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0298 Scientific Results of a Journey in Central Asia, 1899-1902 : vol.3
Scientific Results of a Journey in Central Asia, 1899-1902 : vol.3 / Page 298 (Color Image)

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doi: 10.20676/00000216
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204   MY FIRST JOURNEY IN NORTH-EASTERN TIBET.

have been excavated, and their sides and tops smoothed, and themselves provided with narrow doorways. These were formerly inhabited by Mongols. The camp

here. LXXVII (alt. 2961 m.) counting from Dunglik, which was Camp I, was one of my

principal depots and bases of operations. Here, during the whole period of my absence on this excursion which I have just described, my self-registering barograph

and thermograph had been in operation, and here three times every day meteorological observations were taken without intermission. It was from this same camp that I started on each of the two following excursions.

The united head-stream of Temirlik carried on 26th October a volume of only 0.9 cub. m. in the second, the water being as bright as crystal. .But its breadth did not

amount to more than 0.6 m., its mean depth to 0.3, and its mean velocity to o.5 m. The

springs gush out of the ground immediately above the grottoes of Temirlik, but below them it is joined by several other rivulets from both right and left, e. g. the one

beside which Camp VII stood. Most of the water comes from the right and

clearly originates in the Tschimen-tagh, although almost the whole of it flows underground and only emerges to the light of day when it reaches Temirlik. In conse-

quence of this distribution of the water the belt of vegetation lies nearer to the Akatotagh than to the Tschimen-tagh. The feeders from the springs have cut deep channels, and flow about 5 m. below the top of the upper loess terrace and 2 m.

below the lower terrace. The latter forms a sort of natural balcony or verandah in front of the entrances to the grottoes, which face south. The region abounds

in short, but fairly luxuriant, kamisch. The right bank has a flatter slope, though

there too there exists a distinct terrace. It is just below this that the majority of the springs issue. As early as the beginning of November, the water trickling out

incessantly had formed on the slope large round sheets of ice, and by the middle of December these had grown to a very great size, and no doubt during the winter they would go on increasing until they formed veritable ice volcanoes, similar to those that I once studied in the glen of Mus-kol in the Pamir.

At Temirlik I investigated the temperature of the ground : at the surface it was 7.85°, while the temperature of the air was 6.55°. At a depth of 3o cm. it was

+ 4.2°, at 5o cm. it was 5.33°; at 7o cm. 5.98°; at 85 cm. 6.310; at I oo cm. 6.68°, and at I I5 cm. 6.89°. The ground here was heavily charged with sand and turned moist at a depth of 6o cm., and after that the moisture continued to increase. At a depth of I m. we came into wet plastic blue clay. The ground was permeated in every direction by the roots of kamisch.

A large caravan of Mongol pilgrims bound for Lhasa, who had passed Temirlik in the beginning of December on their way to the Holy City via Tsajdam,

called this region Sum-tun-bulak, or the Three Thousand Springs. Undoubtedly this road from Tscharklik via Tasch-davan and Temirlik to Tsajdam, and so on farther, is the usual caravan road to Lhasa; it is at any rate the most convenient for the Turgut (Torgod) Mongols.