Little Pamir

The Little Pamir (Wakhi: Wuch Pamir; Kyrgyz: Kichik Pamir; Persian: پامیر خرد, romanized: Pāmīr-e Khord)[1][2] is a broad U-shaped grassy valley or pamir in the eastern part of the Wakhan in north-eastern Afghanistan. The valley is 100 km long and 10 km wide,[3] and is bounded to the north by the Nicholas Range, a subrange of the Pamir Mountains.

Little Pamir
View across Lake Chakmaktin towards Ak-Tash, Little Pamir
Little Pamir
Geography
Coordinates37°16′N 74°17′E

Chaqmaqtin Lake (9 km by 2 km) lies towards the western end of the valley while the Tegerman Su valley lies at its easternmost end. The Aksu or Murghab River flows east from the lake through the Little Pamir to enter Tajikistan at the eastern end of the valley. The Bozai Darya (also known as the Little Pamir River) rises a short distance west of the lake,[4] and flows 15 km west to join the Wakhjir River and form the Wakhan River near the settlement of Bozai Gumbaz.

The Little Pamir is used by semi-nomadic Kyrgyz herders for summer pasture. In 1978 almost all the inhabitants fled to Pakistan in the aftermath of the Saur Revolution. Many of the Kyrgyz subsequently migrated to Turkey, but in October 1979, following the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, a group of about 200 Kyrgyz returned to the Little Pamir.[5] In 2003 there were 140 yurt households.[1]

The valley supports populations of Marco Polo sheep, ibex, and other wild animals.[6] The naturalist George Schaller has advocated the creation of an international peace park to protect the wildlife in the area.[7]

The Little Pamir is accessed by trails from the roadhead at Sarhad-e Broghil, about 5 days' walk away.[2] A rough road also leads to the Little Pamir from Murghab in Tajikistan, and was the route by which the Soviets occupied the eastern part of Wakhan. The border is now closed. In 2000 the road was used to deliver humanitarian aid to the Kyrgyz of the Little Pamir,[8] and in 2003 a trade fair was held at the border for a few hours.[1]

References

  1. Felmy, Sabine; Kreutzmann, Hermann (2004). "Wakhan Woluswali in Badakhshan" (PDF). Erdkunde. 58: 97–117. doi:10.3112/erdkunde.2004.02.01.
  2. Lonely Planet (2007):' Afghanistan p.170
  3. Aga Khan Development Network (2010): Wakhan and the Afghan Pamir Archived 2011-01-23 at the Wayback Machine p.3
  4. Some accounts state that the Bozai Darya also rises from Chaqmaqtin Lake. See Afghanistan Information Management Service: River basins and Watersheds of Afghanistan" (2004) Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine, p.5. The International Boundary Study of the Afghanistan-USSR Boundary (1983) Archived 2014-08-17 at the Wayback Machine by the US Bureau of Intelligence and Research, p.10, calls the lake "a deeper and possibly marshy section within the Aq Su-Little Pamir River drainage divide".
  5. "Hermann Kreutzmann (2003) Ethnic minorities and marginality in the Pamirian Knot" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2010-07-25.
  6. Juldu.com: Little Pamir
  7. National Geographic (2007). "Lifetime Achievement: Biologist George Schaller". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 14 October 2007. Retrieved 24 July 2010.
  8. Kreutzmann, H. (2000) Hard Times on the Roof of the World
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