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0802 Southern Tibet : vol.7
南チベット : vol.7
Southern Tibet : vol.7 / 802 ページ(カラー画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000263
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OCR読み取り結果

Mount Kogle belongs to it. Somewhere N. E. or east of the lake the range is
crossed in the pass of Ka-la, of which I only heard. Turning S. E. and south the
branch is called the Surla Range and is, as we have seen before, a member of the
western portion of Central Transhimalaya.

The northern branch of the same system, the one of Kuhanbo-kang-la, con-
tinues E. S. E. for 130 km., and may be in connection with the range that is crossed
in Sangchen-la, 5356 m. high. But it should be remembered that on my meridional
route in this region I crossed four passes, all belonging to the great protuberance
south of the depression of Selling-tso—Panggong-tso; viz., Chaklam-la, 5285 m. high,
Sangchen-la, 5356 m., Ladung-la, 5302 m., and Satsot-la, 4856 m. The Chaklam-la
is situated in a range which farther west runs along the southern shore of Lakor-tso.
Some 130 km. east of Chaklam-la the considerable mountain group of Erenak-chimmo
which I passed in the autumn of 1901, belongs to it. The Gangi-gamo of Nain
Sing is perhaps also one of its parts. Thence it continues eastwards, north of
Tang-yung-tsaka, and is crossed by my route of 1906 in Sarya-la, 4865 m. high.
Mount Changa may belong to it. Running along the northern shore of Tsikut-tso
it then turns to the S. E. along the eastern shore of Kyaring-tso and the southern
shore of Mokieu-tso, where it enters into connection with the Transhimalaya.

The range of Kuhanbo-kang-la — Sangchen-la stretches eastwards to Taksa-
domsa and the Kilong-la, 5550 m., of Nain Sing; runs south of Tang-yung-tsaka,
is crossed by my route of 1906 in Lamlung-la, 5179 m., is farther east called Potu
and Pu-ngumpo, runs south of Tsikut-tso (Chikut-tso), is crossed by Nain Sing's
route of 1874, continues along the S.W. shore of Kyaring-tso, and comes into con-
nection with the Nain Sing Range of Transhimalaya.

My Ladung-la (1908), 5302 m. high, is probably situated in the range that
farther east runs along the northern side of the Nevem valley and Teri-nam-tso to
the district of Chokchu.

The range which I crossed in Satsot-la, 4856 m., and which I have indicated
as the Soma Range, is no doubt interwoven with the Alung-gangri system in one
way or another, though it belongs to the Transhimalaya. It may be that this range
and not the one of Sangchen-la is in uninterrupted connection with the Kuhanbo-
kang-la.

In the province of Naktsang and east of Tsikut-tso, the Alung-gangri system
may be traced in several ranges which here assume a more and more easterly and
finally E. N. E. stretching before they definitely turn S. E. and south to Indo-China.
From north to south these ranges are the following: A range beginning at the
eastern shore of Selling-tso south of Pongok-tso, crossed by Bonvalot in Burben-la,
5389 m. high, some 8 miles S. E. of the point from where I was forced to return
north in 1901,—then continuing E. N. E. to the Ta-tsang-la, 5050 m., of De Rhins,