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Travel to Pure Land
Not only is Qomolangma towering and grand, but very powerful. Twenty
kilometers around it, groups of peaks stand in great numbers and the mountain
ranges rise one higher than another.
Namtso Lake
The name of Namtso Lake means Heavenly
Lake, or Gods' Lake or Lake of Immortals. As a famous Holy Land of Tibetan
Buddhism,
it is located 190 kilometers between Dangxiong County of Lhasa
and Bange County of Naqu Region in the Tibet Autonomous Region. The lake is
4,718 meters above sea level and covers an area of more than 1,900 square
kilometers. The Namtso Lake is the second largest saltwater lake in China as
well as the highest saltwater lake in the world. The lake depends on melting ice
and snow from Danggula Mountains for its water supply, with a number of streams
along it.
To the southeast of the Namtso Lake is the main peak of snow-covered Danggula
Mountains, and continuous highlands and hills stand on the north side of the
lake. Surrounded by vast grasslands, the lake looks like a huge mirror. With the
clear blue sky over the dark blue lake, white snow, green grass, colorful wild
flowers and herdsman's ox-hair tents make a beautiful and appealing natural
landscape. The Namtso Lake is abundant in precious medicinal materials such as
Chinese caterpillar fungus, fritillaria and snow-lotus and as well as various
fish species such as highland thin-scale fish and non-scale fish. The lake is
also a habitat of various wild animals such as black
bear, wild ox, wild donkey, blue sheep and marmot.
Mani stone mounds can be found everywhere along the Namtso Lake. Every
Tibetan Buddhist throws a stone on every mound he or she comes across. To throw
a stone represents reciting the scriptures once. Hanging on the Mani stone mound
are pieces of cloth in five different colors, blue, white, red, green and
yellow. The cloth waves in the wind and one wave means sending the scriptures to
the Heaven once. With the elapse of time, separate stone mounds have joined
together to form a grand sight of Mani wall, which is over one hundred meters
long and about a meter high. Regarded as a holy lake by pious Buddhists, it
attracts pilgrims from as far as India and Nepal.
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