Harman Patil (Editor)

Shiquanhe

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Region
  
Tibet

Time zone
  
CST (UTC+8)

Elevation
  
4,255 m

Local time
  
Sunday 2:50 AM

County
  
Gar

Postal code
  
859000

Prefecture
  
Ngari Prefecture

Number of airports
  
1

Shiquanhe

Country
  
People's Republic of China

Weather
  
-3°C, Wind SW at 6 km/h, 46% Humidity

Sênggêzangbo (Tibetan: སེང་གེ་ཁ་འབབ་, named after Sênggê Zangbo, a river in Ngari), or Shiquanhe (Chinese: 狮泉河镇, i.e. "Lion Spring River Town"), is the main town of Ngari Prefecture, Tibet. Shiquanhe is located on the confluence of Sênggê Zangbo (Indus River) and Gar River.

Contents

Map of Shiquanhezhen, Gar, Ngari, Tibet, China

Historically the town was also known as Ger. This name, in the form "Gar" (simplified Chinese: 噶尔; traditional Chinese: 噶爾; pinyin: Ga'er), is now used to refer to the entire county; however, as the custom with Chinese county seats is, Gar is often used to refer to the county seat as well, and it may be labeled that way on maps.

Being the main town of Ngari Prefecture (which is known in Chinese under the Sinicized form of its name, Ali Prefecture), the town is also commonly known in English as Ngari or Ali (Chinese: 阿里; pinyin: Ālǐ) Town; this is what many guidebooks use as the primary name for the town. In Tibetan, Ngari is only the name for the prefecture, and not the town.

The name Shiquanhe is originally the name of the river; in Tibetan, it is Sengge Zangbo (in SASM/GNC/SRC transcriptions, sometimes simply Senge Zangbo), Senge Zangbu (森格藏布) or Sengghe Tsangpo (in a transcription used in Western books). The source of that river, a hot spring, supposedly, looks like the lion's mouth; thus the name, interpreted as "river flowing from the lion's mouth".

When the Ngari Prefecture of the PRC was established in 1959, its capital was at the place named Kunsa, located elsewhere in Gar County. It was moved from there to Shiquanhe in 1965, due to the extremely difficult living conditions in Kunsa. At that time, Shiquanhe's population was merely 400.

The modern Chinese-style town is situated at the confluence of the Indus and Gar River. According to a government-affiliated source, the population of Shiquanhe had grown from just over 1,500 to over 20,000 in 30 years (1978–2008), and people there now "enjoy their life because the city has been equipped with culture and commerce facilities". Western guidebook writers have referred to the place as a "concrete monstrosity of a town".

The place has several primary schools and a secondary school.

Ali has two banks, but only the Agricultural Bank of China, near the army post west of the roundabout, will change foreign currency. There is also a main post office near the roundabout.

Transportation

Ngari Gunsa Airport, near the town of Shiquanhe, started operations on 1 July 2010, becoming the fourth civil airport in Tibet.

Air China's southwestern branch will operate flight services from Chengdu to Lhasa and on to Ngari – a total of 2,300 km (1,400 mi) – every Tuesday and Friday. "The flight leaves Chengdu at 5:50 AM and arrives at Lhasa two hours later," Bao Lida, a company press official was quoted as saying. "It leaves Lhasa at 8:40 AM and arrives at Ngari at 10:20 AM." the 1,098 km (682 mi) Lhasa-Ngari flight service would start from 2,590 yuan (About US $400). The report said Air China expects to transport 50-60 passengers in winter and 20-30 passengers in summer during each flight service.

Climate

Shiquanhe has a cold arid climate(BWk)

Shiquanhe Observatory

China, Japan, and South Korea are currently entertaining plans to construct a large high-altitude observatory on a ridge 25 km south of Shiquanhe, which was selected after a series of site surveys through Tibet and western China for candidate sites. Atmospheric conditions from the site's 5050m above sea level have been roughly characterized, initial facilities (including two small domes) have been built, and a 25 cm pathfinder telescope project is in place as of 2012, with 50 and 60 cm telescopes planned for 2013 and 2014 and a 3m telescope in the indefinite future: but the ambitions for the site include the possibilities of megaprojects like a 30m-class competitor to E-ELT and a 10-20m class spectrometer as a sequel to LAMOST.

Construction has begun on the telescope, codenamed Ngari No.1, and it is expected to enter operations in 2021.

References

Shiquanhe Wikipedia