakhan Corridor (Afghanistan). A piece of the complex of reaches from the Hindu Kush to the Himalayan Range, it is one of the Greater Ranges of Asia. The Karakoram is home to the four most firmly found tops more than 8000m in tallness on earth: K2, the second most astounding top on the planet at 8,611 m (28,251 ft), Gasherbrum I, Broad Peak and Gasherbrum II.
The range is around 500 km (311 mi) long, and is the most intensely glaciated piece of the world outside the polar areas. The Siachen Glacier at 76 kilometers (47 mi) and the Biafo Glacier at 63 kilometers (39 mi) rank as the world's second and third longest ice sheets outside the polar locales.
The Karakoram is limited on the upper east by the edge of the Tibetan Plateau, and on the north by the Pamir Mountains. The southern limit of the Karakoram is shaped, west to east, by the Gilgit, Indus, and Shyok Rivers, which isolate the range from the northwestern end of the Himalaya go appropriate as these streams meet southwestward towards the fields of Pakistan.
The Tashkurghan National Nature Reserve and the Pamir Wetlands National Nature Reserve in the Karalorun and Pamir mountains have been designated for consideration in UNESCO in 2010 by the National Commission of the People's Republic of China for UNESCO and has likely been added to the rundown
History :
Karakoram is a Turkic expression significance dark rock. The name was first connected by neighborhood merchants to the Karakoram Pass. Early European voyagers, including William Moorcroft and George Hayward, began utilizing the term for the scope of mountains west of the pass, despite the fact that they additionally utilized the term Muztagh (signifying, "Ice Mountain") for the range now known as Karakoram. Later phrasing was impacted by the Survey of India, whose surveyor Thomas Montgomerie in the 1850s gave the names K1 to K6 (K for Karakoram) to six high mountains obvious from his station at Mount Haramukh in Kashmir.
Because of its elevation and toughness, the Karakoram is considerably less occupied than parts of the Himalayas encourage east. European voyagers initially went to right on time in the nineteenth century, trailed by British surveyors beginning in 1856.
The Muztagh Pass was crossed in 1887 by the endeavor of Colonel Francis Younghusband and the valleys over the Hunza River were investigated by General Sir George K. Cockerill in 1892. Investigations in the 1920s set up the greater part of the geology of the district.
The name Karakoram was utilized as a part of the mid twentieth century, for instance by Kenneth Mason, for the range now known as the Baltoro Muztagh. The term is presently used to allude to the whole range from the Batura Muztagh above Hunza in the west to the Saser Muztagh in the twist of the Shyok River in the east.
Flower reviews were completed in the Shyok River catchment and from Panamik to Turtuk town by Chandra Prakash Kala amid 1999 and 2000.
Geology and glaciers :
The Karakoram is in one of the world's most geographically dynamic territories, at the plate limit between the Indo-Australian plate and the Eurasian plate. A critical section, 28-half of the Karakoram Range is glaciated, contrasted with the Himalaya (8-12%) and Alps (2.2%). Mountain icy masses may fill in as a pointer of environmental change, progressing and subsiding with long haul changes in temperature and precipitation. Karakoram ice sheets are generally stagnating or developing, in light of the fact that, not at all like in the Himalayas, numerous Karakoram ice sheets are shrouded in a layer of rubble which protects the ice from the glow of the sun. Where there is no such protection, the rate of withdraw is high.
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