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Safed Koh

Coordinates: 33°58′N 70°22′E / 33.967°N 70.367°E / 33.967; 70.367
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(Redirected from Speenghar Region)

Safed Koh / Spīn Ghar
Pashto: سپین غر
Persian: سفیدکوه
Urdu: سفیدکوه
Highest point
PeakMount Sikaram, AfghanistanPakistan Border
Elevation4,755 m (15,600 ft)
Coordinates33°58′N 70°22′E / 33.967°N 70.367°E / 33.967; 70.367
Geography
Safed Koh / Spīn Ghar is located in Afghanistan
Safed Koh / Spīn Ghar
Safed Koh / Spīn Ghar
Afghanistan
Map
CountriesAfghanistan and Pakistan
ProvincesNangarhar, Logar, Paktia in Afghanistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan
Map of Northeast Afghanistan with Spīn Ghar on the bottom

The Spīn Ghar[1][2] (Pashto: سپین غر) or Safēd Kōh[3][4][5] (Dari: سفیدکوه, less used in this area) meaning both White Mountains, or sometimes (Pashto: Selseleh-ye Safīd Kūh[6]) meaning white mountain range, is a mountain range to the south of the Hindu Kush. It ranges from eastern Afghanistan into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, and forms a natural border between the two areas. Its highest peak is Mount Sikaram on the Afghanistan–Pakistan border, which towers above all surrounding hills to 4,755 m (15,600 ft) above mean sea level.[7] The lower hills are mostly barren and treeless, but pine grows on the main mountains that form the East Afghan montane conifer forests.[citation needed]

Geography

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Seen from Khogyani District
The Spin Ghar range as seen from Jalalabad (Taj Mahal Guest House)
US aircraft flying by the mountains in Afghanistan

The range extends from the Peshawar valley in the east about 160 kilometers west to the Logar valley in Afghanistan. The Kabul River cuts a narrow trough through the Spīn Ghar mountains to flow eastward into the Indus River. The range connects directly with the Shandur Top offshoot of the Hindu Kush mountain system.[1]

The highest peak is Mount Sikaram (Sikaram Sar), near the Pakistani town of Parachinar in the Kurram Valley. From here it passes to Tari Mangal, Pewar, Alizai, Khewas, Shilawzan, Luqman Khel, Maikay, Chappri Rest House, Zeran, and Upper Khyber Agency. The Spīn Ghar form the watershed between the river systems of the Kabul and Kurram.

The closest cities to the Spīn Ghar are Jalalabad to the north; Gardez to the west; and Khost, and Parachinar in Pakistan to the south.

The range between Herat in the west and Chaghcharan in the east is called Paropamisus Mountains.[8][9][10][11]

Geology

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The White Mountains are part of the western rim that separates the Indian subcontinent from the Eurasian Plate.

The base of the mountains consists of Proterozoic gneisses and granites with admixtures of gabbros, mafic metavolcanic rocks, marble and migmatites. On the summit there are cirque glaciers, some of which are filled with scree.[12]

On the southern flank of the Sikaram Sar follow from 2500 m from bottom to top: alluvial soils in valleys, limestone and dolomite up to 4000 m, an intermediate zone of slate at 4000 m, above crystalline rock.[13]

Fauna

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A 20,000 hectare biotope in the southwest of Spīn Ghar is listed as an important bird area in Afghanistan.[14]

Agriculture and forestry

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Above the nearly barren lower slopes, forests of pine and deodar cedar thrived on the main range, but devastation during the Afghan civil wars reduced timber resources. The valleys still support some agriculture.

The rivers of the White Mountains serve the irrigation of the fields in the densely populated river valleys,[15] which allows the pelvis of Jalalabad multiple harvests. Wheat, maize, various types of vegetables (onions, green beans, okra, tomatoes, etc.), cotton, opium poppies, lemons, sugar cane, and olives are also grown around Jalalabad.[16][17][18] The Bara high valley in the southeast of the range is one of the most intensively used agricultural areas of the Pakistani tribal areas under Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[citation needed]

Older reports speak of rich orchards in the valleys of Spīn Ghar with mulberry and pomegranate trees.[19]

Wood from the eastern Afghan forests has been exported mainly to Pakistan since the 19th century, and in increasingly irresponsible quantities, so that Afghanistan imposed a complete export ban in 1975, which smugglers circumvented.[20][21] In addition to the actual forestry there is or was a collection economy for pistachio nuts and the edible seeds of Pinus gerardiana.[22]

Passes

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Tari Mangal, Kurram Agency, below the Peiwar Pass
The border crossing at Torkham on the Khyber Pass in 2011

There are a few notable mountain passes in or near the Spīn Ghar mountain range. The famous Khyber Pass crosses a spur of the Spīn Ghar. A second crossing, near Mount Sikaram, is called Peiwar Pass or Gawi Pass and connects Parachinar city on the Pakistani side with the Aryob Valley of Paktia Province, Afghanistan. The most viable route over the main ridge of the White Mountains is the Agam Pass (3586 m), over which the distance from Jalalabad to Parachinar is 92 km.[23]

History

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The Durand Line border formed in 1893 between Afghanistan and British India cuts through these mountains.

According to US military intelligence, many al-Qaeda fighters, including Osama bin Laden, crossed the Spīn Ghar to escape to Pakistan during the Tora Bora offensive in 2001. Bin Laden hid in the sparsely vegetated mountains in the northern part, called Tora Bora. After 2004, the Spīn Ghar mountain range was a pivotal place and theater of many battles fought between the foreign fighters of al-Qaeda and the joint Northern Command of the Pakistani military, with the latter trying to prevent the foreign fighters' incursion into Pakistan.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Safīd Mountain Range in Encyclopædia Britannica, 2009
  2. ^ defect link: CIA document
  3. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Safed Koh" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 994–995.
  4. ^ Oxford dictionary, 2014
  5. ^ Garren, William R., and Carl R. Page. 1987. Gazetteer of Pakistan: official standard names approved by the United States Board on Geographic Names. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Information Service. p.578
  6. ^ Safīd Mountain Range in: Universalium, 2010
  7. ^ defense.gov
  8. ^ Physical map of Afghanistan, University of Texas
  9. ^ Physical map of Afghanistan, www.ezilon.com
  10. ^ geographic.org
  11. ^ Paropamisus in The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.
  12. ^ John F. Shroder: Natural Resources in Afghanistan. Amsterdam u. a. 2014, S. 73–74 Vorschau. R. G. Bohanon, K. J. Turner: Geologic Map, AGS Open-File Report (509/510) 2005-1107-A. R. G. Bohanon, K. J. Turner: Geologic Map, AGS Open-File Report (511/512/517) 2005-1108-A
  13. ^ Siegmar W. Breckle: Ökologische Beobachtungen oberhalb der Waldgrenze des Safed Koh (Ost-Afghanistan). In: Vegetatio. 30,2 (1975), S. 89–97, hier S. 93 online
  14. ^ Biodiversity Profile of Afghanistan, United Nations Environment Programme, 2008 Archived 21 January 2023 at the Wayback Machine, S. 29
  15. ^ Vgl. Karten der bewässerten Gebiete und der Bevölkerungsdichte in Stephen G. Peter et al.: Summaries of Important Areas for Mineral Investment and Production Opportunities of Nonfuel Minerals in Afghanistan. 2011, S. 1440–1441 20 B
  16. ^ David Mansfield: All Bets are Off! Prospects for (B)reaching Agreements and Drug Control in Helmand and Nangarhar in the run up to Transition. 2013, S. 27. David Mansfield: “From Bad They Made It Worse” The concentration of opium poppy in areas of conflict in the provinces of Helmand and Nangarhar. 2014
  17. ^ Raphy Favre u. a.: Watershed Atlas of Afghanistan. Part III, Kabul 2004, S. 96 online
  18. ^ "Nangarhar Provincial Profile (2007)" (PDF). Archived from the original on 4 March 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  19. ^ The Imperial Gazetteer of India, 1908, vol 21, S. 349 online
  20. ^ Xavier de Planhol: Afghanistan XIII. Forests and Forestry. Encyclopædia Iranica Online
  21. ^ Daniel Balland: Boundaries III. Boundaries of Afghanistan. Encyclopædia Iranica Online
  22. ^ Erwin Grötzbach: Afghanistan. Darmstadt 1990, S. 122
  23. ^ Ludwig W. Adamec (Hrsg.): Historical and political gazetteer of Afghanistan. Vol. 6, Graz 1985, S. 16 online