(Redirected from Kunlun)
Region containing Kunlun Mountains

Karakash River in the Western Kunlun Shan, seen from the Tibet-Xinjiang highway

Peak in Kunlun range

View of Western Kunlun Shan from the Tibet-Xinjiang highway
The 'Kunlun Mountains' () is one of the longest
mountain chains in
Asia, extending more than 3,000
km.
The Kunlun runs eastwards along the northern part of the
Tibetan plateau to form the border range of northern
Tibet. It stretches along the southern edge of what is now called the
Tarim Basin, the infamous
Takla Makan or "sand-buried houses" desert, and the
Gobi desert. A number of important rivers flow from it including the
Karakash River ('Black Jade River') and the
Yurungkash River ('White Jade River'), which flow through the
Khotan Oasis into the
Taklamakan Desert.
The highest mountain of the Kunlun Shan is the
Kunlun Goddess (7,167 m) in the
Keriya area. The Arka Tagh is in the centre of the Kunlun Shan; its highest point is
Ulugh Muztagh (6,973 m, definitely not 7,723 m). Some authorities claim that the Kunlun extends north westwards as far as
Kongur Tagh (7,649 m) and the famous
Muztagh Ata (7,546 m). But these mountains are physically much more closely linked to the
Pamir group.
Bayankala Mountains, a southern branch of the Kunlun Mountains, forms the
watershed between the catchment basins of
China's two longest rivers, the
Yangtze River and the
Huang He.
The mountain range formed at the northern edges of the
Cimmerian Plate during its collision, in the
Late Triassic, with the
Siberia, which resulted in the closing of the
Paleo-Tethys Ocean.
Mythology
The Kunlun mountains are well known in and are believed to be
Taoist paradise. The first to visit this paradise was, according to the legends,
King Mu (976-922 BCE) of the
Zhou Dynasty. He supposedly discovered there the Jade Palace of
Huang-Di, the mythical
Yellow Emperor and originator of Chinese culture, and met
Hsi Wang Mu, the 'Spirit Mother of the West' usually called the 'Queen Mother of the West', who was the object of an ancient religious cult which reached its peak in the
Han Dynasty, also had her mythical abode in these mountains.
The hidden rests in this mountain range.

The Kunlun Pass
References
★
China Tibet Information Centre
★
Worldwildlife.org description
★
Chinaculture.org