Citations:Taklamakan

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English citations of Taklamakan

1971 1980 2004 2015 2022
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  • 1971, R. C. Majumdar, “Medicine”, in A Concise History of Science in India[1], New Delhi: Indian National Science Academy, published 1989, →OCLC, page 261:
    Modern archaeological excavations have unearthed the remains of a large number of ancient cities that lay buried deep under the sands for more than a thousand years, along the trade route from Bactria to China passing between the Tien Shan mountains in the north and the desert of Taklamakan in the south.
  • 1980, Peter Hopkirk, Foreign Devils on the Silk Road[2], Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, published 1984, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, pages 9–10:
    Surrounding the Taklamakan on three sides are some of the highest mountain ranges in the world, with the Gobi desert blocking the fourth. Thus even the approaches to it are dangerous. Many travellers have perished on the icy passes which lead down to it from Tibet, Kashmir, Afghanistan and Russia, either by freezing to death or by missing their foothold and hurtling into a ravine below. In one disaster, in the winter of 1839, an entire caravan of forty men was wiped out by an avalanche, and even now men and beasts are lost each year.
    No traveller has a good word to say for the Taklamakan. Sven Hedin, one of the few Europeans to have crossed it, called it ‘the worst and most dangerous desert in the world’. Stein, who came to know it even better, considered the deserts of Arabia 'tame' by comparison. Sir Percy Sykes, the geographer, and one-time British Consul-General at Kashgar, called it 'a Land of Death', while his sister Ella, herself a veteran desert traveller, described it as 'a very abomination of desolation'.
    Apart from the more obvious perils, such as losing one’s way and dying of thirst, the Taklamakan has special horrors to inflict on those who trespass there. In his book Buried Treasures of Chinese Turkestan, von Le Coq describes the nightmare of being caught in that terror of all caravans, the kara-buran, or black hurricane.
  • 2004 November 21, Joshua Kurlantzick, “A World Apart on China's Silk Road”, in New York Times[3], →ISSN:
    Surrounded by the imposing Altay, Kunlun and Tian Shan mountains and the forbidding Taklamakan and Gubantunggut deserts, Xinjiang was originally settled by Uighurs, a nomadic, Muslim, Turkic people.
  • 2015, Michael Welland, “Barriers and Corridors, Imports and Exports”, in The Desert: Lands of Lost Borders[4], Reaktion Books, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 317:
    At the easterly extent of the Taklamakan is the great dry lake of Lop Nor and the Kumtag Desert, home of the singing dunes described by Marco Polo.
  • 2015, Catherine Matacic, “Carbon tomb buried deep under Chinese desert”, in Science[5]:
    According to the study, carbon-rich runoff from irrigation started seeping into saline aquifers under the Taklamakan nearly 5000 years ago, when humans first took hoe to the region. Since then, it has continued to collect.
  • 2022 May 12, Minnie Chan, “Satellite images ‘suggest China is practising missile strikes on targets in Taiwan and Guam’”, in South China Morning Post[6], archived from the original on 12 May 2022:
    The Chinese military has refined its anti-ship missile training from striking large, carrier-sized targets to smaller ships and naval bases, according to recent satellite images.
    They show a training base in Xinjiang’s remote Taklamakan desert with the layout of mock-up ship moored in a naval base that resembles one in northeast Taiwan and other targets in Guam, according to a Taipei-based naval analyst.