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0072 Sand-Buried Ruins of Khotan : vol.1
砂に埋もれたコータンの遺跡 : vol.1
Sand-Buried Ruins of Khotan : vol.1 / 72 ページ(カラー画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000234
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20   TO ASTOR AND GILGIT   CHAP. ii.

The set of ponies which I had brought from Gurez, and which were the first laden animals that crossed the Burzil this year, were relieved at Cliilliun Chauki by fresh ones sent up for me from Astor. My march on the 6th of June, down the valley leading to Astor, was recreation after the previous one. Notwithstanding the brilliant colour imparted to the scenery by a blue sky, glittering bands of snow in the ravines, and the green tossing stream at the bottom of the valley, it was easy to realise that the crossing of the watershed between the drainage areas of the Jhelam and Indus meant the entry into a sterner region. The hillsides were no longer clothed with verdure as in Kashmir and the Kishanganga Valley. On the slopes of bare decomposed rock cedars and a kind of juniper showed themselves only in scanty patches. Cultivation lower down also bore evidence of the unfavourable conditions of soil and climate. All the more cheerful it was to behold, by the side of the little terraced fields of more than one hamlet, an oblong sward carefully

marked off with stones—the polo ground of the villagers. Polo is the national game of all Dard tribes ; and that even

the inhabitants of these poor mountain hamlets make a sacrifice of valuable soil for its sake attests their devotion to this manly- pastime.

At Gadhoi, where a march of about seventeen miles brought me, it was already distinctly warmer than I had felt

it since leaving Kashmir, though the aneroid still indicated an

elevation of about 9,000 feet. On the 7th of June I continued my journey to Astor, the chief place of the hill

district, to which from early times it has given its name.

Some miles below Gadhoi there showed themselves above the bare rocky mountains along the valley the icy crests of the

great mass of peaks culminating in Nanga Parbat. That giant of mountains (26,600 feet above the sea), the ice-clad pyramid of which I had so often admired from Kashmir Margs, and even from above Murree itself, remained hidden