Manuel Bartlett Bautista and Caucasus Mountains: Difference between pages

Coordinates: 42°30′N 45°00′E / 42.500°N 45.000°E / 42.500; 45.000
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{| {{prettyinfobox}}
:''This article is about the terrestrial Eurasian mountain range. For other meanings, see [[Caucasus (disambiguation)]] and [[Caucasia]].
|+ <font size="+1">'''Manuel Bartlett Bautista'''</font>
{{Geobox |Range
|-----
|name=Caucasus Mountains
| style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" align="center" |
|image=Svaneti, georgia.jpg
[[Governor of Tabasco]]
|image_caption=Svaneti region, North-Western [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]
|-----
|country=Russia|country1=[[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]|country2=Azerbaijan|country3=Armenia
| '''In office'''
|region_type=
| [[January 1]], [[1953]] - [[March 22]], [[1955]]
|region=
|-----
|unit=
| '''Preceded by''' || [[Francisco J. Santamaría]]
|border=
|-----
|length=1100 | length_orientation=
| '''Succeeded by''' || [[Miguel Orrico de los Llanos]]
|width=160 | width_orientation=
|-----
|highest=Mount Elbrus
| '''Born'''
|highest_elevation=5642
| [[December 23]], [[1894]]
|highest_lat_d=43 |highest_lat_m=21 |highest_lat_s=18 |highest_lat_NS=N
|-----
|highest_long_d=42 |highest_long_m=26 |highest_long_s=31 |highest_long_EW=E
| '''Birth Place'''
|geology= | period= | orogeny=
| [[Tenosique, Tabasco|Tenosique]], [[Tabasco]]
|map=Kaukasus.jpg
|-----
|map_caption=Satellite image}}
| '''Died'''
The '''Caucasus Mountains''' are a [[Mountain range|mountain system]] in [[Eurasia]] between the [[Black Sea|Black]] and the [[Caspian Sea|Caspian]] [[sea]] in the [[Caucasus]] region.
| [[April 24]], [[1963]]
|-----
| '''Place of Death''' || [[Mexico City]]
|-----
| '''Spouse''' ||Isabel Díaz Castilla
|-----
| '''Profession''' || [[Lawyer]], [[jurist]]
|-----
| '''Political Party'''
| [[Partido Revolucionario Institucional|Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI)]]
|}


The Caucasus Mountains are made up of two separate mountain systems:
'''Manuel Bartlett Bautista''' (*[[Tenosique, Tabasco|Tenosique]], [[Tabasco]], [[December 23]], [[1894]] — †[[Mexico City]], [[April 24]], [[1963]]) was a Mexican journalist, lawyer, judge, and politician who served as [[Governor of Tabasco|Governor of the State of Tabasco]] for two years, before being pressured to resign.
* the [[Greater Caucasus]] Mountain Range and
* the [[Lesser Caucasus]] Mountains.


The ''Greater Caucasus Range'' extends from the [[Western Caucasus|Caucasian Natural Reserve]] in the vicinity of [[Sochi]] on the northeastern shore of the Black Sea, generally trending east-southeast and reaching nearly to [[Baku]] on the Caspian Sea, while the ''Lesser Caucasus'' runs parallel to the greater range, at a distance averaging about 100 km (60 mi) south. [[Meskheti Range]] is a part of the Lesser Caucasus system. The Greater and Lesser Caucasus ranges are connected by the [[Likhi Range]], which separates the [[Kolkhida Lowland]] from the Kura Depression (Kura Lowland). In the South-East are the [[Talysh Mountains]]. The Lesser Caucasus and the [[Armenian Highland]] constitute the [[Transcaucasian Highland]]. The highest peak in the Caucasus range is [[Mount Elbrus]] in the Greater Caucasus, which rises to a height of 18,506 feet (5,642 meters) above sea level. Mountains near Sochi will host part of the [[2014 Winter Olympics]].
==Biography==


==Geology==
Manuel Bartlett Bautista was born in Tenosique to Gabriel Bartlett Cámara, a businessman of partial [[England|English]] descent, and Teodora Bautista Pérez. He completed his [[Primary school|primary studies]] in Tenosique and his secondary studies there and at the Mexican [[Methodist]] Institute of [[Puebla, Mexico|Puebla]]. From [[1909]]-[[1915|15]] he lived in [[Villahermosa, Tabasco|Villahermosa]], then known as San Juan Bautista, studying at the [[Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco|Instituto Juárez]] while also agitating through [[Mexican revolution|revolutionary]] circles. In [[1913]] Bartlett helped found and became President of the Juárez Institute's Free Student Association, but ended up being expelled from the school after leading a protest against [[Victoriano Huerta|Huerta's]] assassination of President [[Francisco I. Madero|Madero]]. While at the [[Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México]] he worked as editor of the student newspaper ''El Estudiante'', graduating with a degree in law in [[1920]].
The Caucasus Mountains formed ca. 28.49&ndash;23.8 million years ago as the result of a [[plate tectonics|tectonic]] plate collision between the [[Arabian plate]] moving northward with respect to the [[Eurasian plate]]. The mountain system forms a continuation of the [[Himalaya]], which are being pressed upwards by a similar collision zone with the Eurasian and [[Indian plate]]s. The entire region is regularly subjected to strong [[earthquake]]s from this activity, especially as the fault structure is complex with the Anatolia/Turkey and Iranian Blocks flowing sidewise, which prevents subduction of the advancing plate edge and hence the lack of volcanoes on the Greater Caucasus Mountain Range{{Fact|date=July 2007}} (although stratovolcanoes such as [[Mount Elbrus]], Mount [[Kazbek]] and others do exist). The Lesser Caucasus Mountains on the other hand, are largely of [[volcanic]] origin. The [[Javakheti Volcanic Plateau]] in [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] and the surrounding volcanic ranges which extend well into central [[Armenia]] are some of the youngest and the most unstable geological features of the region.[[Image:Aragats in snow.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Mt. [[Aragats]], in [[Armenia]] is the highest peak of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains]]


There are large [[granite]], [[gneiss]], [[petroleum]] (estimated reserves: up to 200 billion barrels) and numerous [[natural gas]] deposits found in the area.
Bartlett returned to Villahermosa that same year and taught for a brief time at his old school, the Instituto Juárez; he also served as [[syndic]] in the [[Ayuntamiento]] del Centro (City Council) and President of the Committee of Public Health. From [[1921]]-[[1922|22]] he served as a [[Deputy (legislator)|deputy]] to the [[Congress of Tabasco|Congress of the State of Tabasco]]. From 1920 to [[1929]] he held various legal and governmental positions, including consulting lawyer to the [[City Council]] of [[Mexico City]] (1920); [[public defender]] to the [[Military of Mexico|military]] (1922); consulting lawyer to the [[Secretariat of Finance and Public Credit]] ([[1924]]-[[1928|28]]); and chief of the legal department of the same (1929). After a decade working in different [[district court|district-judicial]] capacities Bartlett was made a [[Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation|Justice of the Mexican Supreme Court]], position which he would hold from [[1941]]-[[1951|51]].


==Geographical affiliation==
In [[1953]], after three previously unsuccessful attempts, Bartlett obtained the [[Partido Revolucionario Institucional|PRI's]] nomination for the [[Tabasco#Government_and_politics|governorship of Tabasco]], a decision which, owing to the party's virtual monopoly on power, all but assured him the office. However, as a result of intra-party struggles coupled with civil unrest in the state, Bartlett eventually fell out of favor with the [[Adolfo Ruiz Cortines]] government and felt pressured to leave the position before the conclusion of his term. On [[March 22]], [[1955]], Bartlett asked for and was granted a leave of absence by the State Congress, effectively ending his governorship.
There is no clear agreement on whether the Caucasus Mountains are a part of [[Europe]] or [[Asia]]. Depending on the varying perspectives, Europe's highest mountain is either [[Mount Elbrus]] {{m to ft|5642|abbr=yes}} or [[Mont Blanc]] in the [[Alps]], at the Italian-French border, with a height of {{m to ft|4810|abbr=yes}}.


The Caucasus Mountains are located in the middle of the [[Eurasian plate]] between Europe and Asia. Because the plate is geologically stable in this region, it is hard to determine the exact course of the continental borderline. Therefore, throughout history the borderline has changed from one place to another. The ancient [[Greeks]] saw the [[Bosphorus]] and the Caucasus Mountains as the border of Europe. Later this view changed several times for political reasons. In the [[Migration Period]] and the [[Middle Ages]], Bosphorus and the river [[Don River, Russia|Don]] divided the two continents.
Bartlett was married to Isabel Díaz Castilla, daughter of famed poet and insurgent [[Salvador Díaz Mirón]]. His son [[Manuel Bartlett Díaz]] is a prominent PRI official and former governor of [[Puebla, Puebla|Puebla]]. Manuel Bartlett Bautista died on [[April 24]], [[1963]] and is buried in Mexico City.


The border was historically defined by the [[Sweden|Swedish]] [[Officer (armed forces)|military officer]] and [[geographer]] [[Philip Johan von Strahlenberg]], who suggested the border follow the peaks of the [[Ural mountains|Urals]], and then the lower [[Emba River|Emba]] and the coast of the Caspian Sea, before passing through the [[Kuma-Manych Depression]], which lies 300 km north of the Caucasus Mountains. In [[1730]], this course was approved by the [[Russia]]n [[Tsar]] and since then was adopted by many scientists.
==Published works==
Following this definition, the mountains are a part of Asia and according to this view, the highest European mountain is [[Mont Blanc]].
(list not comprehensive)


On the other hand, [[La Grande Encyclopédie]] clearly draws the border between Europe and Asia south of both Caucasian mountain ranges.{{Fact|date=September 2007}} Both [[Elbrus]] and [[Kazbek]] are here European mountains.
*''La defensa como procuración''. 1920
*''El pocho, cojoes, tigres y pochoveras : interesantes y curiosas costumbres tradicionales de Tenosique, Tab''. 1926
*''La cuestión electoral tabasqueña (1923-1926)''. 1954


In political terms, the present-day division is either considered to be between [[Russia]] (Europe) on one side and [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], [[Armenia]] and [[Azerbaijan]] (Asia) on the other, inclusive of Georgia and Azerbaijan within Europe but not Armenia, or inclusive of all three nations.
==Bibliography==

*(English) Camp, Roderic Ai, ''Mexican political biographies, 1935-1993''. The Hague: Mouton, 1993.
==Notable peaks==
*(Spanish) Peralta Burelo, Francisco, ''Gobernadores de Tabasco separados del cargo, 1935-1987''. Villahermosa, Tab.: [[Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco]], 1988.
The table below lists some of the highest peaks of the Caucasus. With the exception of [[Shkhara]], the heights are taken from Soviet 1:50,000 mapping. There are higher and more prominent, but nameless, peaks than some of the peaks included below.

{| class = "wikitable"
!Peak Name !! Elevation (m) !! [[Prominence]] (m) !! Country
|-
| [[Elbrus]] || 5,641|| 4,741 || [[Russia]]
|-
|[[Dykh-Tau]] || 5,205 || 2,002 || [[Russia]]
|-
| [[Shkhara]] || 5,201 || 1,365 || [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]
|-
|[[Koshtan-Tau]] || 5,152 || 822 || [[Russia]]
|-
|[[Janga|Jangi-Tau]] ([[Janga]]) || 5,059 || 300 || [[Russia]]/[[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]
|-
|[[Kazbek]] ||5,047 || 2,353 || [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]
|-
|[[Pushkin Peak|Pushkin]]|| 5,033 || 110 || [[Russia]]/[[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]
|-
|[[Katyn-Tau]] || 4,979 || 240 || [[Russia]]/[[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]
|-
|[[Shota Rustaveli Peak|Shota Rustaveli]] || 4,860 || c.50 || [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]
|-
|[[Tetnuld]] || 4,858 || 672 || [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]
|-
|}

See also: [http://www.peaklist.org/WWlists/ultras/CaucasusP1500m.html List of the most prominent mountains in the Caucasus]

==Climate==
[[Image:VittfarneGeorgien 155.jpg|thumb|left|305px|View of the Caucasus Mountains in [[Svaneti]], [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]]]
The climate of the Caucasus varies both vertically (according to elevation) and horizontally (by latitude and location). Temperature generally decreases as elevation rises. Average annual temperature in [[Sukhumi]], [[Abkhazia]] at sea level is 15 degrees Celsius while on the slopes of Mt. [[Kazbek]] at an elevation of 3700 meters, average annual temperature falls to -6.1 degrees Celsius. The northern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountain Range are 3 degrees (Celsius) colder than the southern slopes. The highlands of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains in [[Armenia]], [[Azerbaijan]], and [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] are marked by sharp temperature contrasts between the summer and winter months due to a more continental climate.

Precipitation increases from east to west in most areas. Elevation plays an important role in the Caucasus and mountains generally receive higher amounts of precipitation than low-lying areas. The northeastern regions ([[Dagestan]]) and the southern portions of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains are the driest. The absolute minimum annual precipitation is 250mm (8.4 inches) in the northeastern [[Caspian Depression]]. Western parts of the Caucasus Mountains are marked by high amounts of precipitation. The southern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountain Range receive higher amounts of precipitation than the northern slopes. Annual precipitation in the Western Caucasus ranges from 1000-4000mm (39-157 inches) while in the Eastern and Northern Caucasus ([[Chechnya]], [[Ingushetia]], [[Kabardino-Balkaria]], [[Ossetia]], [[Kakheti]], [[Kartli]], etc) precipitation ranges from 600-1800mm (23.6-70.9 inches). The absolute maximum annual precipitation is 4100mm (161 inches) around the Mt. Mtirala area which lies on the [[Meskheti Range]] in [[Ajaria]]. The precipitation of the Lesser Caucasus Mountain Range (Southern [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], [[Armenia]], western [[Azerbaijan]]), not including the [[Meskheti Range]], varies from 300-800mm (11.8-31.5 inches) annually.

The Caucasus Mountains are known for the high amount of snowfall, although many regions which are not located along the windward slopes do not receive nearly as much snow. This is especially true for the Lesser Caucasus Mountains which are somewhat isolated from the moist influences coming in from the [[Black Sea]] and receive considerably less precipitation (in the form of snow) than the Greater Caucasus Mountains. The average winter snow cover of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains ranges from 10-30cm (4-12 inches). The Greater Caucasus Mountains (especially the southwestern slopes) are marked by heavy snowfall. [[Avalanches]] are common from November-April.

Snow cover in several regions ([[Svanetia]], northern [[Abkhazia]] ) may reach 5 meters (16.4 feet). The Mt. [[Achishkho]] region, which is the snowiest place in the Caucasus, often records snow depths of 7 meters (23 feet).

==Landscape==
The Caucasus Mountains have a varied landscape which mainly changes vertically and according to the distance from large bodies of water. The region contains [[biomes]] ranging from subtropical low-land marshes/forests to [[glaciers]] (Western and Central Caucasus) as well as highland [[semidesert]]s/[[steppe]]s and [[alpine meadow]]s in the south (mainly [[Armenia]] and [[Azerbaijan]]).

The northern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountains are covered by [[oak]], [[hornbeam]], [[maple]], and [[ash tree|ash]] forests at lower elevations while [[birch]] and [[pine]] forests take over at higher elevations. Some of the lowest locations/slopes of the region are covered by [[steppes]] and [[grasslands]]. The slopes of the Northwestern Greater Caucasus ([[Kabardino-Balkaria]], [[Cherkessia]], etc.) also contain [[spruce]] and [[fir]] forests. The [[alpine climate|alpine]] zone replaces the forest around 2,000 meters above sea level. The permafrost/[[glacier]] line generally starts around 2,800-3,000 meters. The south-eastern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountains are covered by [[beech]], [[oak]], [[maple]], [[hornbeam]], and ash forests. [[Beech]] forests tend to dominate in higher locations. The south-western slopes of the Greater Caucasus are covered by [[Colchis|Colchian]] forests ([[oak]], [[buxus]], [[beech]], [[chestnut]], [[hornbeam]], [[elm]]) at lower elevations with [[coniferous]] and mixed forests ([[spruce]], [[fir]] and [[beech]]) taking over at higher elevations. The alpine zone on the southern slopes may extend up to 2,800 meters above sea level while the [[glacier]]/snow line starts from 3,000-3,500 meters.
[[Image:Chechenya gorge2.jpg|thumb|250px|A Gorge in [[Chechnya]], [[Russia]]]]

The northern and western slopes of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains are characterized both by [[Colchis|Colchian]] and other [[deciduous]] forests at lower elevations while mixed and [[coniferous]] forests (mainly [[spruce]] and [[fir]]) dominate at higher elevations. [[Beech]] forests are also common at higher elevations. The southern slopes of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains are largely covered by [[grasslands]] and [[steppes]] up to an elevation of 2,500 meters. The highest areas of the region contain alpine grasslands as well. [[Volcanic]] and other rock formations are common throughout the region. The volcanic zone extends over a large area from southern [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] into [[Armenia]] and southwestern [[Azerbaijan]]. Some of the prominent peaks of the region include Mt. [[Aragats]], [[Didi Abuli]], [[Samsari]], and others. The area is characterized by [[volcanic plateau]]s, [[lava flows]], [[volcanic lake]]s, [[volcanic cone]]s and other features. The Lesser Caucasus Mountains lack the type of glaciers/glacial features that are common on the Greater Caucasus Mountain Range.

''Parts of this article are from the [[NASA Earth Observatory]]; [http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=15340]''

{{Ranges of Iranian Plateau}}

== References ==
{{reflist}}

==See also==
{{Wikisource1911Enc|Caucasus}}
<div class="references-small">
*Small Nations and Great Powers: A Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict in the Caucasus By Svante E. Cornell</div>


==External links==
==External links==
* [[NASA Earth Observatory]] images of the Caucasus: [http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/search_results.html?cx=016116316545443671480%3Albqtvfnrdrk&cof=FORID%3A9&q=caucasus&sa=search]
*[http://www.scjn.gob.mx/PortalSCJN/RecJur/BibiotecaDigitalSCJN/IndiceBibliotecaDigital/IndiceObrasSCJN/Libros/ElMinistroManuelBartlettBautista.htm El Ministro Manuel Bartlett Bautista] {es}
*[http://www.peakbagger.com/range.aspx?rid=38 Highest Peaks of the Caucasus from peakbagger.com]
*[http://www.tabasco.gob.mx/estado/exgobernadores1.php Ex-gobernadores de Tabasco] {es}


{{coord|42|30|N|45|00|E|region:GE_type:mountain|display=title}}

{{Geography topics}}


[[Category:Caucasus| ]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bartlett Bautista, Manuel}}
[[Category:Ethnographers]]
[[Category:Mountain ranges of Asia]]
[[Category: Governors of Tabasco]]
[[Category:Mountain ranges of Europe]]
[[Category:Members of the Institutional Revolutionary Party]]
[[Category:Mountain ranges of Russia]]
[[Category:Mexican educators]]
[[Category:Mountains of Azerbaijan]]
[[Category:Mexican journalists]]
[[Category:Mountain ranges of Georgia (country)]]
[[Category:Mexican judges]]
[[Category:Mountain ranges of Iran]]
[[Category:Mexican lawyers]]
[[Category:Physiographic provinces]]
[[Category:Mexican legal writers]]
[[Category:Mexican politicians]]
[[Category:Mexican Supreme Court justices]]
[[Category:Mexican writers]]
[[Category:National Autonomous University of Mexico alumni]]
[[Category:People from Tabasco]]


[[ar:جبال القوقاز]]
[[es:Manuel Bartlett Bautista]]
[[az:Qafqaz]]
[[nl:Manuel Bartlett Bautista]]
[[bg:Кавказ]]
[[cs:Kavkaz]]
[[da:Kaukasus]]
[[de:Kaukasus]]
[[et:Kaukasus]]
[[es:Montañas del Cáucaso]]
[[eo:Kaŭkazo]]
[[fa:رشته‌کوه قفقاز]]
[[gl:Cáucaso (cordilleira)]]
[[ko:카프카스 산맥]]
[[hr:Kavkaz]]
[[id:Pegunungan Kaukasus]]
[[is:Kákasusfjöll]]
[[it:Catena del Caucaso]]
[[he:הרי הקווקז]]
[[ka:კავკასიონი]]
[[la:Caucasus]]
[[lt:Kaukazo kalnai]]
[[nl:Kaukasus (gebergte)]]
[[ja:カフカース山脈]]
[[nn:Kaukasus]]
[[pl:Kaukaz (pasmo górskie)]]
[[pt:Cordilheira do Cáucaso]]
[[ro:Munţii Caucaz]]
[[ru:Кавказские горы]]
[[sl:Kavkaz]]
[[fi:Kaukasus]]
[[sv:Kaukasus]]
[[tt:Qawqaz]]
[[tr:Kafkas Dağları]]
[[uk:Кавказ]]
[[ur:کوہ قفقاز]]
[[zh:高加索山脉]]

Revision as of 16:15, 10 October 2008

This article is about the terrestrial Eurasian mountain range. For other meanings, see Caucasus (disambiguation) and Caucasia.

Template:Geobox The Caucasus Mountains are a mountain system in Eurasia between the Black and the Caspian sea in the Caucasus region.

The Caucasus Mountains are made up of two separate mountain systems:

The Greater Caucasus Range extends from the Caucasian Natural Reserve in the vicinity of Sochi on the northeastern shore of the Black Sea, generally trending east-southeast and reaching nearly to Baku on the Caspian Sea, while the Lesser Caucasus runs parallel to the greater range, at a distance averaging about 100 km (60 mi) south. Meskheti Range is a part of the Lesser Caucasus system. The Greater and Lesser Caucasus ranges are connected by the Likhi Range, which separates the Kolkhida Lowland from the Kura Depression (Kura Lowland). In the South-East are the Talysh Mountains. The Lesser Caucasus and the Armenian Highland constitute the Transcaucasian Highland. The highest peak in the Caucasus range is Mount Elbrus in the Greater Caucasus, which rises to a height of 18,506 feet (5,642 meters) above sea level. Mountains near Sochi will host part of the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Geology

The Caucasus Mountains formed ca. 28.49–23.8 million years ago as the result of a tectonic plate collision between the Arabian plate moving northward with respect to the Eurasian plate. The mountain system forms a continuation of the Himalaya, which are being pressed upwards by a similar collision zone with the Eurasian and Indian plates. The entire region is regularly subjected to strong earthquakes from this activity, especially as the fault structure is complex with the Anatolia/Turkey and Iranian Blocks flowing sidewise, which prevents subduction of the advancing plate edge and hence the lack of volcanoes on the Greater Caucasus Mountain Range[citation needed] (although stratovolcanoes such as Mount Elbrus, Mount Kazbek and others do exist). The Lesser Caucasus Mountains on the other hand, are largely of volcanic origin. The Javakheti Volcanic Plateau in Georgia and the surrounding volcanic ranges which extend well into central Armenia are some of the youngest and the most unstable geological features of the region.

Mt. Aragats, in Armenia is the highest peak of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains

There are large granite, gneiss, petroleum (estimated reserves: up to 200 billion barrels) and numerous natural gas deposits found in the area.

Geographical affiliation

There is no clear agreement on whether the Caucasus Mountains are a part of Europe or Asia. Depending on the varying perspectives, Europe's highest mountain is either Mount Elbrus Template:M to ft or Mont Blanc in the Alps, at the Italian-French border, with a height of Template:M to ft.

The Caucasus Mountains are located in the middle of the Eurasian plate between Europe and Asia. Because the plate is geologically stable in this region, it is hard to determine the exact course of the continental borderline. Therefore, throughout history the borderline has changed from one place to another. The ancient Greeks saw the Bosphorus and the Caucasus Mountains as the border of Europe. Later this view changed several times for political reasons. In the Migration Period and the Middle Ages, Bosphorus and the river Don divided the two continents.

The border was historically defined by the Swedish military officer and geographer Philip Johan von Strahlenberg, who suggested the border follow the peaks of the Urals, and then the lower Emba and the coast of the Caspian Sea, before passing through the Kuma-Manych Depression, which lies 300 km north of the Caucasus Mountains. In 1730, this course was approved by the Russian Tsar and since then was adopted by many scientists. Following this definition, the mountains are a part of Asia and according to this view, the highest European mountain is Mont Blanc.

On the other hand, La Grande Encyclopédie clearly draws the border between Europe and Asia south of both Caucasian mountain ranges.[citation needed] Both Elbrus and Kazbek are here European mountains.

In political terms, the present-day division is either considered to be between Russia (Europe) on one side and Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan (Asia) on the other, inclusive of Georgia and Azerbaijan within Europe but not Armenia, or inclusive of all three nations.

Notable peaks

The table below lists some of the highest peaks of the Caucasus. With the exception of Shkhara, the heights are taken from Soviet 1:50,000 mapping. There are higher and more prominent, but nameless, peaks than some of the peaks included below.

Peak Name Elevation (m) Prominence (m) Country
Elbrus 5,641 4,741 Russia
Dykh-Tau 5,205 2,002 Russia
Shkhara 5,201 1,365 Georgia
Koshtan-Tau 5,152 822 Russia
Jangi-Tau (Janga) 5,059 300 Russia/Georgia
Kazbek 5,047 2,353 Georgia
Pushkin 5,033 110 Russia/Georgia
Katyn-Tau 4,979 240 Russia/Georgia
Shota Rustaveli 4,860 c.50 Georgia
Tetnuld 4,858 672 Georgia

See also: List of the most prominent mountains in the Caucasus

Climate

View of the Caucasus Mountains in Svaneti, Georgia

The climate of the Caucasus varies both vertically (according to elevation) and horizontally (by latitude and location). Temperature generally decreases as elevation rises. Average annual temperature in Sukhumi, Abkhazia at sea level is 15 degrees Celsius while on the slopes of Mt. Kazbek at an elevation of 3700 meters, average annual temperature falls to -6.1 degrees Celsius. The northern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountain Range are 3 degrees (Celsius) colder than the southern slopes. The highlands of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains in Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia are marked by sharp temperature contrasts between the summer and winter months due to a more continental climate.

Precipitation increases from east to west in most areas. Elevation plays an important role in the Caucasus and mountains generally receive higher amounts of precipitation than low-lying areas. The northeastern regions (Dagestan) and the southern portions of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains are the driest. The absolute minimum annual precipitation is 250mm (8.4 inches) in the northeastern Caspian Depression. Western parts of the Caucasus Mountains are marked by high amounts of precipitation. The southern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountain Range receive higher amounts of precipitation than the northern slopes. Annual precipitation in the Western Caucasus ranges from 1000-4000mm (39-157 inches) while in the Eastern and Northern Caucasus (Chechnya, Ingushetia, Kabardino-Balkaria, Ossetia, Kakheti, Kartli, etc) precipitation ranges from 600-1800mm (23.6-70.9 inches). The absolute maximum annual precipitation is 4100mm (161 inches) around the Mt. Mtirala area which lies on the Meskheti Range in Ajaria. The precipitation of the Lesser Caucasus Mountain Range (Southern Georgia, Armenia, western Azerbaijan), not including the Meskheti Range, varies from 300-800mm (11.8-31.5 inches) annually.

The Caucasus Mountains are known for the high amount of snowfall, although many regions which are not located along the windward slopes do not receive nearly as much snow. This is especially true for the Lesser Caucasus Mountains which are somewhat isolated from the moist influences coming in from the Black Sea and receive considerably less precipitation (in the form of snow) than the Greater Caucasus Mountains. The average winter snow cover of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains ranges from 10-30cm (4-12 inches). The Greater Caucasus Mountains (especially the southwestern slopes) are marked by heavy snowfall. Avalanches are common from November-April.

Snow cover in several regions (Svanetia, northern Abkhazia ) may reach 5 meters (16.4 feet). The Mt. Achishkho region, which is the snowiest place in the Caucasus, often records snow depths of 7 meters (23 feet).

Landscape

The Caucasus Mountains have a varied landscape which mainly changes vertically and according to the distance from large bodies of water. The region contains biomes ranging from subtropical low-land marshes/forests to glaciers (Western and Central Caucasus) as well as highland semideserts/steppes and alpine meadows in the south (mainly Armenia and Azerbaijan).

The northern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountains are covered by oak, hornbeam, maple, and ash forests at lower elevations while birch and pine forests take over at higher elevations. Some of the lowest locations/slopes of the region are covered by steppes and grasslands. The slopes of the Northwestern Greater Caucasus (Kabardino-Balkaria, Cherkessia, etc.) also contain spruce and fir forests. The alpine zone replaces the forest around 2,000 meters above sea level. The permafrost/glacier line generally starts around 2,800-3,000 meters. The south-eastern slopes of the Greater Caucasus Mountains are covered by beech, oak, maple, hornbeam, and ash forests. Beech forests tend to dominate in higher locations. The south-western slopes of the Greater Caucasus are covered by Colchian forests (oak, buxus, beech, chestnut, hornbeam, elm) at lower elevations with coniferous and mixed forests (spruce, fir and beech) taking over at higher elevations. The alpine zone on the southern slopes may extend up to 2,800 meters above sea level while the glacier/snow line starts from 3,000-3,500 meters.

A Gorge in Chechnya, Russia

The northern and western slopes of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains are characterized both by Colchian and other deciduous forests at lower elevations while mixed and coniferous forests (mainly spruce and fir) dominate at higher elevations. Beech forests are also common at higher elevations. The southern slopes of the Lesser Caucasus Mountains are largely covered by grasslands and steppes up to an elevation of 2,500 meters. The highest areas of the region contain alpine grasslands as well. Volcanic and other rock formations are common throughout the region. The volcanic zone extends over a large area from southern Georgia into Armenia and southwestern Azerbaijan. Some of the prominent peaks of the region include Mt. Aragats, Didi Abuli, Samsari, and others. The area is characterized by volcanic plateaus, lava flows, volcanic lakes, volcanic cones and other features. The Lesser Caucasus Mountains lack the type of glaciers/glacial features that are common on the Greater Caucasus Mountain Range.

Parts of this article are from the NASA Earth Observatory; [1]

References

See also

  • Small Nations and Great Powers: A Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict in the Caucasus By Svante E. Cornell

External links


42°30′N 45°00′E / 42.500°N 45.000°E / 42.500; 45.000