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Area: 97,000 sq
kms out of which nearly 38,000 sq. kms are under Chinese Occupation
since 1962.
Population: Approx. 2.40 lakh in the 2
districts of Leh & Kargil.
Languages: Ladakhi including Balti / Purgi, Shina or Dardic,
Urdu / Hindi.
Ethnic
composition: Mongoloid/Tibetan, Dardic and assorted Indo-Aryan
elements.
Altitude: Leh 3505 m, Kargil 2750 m
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Temperature: |
Maximum |
Minimum |
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Summer |
25oC |
8oC |
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Winter |
(-) 5oC |
(-) 20oC |
Rain-fall : 15cm, 6" (annual average)
Clothing :Cotton & light woollens in summer and heavy woollens
including down-filled wind proof upper garments in winter.
Geographical Introduction
Ladakh is a land abounding in awesome physical features, set in an
enormous and spectacular environment. Bounded by two of the world's
mightiest mountain ranges, the Karakoram in the north and the Great
Himalaya in the south, it is traversed by two other parallel chains,
the Ladakh Range and the Zanskar Range.
In
geological terms, this is a young land, formed a few million years
ago. Its basic contours, uplifted by tectonic movements, have been
modified over the millennia by the process of erosion due to wind
and water, sculpted into the form that we see today.
Today a
high-altitude desert, sheltered from the rain-bearing clouds of the
Indian monsoon by the barrier of the Great Himalaya, Ladakh was once
covered by an extensive lake system, the vestiges of which still
exist on its south-east plateaux of Rupshu and Chushul, in the
drainage basins or lakes of Tso-moriri, Tso-kar and Pangong-tso. But
the main source of water is winter snowfall.
Dras,
Zanskar and the Suru Valley on the Himalaya's northern flanks
receive heavy snow in winter, this feeds the glaciers from which
melt water, carried down by streams, irrigates the fields in summer.
For the rest of the region, the snow on the peaks is virtually the
only source of water. As the crops grow, the villagers pray not for
rain, but for sun to melt the glaciers and liberate their water.
Ladakh
lies at altitudes ranging from about 9,000 ft (2,750 m) at
Kargil to 25,170 ft (7,672m) at Saser Kangri,
in the Karakoram Range. Summer temperatures rarely exceed 27C in
the shade, while in winter they may at times plummet to minus 20C
even in Leh. Surprisingly though, the thin air makes the heat of the
sun even more intense than at lower altitudes. It is said that only
in Ladakh can a man sitting in the sun with his feet in the shade
suffer from sunstroke and frostbite at the same time!
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