1
Asia
I
INTRODUCTION
Asia, largest of the Earth’s
seven continents, lying almost entirely in the Northern Hemisphere.
With
outlying islands, it covers an estimated 44,391,000 sq km (17,139,000
sq mi),
or about 30 percent of the world’s total land area. Its peoples account
for
three-fifths of the world’s population; in 2005 Asia
had an estimated 3.91 billion inhabitants.
Most geographers regard
Asia as bounded on the north by the Arctic Ocean, on the east by the
Bering
Strait and the Pacific Ocean, on the south by the Indian Ocean, and on
the
southwest by the Red Sea and Mediterranean Sea.
On the west, the conventional boundary between Europe and Asia is drawn
at the
Ural Mountains, continuing south along the Ural River to the Caspian
Sea, then
west along the Caucasus Mountains to the Black Sea.
Some geographers include Europe and Asia together in a larger Eurasian
region,
noting that western Asian countries, such as Turkey,
merge almost imperceptibly into Europe.
The continental mainland
stretches from the southern end of the Malay Peninsula to Cape
Chelyuskin in Siberia. Its
westernmost point is Cape
Baba in northwestern Turkey, and its easternmost point is Cape Dezhnyov
in northeastern Siberia. The
continent’s
greatest width from east to west is 8,500 km (5,300 mi). The lowest and
highest
points on the Earth’s surface are in Asia, namely, the shore of the
Dead Sea
(408 m/1,340 ft below sea level in 1996) and Mount
Everest
(8,850 m/29,035 ft above sea level).
South of the mainland
in the Indian Ocean are Sri Lanka
and smaller island groups, such as the Maldives
and the Andaman and Nicobar islands.
To the
southeast is an array of archipelagoes and islands that extend east to
the
Oceanic and Australian realms. Among these islands are those of Indonesia, including Java, Sumatra,
Sulawesi,
and Borneo. The western end of the island of New
Guinea
is within Indonesia
and for
that reason geographers occasionally consider it part of Asia.
In this encyclopedia, however, it is treated as a part of the Pacific Islands.
The Philippine Islands, which include Luzon and Mindanao,
are also among the Southeast Asian islands. To their north lie Taiwan, the Chinese island
of Hainan, the islands of Japan, and the Russian island of Sakhalin.
Because of its vast size
and diverse character, Asia is divided into five major realms: East
Asia,
including China, Mongolia, North Korea, South Korea, and Japan;
Southeast Asia,
including Myanmar (formerly known as Burma), Thailand, Cambodia, Laos,
Vietnam,
Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Brunei, and the Philippines; South
Asia,
including India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Maldives, Nepal, and
Bhutan;
and Southwest Asia, including Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Cyprus,
Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Georgia, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia,
Yemen, Oman,
United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait. Most of the countries
of
Southwest Asia are also considered part of the Middle East, a loosely
defined
region that includes Egypt.
Afghanistan and Myanmar are sometimes considered part
of South
Asia, but most geographers place Afghanistan
in Southwest Asia and Myanmar
in Southeast Asia. The fifth realm
consists of
the area of Russia
that lies
east of the Ural Mountains (Russian Asia) and the states of Central Asia that were formerly part of the
Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR). These states are Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan.
The continent may also
be divided into two broad cultural realms: that which is predominantly
Asian in
culture (East Asia, Southeast Asia, and South Asia) and that which is
not
(Southwest Asia, Central Asia, and
Russian
Asia). There is enormous cultural diversity within both regions,
however.
II
THE
NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
As the largest continent,
Asia contains some of the world’s most
spectacular natural features, including high mountain ranges, vast
plateaus,
majestic river basins, and lakes and inland seas. The centerpiece is
the high
mountains of the Himalayas and the
associated
Tibetan Plateau (Qing Zang Gaoyuan). To the far north are vast plateau
regions
of Siberia and open waterways such as Lake Baikal.
Located in an arc around the eastern rim of the continent are the
plateaus of China,
dissected by great rivers, including the
Yangtze River (Chang Jiang). In South
Asia,
the Deccan Plateau dominates India.
Toward the west is the Arabian Peninsula, and in a northwesterly
direction are
the steppes of Central Asia.
A
Geological
History
According to the theory
of plate tectonics, the crust of the Earth’s surface is made up of vast
continental
and oceanic plates. These are in constant motion, rubbing and pushing
against
one another, moving only small amounts each year. The Eurasian
continental
plate is the largest. It is composed of some of the most ancient rocks
on
Earth, originating in Precambrian time from 4.65 billion to 570 million
years
ago. These ancient materials can today be found in eastern Siberia,
throughout
the Arabian Peninsula, and in India
south of the Indus and Ganges rivers.
A huge sea called Tethys
covered most of the interior of Eurasia
during
the Paleozoic and Mesozoic eras, which lasted from 570 million to 65
million
years ago. Thick deposits of sediment formed on the seafloor,
eventually
becoming the layers of rock that form the geological features of the
present day.
The Indian subcontinent
broke off from the southeastern corner of the African continental plate
during
the Cretaceous period. It drifted in a northeasterly direction and
collided
with the larger Eurasian plate, slipping partly underneath it. The
impact
created an enormous “deep” that eventually filled with sediments and
became the
Gangetic Plain. The collision also generated enormous pressure on the
southern
edge of the Eurasian plate, causing this region to crumple; this forced
an
uplift of rock that created the Himalayas,
the
world’s highest mountain system.
The Pacific Ocean plate
drifted westward, scraping
along the Eurasian plate and slipping under its coastal edge. This
created the
islands of Japan, Taiwan, the Kurils, the Ryūkyūs, and
the Philippines.
Southeast Asia lies at the intersection of the Eurasian, Pacific Ocean,
and Indian Ocean plates. Over time
the contact between these
plates created the mountain ranges of mainland Southeast
Asia. The continued slow movement of the plates causes
friction
and instability deep below the Earth’s surface, producing volcanoes and
earthquakes.
B
Surrounding
Waters and Islands
1
Asia is bounded on three
sides by oceans: the Arctic to the
north, the
Pacific to the east, and the Indian to the south. Many seas, bays, and
gulfs
indent the continent’s coastline, which is 62,000 km (39,000 mi) long.
The most prominent seas
along the northeastern rim of Asia are the Bering Sea in the far north
between
Asia and North America; the Sea of Okhotsk, located west of the
Kamchatka
Peninsula and north of the Kuril Islands; the Sea of Japan (East Sea),
which
fills the gap between Japan and the Asian mainland; and the Yellow Sea,
situated between China and Korea. The Kuril Islands, Japan’s
major islands of Hokkaidō, Honshū,
Shikoku,
and Kyūshū and Taiwan
run along a thread from north to south.
The South China Sea lies
adjacent to Southeast Asia, linking mainland countries to the Philippines and Indonesia.
The Gulf of Tonkin
sits between Vietnam
and China’s Hainan
Island, while the narrow
Strait of
Malacca separates the Indonesian island
of Sumatra from the Malay Peninsula. Java
Island lies across the Java
Sea from Borneo, the world’s
third
largest island after Greenland and New Guinea. To the
southeast is the
Timor Sea separating the Asian island of Timor
from the
Australian continent.
The Indian subcontinent
is flanked by the Bay of Bengal on the east and the Arabian Sea on the west. The island
of Sri Lanka and the much
smaller Maldives
and Nicobar Islands trail away to the
south.
The Arabian Sea’s Gulf
of Aden, the Red Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Black Sea form an
arc
along the western rim of Asia, providing natural boundaries with Africa
and Europe. The Suez Canal, an
artificial waterway excavated
in the mid-19th century, provides a passage for ships between the Mediterranean and Red seas. The Persian Gulf
provides Saudi Arabia,
Iraq,
and Kuwait access
to the Arabian Sea.
C
Plains
and Deserts
Plains occupy more land
area in Asia than any other type of
physical
feature. Most of the western and northeastern parts of Russian Asia
consist of
plains. Other large plains include those of the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers in
Southwest Asia, the Ganges River in northern India,
the Mekong River
in Southeast Asia, and the Yangtze River in China.
Deserts are a feature
of the Asian interior north of the Himalayas and large parts of
Southwest Asia,
especially the Arabian Peninsula.
There the
Syrian Desert, a plateau strewn with rock and gravel, spreads through
southern Syria,
northeastern Jordan,
and western Iraq.
Farther to the south, in southern Saudi
Arabia,
lies the Rub‘ al Khali (Empty Quarter).
It is
the largest continuous body of sand in the world.
Large deserts are also
spread throughout Central Asia. The
Garagum
(Turkic for “black sand”) occupies most of Turkmenistan.
Southern Kazakhstan
and northern Uzbekistan
share the Qyzylkum (Turkic for “red sand”), which lies southeast of the
Aral Sea.
Stretching east across
Mongolia and into China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region is the Gobi,
a cold,
high plateau with an average elevation of 900 m (3,000 ft). Southwest
of the
Gobi is the Takla
Makan Desert
in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China. Both deserts are in
the rain
shadow of the Himalayas, which blocks the movement of moist air from
the Indian Ocean.
D
Mountain
Ranges
Asia’s mightiest mountain
ranges radiate in great sweeping arcs from the Pamirs of Central Asia,
a
highland region where Tajikistan,
Afghanistan, and China
intersect. Southeast of the Pamirs are the Himalayas, spanning 2,400 km
(1,500
mi) from the border between India
and Pakistan in the
west to
the border between India
and
Myanmar
in the east. The Karakorum Range lies just north of the western Himalayas. These two ranges contain all but two
of the
world’s highest peaks, including Mount Everest, which lies on the
border
between Tibet and Nepal.
Smaller
mountain ranges extend southward from the eastern Himalayas into the Indochinese Peninsula.
East and northeast of
the Pamir knot, the Kunlun Mountains and the Tian Shan extend for more
than
1,600 km (1,000 mi) into China.
To the west, extending into central Afghanistan,
is the Hindu Kush. Ranges connected
to the
Hindu Kush then extend into northern Iran,
where they are known as the Elburz Mountains.
A branch of the Elburz becomes the Caucasus Mountains between Europe
and Asia.
A low range of mountains
extends southwestward from the Pamir knot into western Pakistan, where they are known as the Sulaimān Range. These mountains then
continue
northwestward through Iran
into southern Turkey,
where
they are known as the Taurus Mountains.
Other important mountain
ranges of Asia, such as the low Nan Ling hills in central and southern China,
are not
directly connected to the high mountain chains that meet at the Pamirs.
E
Plateaus
Several plateaus lie between
the mountain ranges of Central Asia.
The
highest is the Tibetan Plateau, often referred to as the Roof of the
World,
which is bounded by the Kunlun
Mountains and the Himalayas.
About 1,300,000 sq km (500,000 sq mi) of this plateau lies at an
elevation
above 4,300 m (14,000 ft). The principal plateaus of Southwest Asia are
the
Anatolian Plateau of central Turkey,
the Arabian Plateau, and the Iranian Plateau. In South Asia, most of
the peninsula
of India consists
of the great triangular
Deccan Plateau. The Yunnan Plateau extends over much of the Indochinese Peninsula
and the southwestern part of China.
Much of the northern part of Russian Asia is occupied by the Central
Siberian
Plateau.
F
Rivers,
Lakes, and Inland
Seas
East Asia is the location
of the continent’s longest river, the Yangtze, which flows 6,300 km
(3,900 mi)
eastward from Tibet
to the East China Sea. The Huang He
(Yellow River) also rises in
the Tibetan highlands, flowing east across central China
to its mouth at the Yellow Sea. The
Zhu Jiang
(Pearl River) rises in southwestern China
and flows through the southern part of the country on its route to the South China Sea.
In Southeast Asia the
major rivers flow southward between mountain ranges. The Mekong rises
in
eastern Tibet and
flows
southeast to the South China Sea. The
Salween
also originates in Tibet,
where it is called
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