General Classification of Himalayas: Trans Himalayas

Basics

  • Location: Himalayan ranges immediately north of the Great Himalayan range.
  • Other Name: Also called the Tibetan Himalayas because most of it lies in Tibet.
  • Length and Direction: 1,000 km in the east-west direction
  • Average Elevation: 5000 m above mean sea level
  • Average Width: 40 km at the extremities and about 225 km in the central part.
  • Part of: Geologically not part of the Himalayas.
  • Peak: Mount K2/ Godwin Austen is the second-highest peak in the world and the highest peak in the Indian Union.
  • Major Glacier: The highest battleground is the Siachen Glacier.

Major Ranges

  1. Karakoram Range
    • Also called the Krishnagiri range
    • Average elevation – 5500m
    • Extends from the Pamir for 800km
    • Major pass – Karakoram pass
    • The Ladakh Plateau lies to the north-east of the Karakoram Range. It has been dissected into a number of plains and mountains (Soda Plains, Aksai Chin, Lingzi Tang, Depsang Plains, and Chang Chenmo).
  2. Ladakh Range
    • North of Zaskar range.
    • Merges with the Kailash range in Tibet.
    • Major Pass – Khardungla 
  3. Kailas Range
    • An offshoot of the Ladakh range.
    • Highest Peak – Mount Kailash
    • River Indus originates from this range.
    • It is located in Tibet.
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