国立情報学研究所 - ディジタル・シルクロード・プロジェクト
『東洋文庫所蔵』貴重書デジタルアーカイブ
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| 0708 |
Ruins of Desert Cathay : vol.2 |
| 中国砂漠地帯の遺跡 : vol.2 |
引用情報
OCR読み取り結果
walled-up mouths of abandoned pits showed where many
more of the victims had found their last rest. In the
days of the 'old Khitai rule' and of Yakub Beg, that
soi-disant liberator, when the digging was carried on by
forced labour, this rugged gorge, with its inclement climate,
must have seen more human misery than one cares to
think of. Among all the desolate places of the earth to
which auri sacra fames has led men, this forbidding ravine,
cut between the most barren of mountains, with its atmo-
sphere of Rider Haggard sensations, might well compete
for the front rank.
To us the discovery of this gloomy gorge proved of
great value. Leaving our camp at a small grassy plot near
the central point of the present mining activity, some
13,600 feet above the sea, I managed with Lal Singh first
to descend by breakneck paths to the cañon-like valley of
the Yurung-kash (Fig. 320), and on subsequent days to
climb commanding points on a series of high spurs coming
straight down from the main Kun-lun Range northward.
By establishing our survey stations in full view of its crest-
line, here showing an average height of over 20,000 feet,
we managed to map with theodolite, plane-table, and
photographic panoramas, the greater portion of the in-
expressibly grand and wild mountain system containing the
unexplored eastern head-waters of the Yurung-kash. On
the south, for a distance of over sixty miles, we could see
them flanked by a magnificent range of snowy peaks, rising
to over 23,000 feet, and all clad with glaciers more extensive
than any I had so far seen in the Kun-lun.
Among the peaks to the south-west we could, fortunately,
recognize several of a small group which had been triangu-
lated over forty years earlier from high stations on the
Tibetan uplands to the north of Ladak, and thus exactly
determine our position. I was all the more grateful for
this as, in spite of the clear weather which had set in after
light snow showers, clouds enveloped the glacier-girt
peak of the great Muz-tagh peak westwards which had
formed so dominating a landmark for our surveys about
Karanghu-tagh.
From the ridges we thus climbed above Zailik there
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629
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657
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683
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696
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705
707
708
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711
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723
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736
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749
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760
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771
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783
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793
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803
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813
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