Qamdo

Qamdo

also spelled  Changdu , Wade-Giles romanization  Ch'ang-tu , Tibetan  Chab-do 

      mountainous area in the far eastern part of the Tibet Autonomous Region, western China. It borders the provinces of Qinghai (Tsinghai), Yunnan, and Sichuan to the north, east, and southeast, respectively. Myanmar (Burma) and the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh lie to the south.

      In Qamdo the great fold systems of the Himalayas and the northern Nyainqêntanglha Mountains swing southeast, forming a series of high parallel ranges with a predominantly northwest-to-southeast axis, between which the upper streams of the Salween (Salween River) (Nu Jiang), Mekong (Mekong River) (Lancang Jiang), and Jinsha (Jinsha River) rivers (the latter a tributary of the Yangtze River [Chang Jiang]) flow from northwest to southeast through deep, forested chasms. The Ningjing Mountains, between the Mekong and the Jinsha, have peaks rising to 14,000 feet (4,200 metres). The range to the west of the Salween, the Boshula Mountains, is even higher, with peaks above 20,000 feet (6,100 metres).

      Most of the area is uninhabited, and large parts remain virtually unexplored. The city of Qamdo, in the northern section of the region, is a communications hub for eastern Tibet and a gateway providing access to the Chengdu Plain in Sichuan. In the 1950s a highway was built through this northern part from Chengdu (capital of Sichuan) via Qamdo, where it divides into two routes that ultimately reach Lhasa, the capital of Tibet. In addition to highways, the city also has an airport (opened 1995) that provides service to Lhasa and Chengdu. Since the 1970s, several hydropower stations have been constructed around the city area. In addition, some small and medium-sized food-processing and coal-mining operations have been established. Locally produced specialty medicines—including musk, the bulb of the fritillary (Fritillaria thumbergii), and Chinese caterpillar fungus (Cordyceps sinensis)—are in great demand throughout China. Pop. (2000) Qamdo city, 30,484.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Qamdo — ist ein tibetischer Ortsname in China; er steht unter anderem für: den Regierungsbezirk Qamdo im Autonomen Gebiet Tibet, siehe Qamdo (Regierungsbezirk); den Kreis Qamdo des oben genannten Regierungsbezirks, siehe Qamdo (Kreis); die Großgemeinde… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Qamdo — This article refers to the town also known as Chamdo. For other uses, see Qamdo (disambiguation). Qamdo Chamdo Chengguan   Town   城关镇 …   Wikipedia

  • Qamdo — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Qamdo (pinyin tibétain, utilisé sur des panneaux), Chamdo (selon l’orthographe occidentale de Nicolas Tournadre), ou Changdu (pinyin chinois) peut se… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Qamdo — Original name in latin Qamdo Name in other language BPX, Ch a mu to, Ch ang tu, Ch ang tu hsien, Ch ang tu tsung, Chamdo, Chamudo, Changdu, Chhamdo, Ch’a mu to, Ch’ang tu, Ch’ang tu hsien, Ch’ang tu tsung, Qamdo, chang dou State code CN… …   Cities with a population over 1000 database

  • Qamdo Prefecture — in the Tibet Autonomous Region Qamdo Cou …   Wikipedia

  • Qamdo County — ཆབ་མདོ་རྫོང་ 昌都县   County   South of Qamdo main town …   Wikipedia

  • Qamdo (disambiguation) — Qamdo (Tibetan pinyin, used on signs), Chamdo (Tournadre western spelling), 昌都 (Pinyin: Changdu) can refer to: Chamdo, a town in Tibet Qamdo Region, a former administrative region in western Kham, Tibet see Qamdo Prefecture Qamdo Prefecture, a… …   Wikipedia

  • Qamdo (Bezirk) — Tibetische Bezeichnung Tibetische Schrift: ཆབ་མདོ་ས་ཁུལ་ Wylie Transliteration: chab mdo sa khul Aussprache in IPA: [tɕʰamto] …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Qamdo (Kreis) — Tibetische Bezeichnung Tibetische Schrift: ཆབ་མདོ་རྫོང་ Wylie Transliteration: chab mdo rdzong Offizielle Transkription der VRCh: Qamdo Andere Schreibweisen …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Qamdo Bangda Airport — Flughafen Bangda (Chamdo Bamda oder Qamdo Bangda Airport) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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