'Dzungaria' (also 'Jungaria', 'Sungaria', 'Zungaria';
Mongolian: Зүүнгар ''Züüngar'', , ''Džungarija'') is a geographical region covering approximately 777,000 km², within the
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, northwestern
China.
History
Dzungaria is named after a
Mongolian kingdom which existed in
Central Asia during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It derived its name from the
Dzungars, who were so called because they formed the left wing (''züün'', left; ''gar'', hand) of the Mongolian army. It was raised to its highest pitch by
Kaldan (also known as Galdan Boshigtu Khan) in the latter half of the 17th century, but completely destroyed by the
Qing government about
1757-
1759. It has played an important part in the history of
Mongolia and the great migrations of Mongolian stems westward.
In 1911, its territory fell partly to the Qing Empire (
Xinjiang also known as
East Turkestan, and north-western Mongolia) and partly to
Russian Turkestan (provinces of
Semirechye and Semipalatinsk).
Its widest limit included
Kashgar,
Yarkand,
Khotan, the whole region of the
Tian Shan, and in short the greater proportion of that part of Central Asia which extends from 35º to 50º N and from 72º to 97º E.
Current usage
As a political or geographical term ''Dzungaria'' has practically disappeared from the map; but the range of mountains stretching north-east along the southern frontier of the
Land of the Seven Streams, as the district to the south-east of
Lake Balkhash preserves the name of
Dzungarian Alatau. It also gave name to
Dzungarian Hamsters.
Dzungaria and its derivatives are used to name a number of pre-historic animals hailing from the rocky outcrops located in an eponymous sedimentary basin of that region, the
Junggar Basin.
★ ''
Dsungaripterus weii'' (
pterosaur)
★ ''
Junggarsuchus sloani'' (
crocodylomorph)
A recent notable find, in February 2006, is the oldest
tyrannosaur fossil unearthed by a team of scientists from
George Washington University who were conducting a study in the Junggar Basin. The species, named ''
Guanlong'', lived 160 million years ago, more than 90 million years before the famed ''
Tyrannosaurus rex''.
Geography and geology
Dzungaria is a largely
steppe and semi-desert basin surrounded by high mountains: the Tian Shan in the south and the
Altai in the north. Geologically it is an extension of the Paleozoic
Kazakhstan Block and was once part of an independent continent before the Altai mountains formed in the late Paleozoic. It does not contain the abundant minerals of Kazakhstania and may have been a pre-existing continental block before Kazakhstan is formed.
Urumqi,
Yining and
Karamai are the main cities; other smaller
oasis towns dot the piedmont areas.
Economy
Wheat,
barley,
oats, and
sugar beets are grown, and
cattle,
sheep, and
horses are raised. The fields are irrigated with melted snow from the permanently white-capped mountains.
Dzungaria has deposits of
coal,
iron, and
gold, as well as large
oil fields.
Demographics
The population consists of
Uyghurs,
Kazakhs,
Kyrgyz, Mongols, and
Han Chinese. Since
1953 there has been a massive influx of Han Chinese to work on water conservation and industrial projects.
See also
★
Kalmykia
★
Battle of Ikh Bayan
References
★