Visit our new beta site!

Himalayas

From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition  |  Date: 2008

Himalayas [Sanskrit,=abode of snow], great Asian mountain system, extending c.1,500 mi (2,410 km) E from the Indus River in Pakistan through India, the Tibet region of China, Nepal, E India, and Bhutan to the southern bend of the Brahmaputra River in SE Tibet. For most of its length, the Himalayas comprise two nearly parallel ranges separated by a wide valley in which the Indus and Sutlej rivers flow westward and the Brahmaputra flows eastward. The northern range is called the Trans-Himalayas. The southern range has three parallel zones: the Great Himalayas, the perpetually snow-covered main range in which the highest peaks (average elevation 20,000 ft/6,100 m) are found; the Lesser Himalayas with 7,000 to 15,000 ft (2,130-4,570 m) elevations; and the southernmost Outer Himalayas, 2,000 to 5,000 ft (610-1,520 m) high. A relatively young and still growing system subject to severe earthquakes, the Himalayas' main axis was formed c.25 to 70 million years ago as the earth's crust folded against the northward-moving Indian subcontinent. Some 30 peaks rise to more than 25,000 ft (7,620 m), including Mt. Everest (29,035 ft/8,850 m) and Kanchenjunga (28,208 ft/8,598 m), the world's highest and third highest peaks. Himalayan peaks have long been the goal of mountaineers. The towering ranges are penetrated by many roads and tracks, and air flights reach remote towns. Railroads reach only the southern foothills; from there the main route follows footpaths across primitive bridges, ropeways, and high mountain passes. Improved roads run between Kashmir and China and from India through Nepal to China, and there are major airports at Katmandu and Srinagar. The aridity of the Tibetan plateau and the Tarim basin of W China results from the interception of the moisture-laden northwest monsoon by the Himalayas' southern face. Consequently, the northern slopes receive relatively light snowfall and have little drainage, while the snow-covered and extensively glaciated southern slopes give rise to the Indian subcontinent's major rivers, including the Indus, Sutlej, Ganges, and Brahmaputra. Little of the region is inhabitable or of great current economic value. The southern piedmont plains of Tarai and Duars were formerly malarial jungle and swamps but have been converted to agriculture, with many wild animals in nature preserves. Grazing is possible on some of the gentler slopes, and extensive farming is carried on in the valleys; there is some lumbering in the forests found below 12,000 ft (3,660 m). Limited amounts of iron ore, gold, and sapphires are worked in the west. The Himalayan rivers offer much scope for hydroelectric power and irrigation. Hill resorts such as Shimla, Naini Tal, Mussoorie, and Darjeeling are popular summer retreats from the heat of the Indian plains. The Himalayas are associated with many legends in Asian mythology (see abominable snowman ); on isolated slopes are found the retreats of rishis (holy sages), gurus (teachers), and Tibetan monks.

Author not available, HIMALAYAS., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008

Related articles from HighBeam Research:

Characteristics of Monsoon Rainfall around the Himalayas Revealed by TRMM Precipitation Radar
Monthly Weather Review; 1/1/2005; Bhatt, B C; Nakamura, K; 7956 words; ... variability are investigated around the Himalayas using hourly, 0.05 0.05 grid, near-surface ... inherent to TRMM PR measurements around the Himalayas could influence results, PR-observed ... rain over the south-facing slopes of the Himalayas. The moderate to heavy conditional rain ...
Mesoscale modeling for mountain weather forecasting over the Himalayas
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society; 9/1/2003; Das, Someshwar; Singh, S V; Rajagopal, E N; Gall, Robert; 3844 words; Severe weather over the Himalayas has calamitous effect, due to complex ... mesoscale models. Northwest India and the Himalayas (Fig. 1) are particularly prone to ... systems severely influence life in the Himalayas by inducing widespread rainfall and ...
Monitoring the monsoon in the Himalayas: Observations in Central Nepal, June 2001
Monthly Weather Review; 7/1/2003; Barros, Ana P; Lang, Timothy J; 8541 words; ... June 2001 along the south slopes of the Himalayas in central Nepal. Radiosondes were launched ... monsoon flow with the south slopes of the Himalayas, modulated by the diurnal variability ... processes along the south slopes of the Himalayas are not well known or well documented ...
The complete guide to the Himalayas The people of the Himalayas are closer to God than most. Dotted among the highest mountains in the world, they live a life pervaded by religion. And visitors experience a richly varied culture, not to mention those awe-inspiring views.
The Independent - London; 2/12/2000; Rhiannon Batten; 2629 words; ... Well, from one point of view, yes. The Himalayas stretch 1,900 miles from, roughly, the ... momos. YOU'RE NOT BEING VERY SPECIFIC The Himalayas are not the easiest mountains to draw ... Tibetan plateau. Politically, too, the Himalayas straddle sensitive boundaries, some of ...
Ethnomedicinal flora: therapeutic significance of major food plants in a remote part of the eastern Himalayas.
Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science; 7/1/2006; Sharma, G.K.; 3281 words; ... the most remote areas of the eastern Himalayas bordering Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Tibet ... the world (Schultes, 1960, 1962). The Himalayas, a remote region where Nature reigns ... flora. Ethnomedicinal folklore in the Himalayas has richly contributed to Amchi, Sidha ...
MEDICINAL PLANT FOLKLORE AND THE AYURVEDIC SYSTEM OF MEDICINE IN THE INDO-TIBETAN OUTER HIMALAYAS.
Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science; 1/1/2000; SHARMA, G. K.; 2869 words; ... the most remote corners of the Outer Himalayas at the border between India and Tibet ... reported based on the herbal wealth of the Himalayas. There is no way of calculating how many ... of new drugs for modern medicine. The Himalayas personify nature's medicinal bounty ...
OVER THE HILL; After 28 hours lost on the Ochils, Carole is off to crack the Himalayas.(News)
Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland); 2/3/2001; 466 words; ... A NOVICE walker is set to tackle the Himalayas - despite almost dying on one of Scotland ... me even more determined to go to the Himalayas. I'm absolutely committed. Carol, of ... stranded. She said: The man I'm going to the Himalayas with is a lot more experienced than Robert ...
Thrust-wedge mechanics and coeval development of normal and reverse faults in the Himalayas
Journal of the Geological Society; 5/1/2002; Shanker, D; Kapur, N; Singh, Bhawani; 1842 words; ... observed dominance of thrusting in the Himalayas, is modelled using stress simulation ... models, representing cross-sections of the Himalayas and Tibet are used. Simulated stresses ... Thrust, the plate boundary fault below the Himalayas, would have favoured the occurrence of ...
Temperate Mountain Glacier-Melting Rates for the Period 2001-30: Estimates from Three Coupled GCM Simulations for the Greater Himalayas
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology; 6/1/2007; Ren, Diandong; Karoly, David J; Leslie, Lance M; 5574 words; ... temperate glaciers in the greater Himalayas (GH) and the neighboring region ... valley glaciers. For example, the Himalayas have a glacier coverage of 33 ... et al. 2001), two-dimensional maps of the additional melting rate ... from the Dasuopu Glacier of the Himalayas, in Tibet, which indicate ...
Medical ethnobotany in the Shivalik Range of the Himalayas.
Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science; 7/1/2004; Sharma, G.K.; 2408 words; ... inhabitants of the remote Shivalik Range of the Himalayas. This treasure trove of medicinal wealth ... Ethnomedicinal folklore in the Himalayas has richly contributed not only to the ... folklore in the remote Shivalik Range of the Himalayas. MATERIALS AND METHODS The area under ...
'Himalayas': Multitudes That Move Mountains
The Washington Post; 10/22/2003; Paul Richard; 1059 words; "Himalayas: An Aesthetic Adventure" at the Arthur ... mountains are unimaginably immense. In the Himalayas the air is so thin, and the sun is so ... grew emptier and emptier. In the empty Himalayas the pictures grew fuller and fuller ...
Pinnacle of Eastern art 'Himalayas' exhibit climbs beyond all man- made barriers
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 4/17/2003; JAMES AUER; 986 words; Pinnacle of Eastern art 'Himalayas' exhibit climbs beyond all man-made ... achievement as chief organizer of "Himalayas: An Aesthetic Adventure." And he ... Institute of Chicago. On the face of it, "Himalayas" is an enterprise of distinctly limited ...
`Surfing the Himalayas' into a swirl of controversy
The Boston Globe; 11/14/1995; William A. Davis, Globe Staff; 819 words; ... would have ever thought that "Surfing the Himalayas," a New Age novel that combines the unlikely ... during a recent Boston visit. "Surfing the Himalayas" has a strange publishing history. And ... interest. Warner Books decided "Surfing the Himalayas" had the potential to be another "The ...
Expedition through Himalayas planned
China Daily; 9/16/2006; Wu Chong; 383 words; ... joint scientific expedition through the Himalayas in the middle of next month, announced ... India, Nepal and Bhutan, all of which the Himalayas extend through, to make a month-long ... research into the southern bend of the Himalayas, said Zhang Wenjing, chief scientist ...
KAROLA PASS, Tibet - The glaciers of the Himalayas... [Derived Headline]
Bismarck Tribune; 5/20/2007; 583 words; KAROLA PASS, Tibet - The glaciers of the Himalayas store more ice than anywhere on Earth ... people living in the watershed of the Himalayas and other nearby mountain ranges along ... The pace of glacial retreat around the Himalayas varies. Smaller glaciers fragment and ...

See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:

Various Artists The Rough Guide to the Music of the Himalayas; Rahul Sharma, Music of the Himalayas.(Sound Recording Review)
Sing Out!; 1/1/2003; Wilson, Sule Greg; 461 words;
Floods in Bangladesh; history, dynamics, and rethinking the role of the Himalayas.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
SciTech Book News; 3/1/2007; 151 words;
Vicar treks across Himalayas for charity.
Grantham Journal & Citizen (Grantham, England); 10/26/2007; 267 words;
Zoe heads for Himalayas to raise cash for wildlife.
The Falkirk Herald (Falkirk, Scotland); 10/4/2007; 131 words;
Wild Everest: over the top! (climbing Mount Everest Mt. in the Himalayas: includes a timeline of highlights about people from the West climbing the mountain which was named for a colonial British surveyor, George Everest)(includes a Q&A on Mt Everest trivia)
Science World; 2/23/1998; Chang, Marie L.; 1946 words;
The making of a mountain: journey to the Himalayas and discover what happens when continents collide. (Earth Science Geology).
Science World; 3/7/2003; Masibay, Kim Y.; 1124 words;
Roof of the World.(the Himalayas)(Illustration)
Current Events, a Weekly Reader publication; 3/22/2002; 318 words;
A buddhist monastery in the ladakh range of the himalayas has been ignored by time. The valley's way of life has been little changed since the building was erected three and a half centuries ago. (delight).(Brief Article)
The Architectural Review; 11/1/2001; Dakin, Phoebe; 331 words;
Retired Dalkeith couple to trek the Himalayas.
The Advertiser (Midlothian) (Dalkeith, Scotland); 1/11/2008; 165 words;
Ladakh learning: an idealistic school in the Himalayas aims to transform education for poor and remote people and be an example of sustainable building of the area.(Brief Article)
The Architectural Review; 5/1/2002; 623 words;
Browse by alphabet: