Saturday, January 28, 2017

Sacred Lake of Tibet:Manasarovar

Mount Kailash And Lake Manasarovar
Lake Manasarovar (also Manas SarovarMapam YumtsoChinese玛旁雍错Tibetanམ་ཕམ་གཡུ་མཚོ།Wyliema pham g.yu mtshoSanskrit:मानसरोवर ) is a freshwater lake in the Tibet Autonomous Region, 940 kilometres (580 mi) fromLhasa. To the west of it is Lake Rakshastal; to the north is Mount KailashLake Manasarovar overflows in to lake Rakshastal which is a salt-water endorheic lake. These lakes used to be part of the Sutlej basin and were separated due to tectonic activity.

Lake Manasarovar lies at 4,590 m (15,060 ft) above mean sea level, a relatively high elevation for a large freshwater lake on the mostly saline lake-studded Tibetan PlateauLake Manasarovar is relatively round in shape with the circumference of 88 km (55 mi). Its depth reaches a maximum depth of 90 m (300 ft) and its surface area is 320 km2 (120 sq mi). It is connected to nearby Lake Rakshastal by the natural Ganga Chhuchannel. Lake Manasarovar is near the source of theSutlej, which is the easternmost large tributary of theSindhu. Nearby are the sources of the Brahmaputra River, the Indus River, and the Ghaghara, an important tributary of the Ganges. Source: Wikipedia 

 
The Lake and Tibetan Himalayas






View from Chiu Gompa

View from the Space

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