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Its
landscapes are forbidding by any measure. Snow-swathed mountains rise to
several thousand feet above one of the most elevated plateaus on earth. A
treeless wind-swept country, much of Ladakh can be termed as mountainous,
Arctic desert, where everything is parched by the rarefied dryness of the
atmosphere. Scattered here and there, a few narrow fertile valleys provide a
clear sparkling air. The limpidity of the atmosphere, in fact, gives the
night sky a unique clarity, so full and bright with stars that one feels
transported to some ethereal setting, far removed from Earth.
The
Himalayas, higher than the mightiest mountains anywhere in the world, are
clearly the result of a process of folding-a moment of the coastal plates by
which one drifting piece of land overrides another. When two such drifting
continental pieces collide and wrap, the resultant wrinkles form mountains.
This Himalayan massif is believed to be the result of such a collision
between the Indian and Asian plates (geologically a comparatively recent
phenomenon). Consequently, much of the high altitude Himalayan fauna is
typical of both the oriental and Palearctic regions. | :: Customize this tour |
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