Golog Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture Explained

Golog Prefecture
Official Name: Golog Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture
Settlement Type:Autonomous prefectures
Coordinates:34.1167°N 118°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:People's Republic of China
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Qinghai
Seat Type:Prefecture seat
Seat:Maqên County (Dawu)
Area Total Km2:74246
Population Total:215600
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Density Urban Km2:auto
Demographics Type2:GDP[1]
Demographics2 Title1:Total
Demographics2 Info1:CN¥ 3.6 billion
US$ 0.6 billion
Demographics2 Title2:Per capita
Demographics2 Info2:CN¥ 18,238
US$ 2,928
Timezone:China Standard
Utc Offset:+8
Iso Code:CN-QH-26

Golog (Golok[2] or Guoluo) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture (;) is an autonomous prefecture occupying the southeastern corner of Qinghai province, People's Republic of China. The prefecture has an area of 76312km2 and its seat is located in Maqên County. Due to its special geographical location and natural environment, the entire autonomous preference has been included in the Chinese largest natural environmental protection area — the Sanjiangyuan National Park.[3]

Geography

Golog Prefecture is located in the southeastern part of Qinghai, in the upper basin of the Yellow River. Gyaring Lake and Ngoring Lake on the western edge of the prefecture are considered to be the source of the Yellow River. However, these lakes do receive water from rivers that flow from locations even further west, in Qumarleb County of the Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.

The lay of the land of the prefecture is largely determined by the Amne Machin mountain range (max elevation 6,282 m), which runs in the general northwest- to-southeast direction across the entire prefecture, and beyond. The existence of the ridge results in one of the great bends of the Yellow River, which first flows for several hundreds of kilometers toward the east and southeast along through the entire Golog Prefecture, along the southern side of the Amne Machin Range, until it reaches the borders of Gansu and Sichuan; it and then turns almost 180 degrees and flows toward the northwest for 200– through several prefectures of the northeastern Qinghai, forming a section of the northeastern border of the Golog prefecture.

Several sections of the Sanjiangyuan ("Sources of Three Rivers") National Nature Reserve are within the prefecture.

Demographics

According to the 2000 census, Guoluo has 137,940 inhabitants with a population density of 1.81 inhabitants/km2.

Ethnic groups in Guoluo, 2000 census

NationalityPopulationPercentage
Tibetan126,39591.63%
Han9,0966.59%
Hui1,5291.11%
Salar3290.24%
Tu3020.22%
Others2890.21%

Subdivisions

The prefecture is subdivided into six county-level divisions: six counties:

Map
NameHanziHanyu PinyinTibetanWylie
Tibetan Pinyin
Population
Area (km2)Density
(/km2)
1Maqên County
(Maqin County)
Chinese: 玛沁县Mǎqìn Xiànrma chen rdzong
Maqên Zong
51,24513,6363.75
2Baima County
(Banma County)
Chinese: 班玛县Bānmǎ Xiànpad ma rdzong
Baima Zong
27,1856,4524.21
3Gadê County
(Gande County)
Chinese: 甘德县Gāndé Xiàndga' bde rdzong
Gadê Zong
34,8407,1434.87
4Darlag County
(Dari County)
Chinese: 达日县Dárì Xiàndar lag rdzong
Tarlag Zong
30,99515,3852.01
5Jigzhi County
(Jiuzhi County)
Chinese: 久治县Jiǔzhì Xiàngcig sgril rdzong
Jigzhi Zong
26,0818,6962.99
6Madoi County
(Maduo County)
Chinese: 玛多县Mǎduō Xiànrma stod rdzong
Madoi Zong
11,33625,0000.45

Transport

Construction for Guoluo Maqin Airport began in September 2012 and the airport opened on 1 July 2016.[4]

3000km (2,000miles) of new roads are expected to be built by 2015.[5]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: 青海省统计局、国家统计局青海调查总队 . 《青海统计年鉴-2016》 . August 2016 . 中国统计出版社 . 978-7-5037-7834-6 . 2017-06-05 . 2017-12-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171228012718/http://www.qhtjj.gov.cn/nj/2016/indexch.htm .
  2. News: Flooded Tibet: struggling to adapt to the new reality. Central Tibetan Administration. 2017-12-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20170904111255/http://tibet.net/2017/09/flooded-tibet-struggling-to-adapt-to-the-new-reality/. 4 September 2017. en-US. "On 30 August 2017, a massive landslide buried nine people in Golok Machen region of north eastern Tibet.".
  3. Qinghai and the emergence of the west: Nationalities, communal interaction and national integration. The China Quarterly; Cambridge.
  4. News: 果洛机场14日正式奠基 预计2015年竣工通航 . Carnoc . 2012-09-15 . 2012-09-15.
  5. News: China to invest 3.5b yuan for Tibetan roads . 2012-09-01 . 2012-09-05 . Chinadaily.