Northern & Central & Gobi Desert – 22 Days Tour
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Central – Western – Northern Mongolia - 26 Days Tour
Central – Western – Northern Mongolia - 26 days tour We welcome you to the world of astonishingly untouched nature with a surprising mixture of landscapes, majestic snow-capped mountains, gigantic blue lakes, rare flora and fauna as well as heterogeneous ethnic groups and unique nomadic culture that is Western Mongolia! This is an extremely restful environment where you should spend your vacation. During this tour, we will visit not only the western area but also wonderful natural & cultural sights of central Mongolia and Darkhad Valley, Taiga, Reindeer herders and Shamanist in Northern Mongolia. Moreover, you will ride horses & camels and hiking in the untouched nature. Diverse, interesting activities are waiting for you. We will stay in the traditional Mongolian dwellings, the Ger, sometimes overnight in tents in beautiful spots and gaze at the amazing starry sky before sleeping. Feel life’s freedom in the immeasurable spacious and silent paradise of Western Mongolia and enjoy the beauty of pristine nature. Please see the below suggested itinerary then enjoy them all in reality! You can be sure this tour of Mongolia will be your unforgettable holiday of a lifetime. Day 1. Elsen Tasarkhai Sand Dunes. After breakfast we will drive west to beautiful Elsen Tasarkhai Sand Dunes. On the way we will visit the Khustai NP. Khustai has 506 square km area and was established in 1993. The park protects the wild horse “Takhi”, also known as Przewalski’s wild horse in the world, and a bio-diversity of other rare wild animals and plants. The quantity of various ecosystems within the park assures an abundance of wildlife. -
Destinations in Northern Mongolia
Destinations in Northern Mongolia Khuvsgul National Park: Khuvsgul National Park is called “Mongolia’s Switzerland”. The National Park covers 8381 square kilometers including the lake of Khuvsgul Nuur and its watershed, the Nuur River basin, and parts of Zuni Saran Mountain. The park has been protected since 1992. Here in the forests are special plants such as yellow marsh saxifrage, valeriana officinalis and saussurea involucrate. There are also many rare animals and around 200 species of birds found in the park area including, Euro-Asian otter, beaver, moose, reindeer, red deer, wild Argali sheep, Siberian ibex, snow leopard, lynx, wolf, brown bear, wild boar, black stork, relict gull, osprey and curlew. Clear Khuvsgul Lake: Khuvsgul Lake is the deepest lake in Central Asia with a maximum depth of 262 meters and contains 1 percent of the world’s fresh water. The lake is situated on the north edge of Mongolia and covers an area of 2612 square kilometers. Khuvsgul is a large lake extending 134 kilometers north south and 39 kilometers east west. Dominating the western shore of the lake is Khoridol Saridag Mountain which attains a height of 3200 meters above sea level. 96 rivers and streams feed into Khuvsgul Nuur and the Eg River flows out draining into the Orkhon River and so to Lake Baikal in the Russian Federation. The reflections of larch forests and Khoridol Saridag Mountain Range on the blue lake water are extremely amazing. Plenty of fish are found in the lake such as Baikal Omul, Lenok, Umber, Siberian Graying and River Perch. Visitors can kayak and boat on the lake, ride horses and even reindeer, enjoy wildlife, explore flora & fauna, hike around the lake and meet shaman and reindeer people. -
Darhadyn Wetland
Darhadyn Wetland in Mongolia Synthesis Investigation on Ecosystems Editor Hideo Nishida / Tseden Jamsran © Mongolia Ecology Information Center Director of investigation, Chief Editor: Hideo Nishida Professor of Graduate School of Kanazawa Gakuin University, Japan Guest Professor of Mongolia State University of Education,Mongolia 1963:Tokyo University of Science- department of science graduation 1970-77: A leader of pollution opposition movement 1973:Pablished "Ecology of Wetland"from Uchida Roukakuho Co.Ltd. 1984;Awarded a grant for "National Wetland environmental research by remote sensing and a study of the evaluation system" from Toyota foundation. 1986;Cnferred Doctor of engineering in "A study of statistical evaluation method of Heavy metals in River sediment" from Tokyo Institute of Technology 1998:Conferred a Honarary doctorate by "Eenvironmental education" from Mongolia State University of Education 2002-8:Awarded a grant for "Thaw survey of the permafrost layer accompanying ecosystem evaluation and the global warming of Darhadyn Wetland" from Fuand for Global Environment. e-mail: [email protected] Editor: Tseden Jamsran Professor of Mongolia National University, Mongolia PhD. Doctor of Science (Dr. Sc.,) 1954-1959, graduated from Moscow State University as a biologist. 1972-1977, has been worked for Mongolian and Germany joint expedition, specifically on research of the plants in area of the Westerm Mongolian High Mountains. 1977-1997, has been worked for joint expedition of the Mongolian National University and Irkutsk State University, and did scientific research on Huvsgul Lake and plants in this area. e-mail: [email protected] Subeditor Subeditor Tomoyuki Sano Masahiro Nakagawa Professor of Himeji Dokkyo Wetland International Japan University, Japan e-mail: masahiro_nakagawa@ e-mail: [email protected] wi-japan.org This booklet was surported by the Grant from the Japan Fund for Global Environment of the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency. -
Natural Resource Inventory and Monitoring for Ulaan Taiga Specially Protected Areas—An Assessment of Needs and Opportunities in Northern Mongolia
Natural Resource Inventory and Monitoring for Ulaan Taiga Specially Protected Areas—An Assessment of Needs and Opportunities in Northern Mongolia Open-File Report 2017–1025 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Cover: Native species of Horidol Saridag Strictly Protected Area, Hovsgol aimag, northern Mongolia. Counter-clockwise from top left: Siberian larch (Larix sibirica) and Siberian ibex (Capra sibirica) habitat, Siberian larch branches and cones, Siberian pine (Pinus sibirica) cones and needles, monkshood (Aconitum cf. glandulosum), camel tail (Caragana jubata), shrubby cinquefoil (Dasiphora fruticosa), round-leaved wintergreen (Pyrola rotundifolia), crustose lichen, Siberian ibex. Photographs by Peggy E. Moore, U.S. Geological Survey, July 2016. Natural51B Resource Inventory and Monitoring for Ulaan Taiga Specially Protected Areas—An Assessment of Needs and Opportunities in Northern Mongolia By Peggy E. Moore, Joseph B. Meyer, and Leslie S. Chow Open-File Report 2017–1025 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior RYAN K. ZINKE, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey William H. Werkheiser, Acting Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2017 For more information on the USGS—the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment—visit http://www.usgs.gov/ or call 1–888–ASK–USGS (1–888–275–8747). For an overview of USGS information products, including maps, imagery, and publications, visit http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod/. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. Although this information product, for the most part, is in the public domain, it also may contain copyrighted materials as noted in the text. -
Lords of the Mongolian Taiga
LORDS OF THE MONGOLIAN TAIGA: An Ethnohistory of the Dukha Reindeer Herders W. Alan Wheeler A thesis submitted to the faculty of the University Graduate School in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Department of Central Eurasian Studies, Indiana University December 2000 Accepted by the Graduate Faculty, Indiana University, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts. Christopher P. Atwood Supervisory Committee György Kara Larry Moses Date ii To Kim iii Acknowledgements I would like to express my appreciation to Professor Christopher Atwood and Professor György Kara for their encouragement, guidance and advice during my studies at Indiana and throughout the writing of this thesis. I am grateful to Otto Farkas, not only for his invaluable assistance in providing me with his personal insights and materials on the Dukha, but also for his friendship during the years we worked together on various undertakings such as the Mongolian Reindeer Fund (MRF). I would also like to thank O. Sükhbaatar, S. Battulga, and other colleagues and friends at the MRF whose knowledge and expertise I came to depend on greatly. A special thanks goes to Morten Pedersen for his useful suggestions and comments during our brief period of fieldwork together and through ongoing discussions about northern Mongolia. It goes without saying that I am indebted to the Dukha themselves who were always warm and hospitable, never allowing me to feel like a stranger or burden to them when I am certain to have been both at times. Finally, it should be known that this thesis would not have come to completion were it not for the endless love and support from my wife, Kim—God’s perfect gift that keeps giving and giving.