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Thanon Thong Chai Range

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Peak
  
Doi Inthanon

Width
  
80 km (50 mi) E/W

Type of rock
  
Granite and limestone

Highest point
  
Doi Inthanon

Age of rock
  
Precambrian

Types of rock
  
Granite, Limestone

Length
  
170 km (110 mi) N/S

Parent range
  
Shan Hills

Elevation
  
2,565 m

Country
  
Thailand

Mountains
  
Doi Inthanon

Thanon Thong Chai Range httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

States/Provinces
  
Chiang Mai Province, Mae Hong Son Province and Lamphun Province

Similar
  
Tenasserim Hills, Doi Inthanon, Doi Chiang Dao, Titiwangsa Mountains, Phuket Range

Visit khao daeng at the tip of thanon thong chai range


The Thanon Thong Chai Range (Thai: เทือกเขาถนนธงชัย, formerly Thanon Range; Burmese Tanen Taunggyi) is a mountain range in northern Thailand. Its tallest peak is Doi Inthanon, the highest point in Thailand. Most of the range is located in Chiang Mai Province, with parts in Mae Hong Son and Lamphun Provinces.

Contents

Map of Thanon Thong Chai Range, Ban Luang, Chom Thong District, Chiang Mai 50270, Thailand

Geologically in the Thanon Thong Chai Range, as in the other southern subranges of the Shan Hills, layers of alluvium are superimposed on hard rock. Precambrian rocks are present in this range, but absent in the ranges further east, such as the Khun Tan Range.

Geography

The Thanon Thong Chai Range is the southernmost prolongation of the Shan Hills and it consists of two parallel ranges running southwards from the southwestern limits of the Daen Lao Range between rivers Yuam and Ping. The eastern range is also known as Inthanon Range (ทิวเขาอินทนนท์). Often the Dawna Range further west and south is included as the western part of the Thanon Thong Chai Range. There are also some geographers who include the Thanon Thong Chai as a subrange of the Daen Lao Range.

Doi Inthanon, at 2,565 metres in the Inthanon Range, is one of the ultra prominent peaks of Southeast Asia. Other high peaks of the Thanon Thong Chai Range are 2,340 m high Doi Hua Mot Luang, the second highest peak in Thailand, Doi Pui (1,685 m), and 1,676 m high Doi Suthep.

History

Certain hill tribe communities live in the range, like the Hmong and the Karen whose tribal villages dot the mountainsides. Some of these communities are regularly visited by organized tourist groups.

Doi Inthanon was formerly known as Doi Ang Ka and was renamed in honor of King Inthawichayanon at the end of the 19th century.

Ecology

The vegetation is mostly deciduous forest below 1,000 m and evergreen hill forest above this height but there has been heavy deforestation. Since a great proportion of the original forest cover has disappeared, denuded patches of grassland and mixed bushy vegetation are common. Some projects for the restoration of forest cover have been undertaken in ecologically degraded areas.

Animal species in the Thanon Thong Chai Range are threatened by deliberate wildfires that are set seasonally by farmers in different areas across the range. Wild fauna in the range includes Sambar deer, barking deer, serow, leopard, goral and the Tenasserim white-bellied rat, as well as many bird species. A number of national parks and wildlife sanctuaries are located in the range.

References

Thanon Thong Chai Range Wikipedia