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Monday 7 November 2011

Mongolia Travaling Best of the 2011


MongoliaPhotos

Photo: A woman wearing an elaborate headdress

Pageant Contestant

A young woman in an elaborate traditional headdress participates in a beauty pageant in Darhan, one of Mongolia’s largest cities. Nearly half of all Mongolians live in cities; a third (about one million) live in the capital city of Ulaanbaatar,Photo: People herding goats through snow
When fall comes to northern Mongolia’s Darhad valley, hundreds of families load up their oxen and move their sheep, goats, and cattle over 10,000-foot (3,000-meter) mountains to winter pasture. The twice-yearly trek has shaped nomadic life here for centuries.
One of the highest countries in the world, Mongolia is a land of harsh extremes—snowy mountains, wide expanses of grassy steppe, and windswept desert. Though vast in area, Mongolia is home to just over three million people, many continuing a nomadic way of life as the country adjusts from Soviet rule to modern conveniences.
Here, a boy ropes a Bactrian camel as he and his family prepare to move on from their camp. The only truly wild camels that still exist, these two-humped herbivores are still found in the Gobi desert in Mongolia and China but number less than a thousand.Photo: Close-up of a Mongolian man
A man in western Mongolia wears a fur-trimmed hat as protection from the bitter cold of winter. Sprawled across mountains and plateaus, Mongolia has an average elevation of 5,180 feet (1,580 meters)Photo: Pigeons flocking from a courtyard
A young boy chases pigeons in the courtyard of a Buddhist monastery and temple in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia’s capital. About half of Mongolians are Lamaist, or Tibetan, Buddhists. Minority religions include Islam, Christianity, and Shamanism.Photo: Four camels walking in the desert
Bactrian camels make their way across dunes in the Gobi desert, a vast expanse between southern Mongolia and northern China. The world’s third largest “hot” desert, the Gobi is home to some of Earth’s largest dunes, as well as unique wildlife like the endangered Gobi bear.Photo: Men wrestling in a grassy field
Judges keep a close watch as one wrestler trounces another during a premigration festival in the Darhad valley. Mongolian legend claims wrestlers began wearing open-chested shirts after a woman won competitions disguised as a man. Photo: Two girls in a classroom
In the capital, students work together to complete a math lesson. Until 1990 the Soviet Union had Mongolia in a tight lock for more than six decades, imposing bureaucratic strictures on a people who had rarely lived by clock or ledger. But Soviet aid also built schools across Mongolia and brought virtually 100 percent literacy.Photo: A man on a horse-drawn cart in the water
,A man in northern Mongolia collects water in the falling snow. Nomadic herdsmen must often cope with the country’s extreme climate, including thedzud, a harsh winter that follows a dry summer. Photo: Two boys racing horses in the countryside
Young boys race horses at the annual Nadaam festival, a midsummer celebration of nomadic athleticism that also includes wrestling and archery competitions. Hundreds of children—both boys and girls—participate as jockeys in the horse racing event.

Mongolia Map

Map: Mongolia
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