From the
Pamirs of
Tajikistan, the Kunlun Mountains run east through southern
Xinjiang to
Qinghai province, stretching along the southern edge of the
Tarim Basin containing the
Taklamakan Desert, and the
Gobi Desert. A number of important rivers flow from the range including the
Karakash River ('Black Jade River') and the
Yurungkash River ('White Jade River'), which flow through the
Khotan Oasis into the Taklamakan. To the south of the Kunlun is the sparsely populated
Changtang region, which forms part of the
Tibetan Plateau.
Altyn-Tagh or Altun Range is one of the chief northern ranges of the Kunlun. Its northeastern extension
Qilian Shan is another main northern range of the Kunlun. In the south main extension is the
Min Shan.
Bayan Har 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
Yellow River. The highest mountain of the Kunlun Mountains is the
Kunlun Goddess Peak (7,167 m) in the
Keriya area of the western Kunlun Mountains. Some authorities claim that the Kunlun extends further northwest-wards 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 (ancient
Mount Imeon). The Arka Tagh (Arch Mountain) is in the center of the Kunlun Mountains; its highest points are
Ulugh Muztagh (6,973 m) and
Bukadaban Feng (6,860 m). In the eastern Kunlun Mountains the highest peaks are
Yuzhu Peak (6,224 m) and
Amne Machin [also Dradullungshong] (6,282 m); the latter is the major eastern peak of the Kunlun Mountains and is thus considered as the eastern edge of the Kunlun Mountains. The mountain range formed at the northern edges of the
Cimmerian Plate during its collision, in the
Late Triassic, with
Siberia, which resulted in the closing of the
Paleo-Tethys Ocean. The range has very few roads and in its 3,000 km length is crossed by only two. In the west,
Highway 219 traverses the range en route from Yecheng, Xinjiang to Lhatse, Tibet. Further east,
Highway 109 crosses between
Lhasa and
Golmud.
Kunlun Volcanic Group Over 70
volcanic cones form the Kunlun Volcanic Group. They are not volcanic mountains, but cones. As such, they are not counted among the world volcanic mountain peaks. The group, however, musters the heights of above sea level (). If they were considered volcanic mountains, they would constitute the highest volcano in Asia and China and second highest in the
Eastern Hemisphere (after
Mount Kilimanjaro) and one of
Volcanic Seven Summits by elevation. (Mount
Damavand is the highest volcano in Asia, not the Kunlun cones.) The last known eruption in the volcanic group was on May 27, 1951. ==Mythology==