The series of lakes in one and the same
line of valley, but just separated from each other, the low & of which bears
the name of Pangkong or Pangong, occupy a length of
valley of 90 miles, from end to end of the Lake.
The neck of the Tsaka Pass is a point on the watershed between
the two basins. From its summit there
ie an easy descent into a very gradually
sloping valley, which, in less than 30 miles, leads to past the village of Chushal to the shores of the Pangkong Lake.
The hollow in which it liea, a valley cut through the mountains, not
different from many parts of the valleys of other tributaries to the Indus and
to be referred to the same origin as they, had its drainage flow out by Thaktse to the Shyok. Then came the damming of the waters of
that valley by one or other of the fans which have been pointed out. The water rose in the valley and made a lake
gradually increasing in height, probably equally with the increase of the fan, which by no
means was made all at once. Doubtless the water flowed over between the end of
the fan and the mountain opposite.
This over flow of the water very likely wore
down the channel to some extent, and so the lake may
have been partly drained again. Then, later, came a change of climate to a state drier than before, and a
sinking and receding of the lake-waters
to their present position, where they are enclosed by deposits which were laid down in the lake
during its greater extension. It was at this stage that the water got salt The series of lakes in one and the same
line of valley, but just separated from each other, the low& of which bears
the name of Pangkong or Pangong, occupy a length of
valley of 90 miles, from end to end of the Lake.
The upper part of Pangkong itself and the lake next above are
known to us only through the explorations (made in 1863) of Major E H.
Godwin-Austen, of the Q. T. Survey.
There is a somewhat narrow winding lake
over 40 mile in length ; next (within the same
valley) is a plain, three or four miles long, through which in a channel of
water ; Pangkong is 40 mile in length and from two to nearly four miles in width ; its height above the sea
is 13,980 feet. The valley leading down from the Tsaka Pass and Chushal debouch into that occupied by the lake at about
the centre of this 40 miles, at which a point that, in spite of the great bend in its direction,
a great length, up and down, is visible. What strikes the eye in coming first in view of this
lake is the lovely colour of its waters; especially towards evening is it of the riches deep blue, over the whole expanse ; at morning
time it is of a lighter but a very brilliant colour ; close to the shore, indeed, the water is both so limpid that the bottom can be
seen far down and colorless,
disturbed by
the wind, at the rolling over of the waves before breaking, a beautiful
sapphire that is seen in it.
In the eastern part,
on both sides, high mountains bound
the lake,
whose bold spurs jut out in succession
and, at last meeting, close in the
view. These hills, like all those we have so long been amongst, are bare, showing nought but rock and loose stones ; they are of shaded of brown and yellow, only in the
far distance
is this earthy look modified by the
tone which the atmosphere
gives.
Assuredly for grandeur of aspect, for combination of fine formed mountains with the stretch of
waters, and for the colour of the clear blue sky contrasting with the mountains, neither surpasses it ;
and indeed, under some aspects, it is difficult to persuade oneself that it is
not as beautiful as can be. The
western part of the lake has, on its north-east side, hills like those The water of the lake is salt, with a slightly bitter taste ; reckoning by the taste, to be
something less than half as salt as sea water, nearly half of which is common salt, and mostly sulfates of soda and magnesia, and chloride of potassium.
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Essence of past -It is All about Kashmir