Flaming Mountain


  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain
  • flaming mountain

The Flaming Mountains (Chinese: 火焰山; pinyin: huǒyànshān) or Gaochang Mountains are barren, eroded, red sandstone hills in the Tian Shan of  Xinjiang. They lie near the northern rim of the Taklamakan Desert and east of the city of Turpan. Their striking gullies and trenches caused by erosion of the red sandstone bedrock give the mountains a flaming appearance at certain times of the day.

The mountains are approximately 100 kilometres (60 mi) long and 5–10 km (3–6 mi) wide, crossing the Turpan Depression from east to west. The average height of the Flaming Mountains is 500 m (1,600 ft), with some peaks reaching over 800 m (2,600 ft). The mountain climate is harsh, and the extremely high summer temperatures make this the hottest spot in China, frequently reaching 50 °C (122 °F) or higher. One of the largest thermometers in China—a popular tourist spot—is on display adjacent to the mountain, tracking the surrounding ground temperatures.

A number of important palaeontological remains have been found in the area, see e.g. Lianmuqin Formation and Subashi Formation.

Silk route

In ancient times, the merchant traders traversing the Silk Route in southeast Asia avoided the mountains by stopping at oasis towns, such as Gaochang,  built on the desert's rim at the foot of the Flaming Mountains and  near an important mountain pass. Oasis towns became respite stops for traveling merchant traders. Buddhist missionaries often accompanied traders on busy international trade routes. During this time trade boomed on the Silk Route. Buddhist monasteries and temples were built in the busy trading centers and in nearby remote mountain spots.

The Bezeklik Thousand Buddha Caves site lies in a gorge under the cliffs of the Flaming Mountains near the pass by Gaochang. It is a complex of seventy Buddhist cave grottoes dating from the 5th to the 9th centuries CE, many with thousands of murals of Buddha.

Literary fame

The Flaming Mountains received their name from a fantasy account of a Buddhist monk, accompanied by a Monkey King with magical powers. The monk runs into a wall of flames on his pilgrimage to India in the popular 16th century novel, Journey to the West, by Ming dynasty writer, Wu Cheng'en. The novel is an embellished description of the monk Xuanzang who traveled to India in 627 CE to obtain Buddhist scriptures and went through a pass in the Tien Shan after leaving Gaochang.

Mythology

According to the classical novel Journey to the West, the Monkey King created a disturbance in the heavens and knocked over a kiln, causing embers to fall from the sky to the place where the Flaming Mountains are now. In a Uigur legend, a dragon lived in the Tianshan Mountains. Because the dragon ate little children, a Uigur hero slew the dragon and cut it into eight pieces. The dragon's blood turned into a scarlet mountain of blood and the eight pieces became the eight valleys in the Flaming Mountains.

Climate

An unconfirmed soil surface temperature of 300.2 °F (149.0 °C) was estimated by satellite measurement in 2008.

Client’s Reviews

  • Chung L

    Chung L

    Reviewed 4thNovember2016

    This is a tourist trap. Flaming Mountain is famous because it was featured 8n a classic Chinese novel, but there really is nothing here. The admission fees are a rip-off. Nearby, there is the Flaming Mountain Canyon, and it is much more impressive. It is...More

  • CM1151

    CM1151

    Reviewed 10thSeptember2017

    Houyan Shan (Flaming Mountains), east of Xinjiang, is a huge sandstone mountain range 9-10 km wide and 100 km long stretch across the Tulufan (Turpan) Depression. The average height is 500m and at its highest point 800m. This was where characters of the famous Journey...More

  • benquintens

    benquintens

    Reviewed 27thJuly2012

    Nice mountains but just stay out of the paying area because outside of it there's even more to see. Extremely hot!

  • TOsunnyfirst

    TOsunnyfirst

    Reviewed 12thJuly2017

    Even if one is familiar with the story of "Journey to the West" and the monkey king, it would not be worth it to pay to go inside the tourist trap with sculptures and a giant mountain range that can be appreciated from afar. The...More

  • merc8989

    merc8989

    Reviewed 6thNovember2012

    made famous by chinese epic movie "journey to the west". Very commercial n not worth the long drive from urumuqi. There are some caves with paintings of buddha but nothing compared to grotto in dunhuang. Many of the scruptures have been stolen or damaged. Not...More

  • Rhea W

    Rhea W

    Reviewed 30thApril2013

    These mountains are nothing special. They 'flame' when the sun shines on them but there are better mountains with colour in Azerbijain.

  • Dennis M

    Dennis M

    Reviewed 15thJuly2013

    If you happen to be driving past it, you can snap a picture if you like, but the mountain really looks like many others along the way. Why anybody would want to pay an entrance fee to go inside a compound where you can take...More

  • Andrew M

    Andrew M

    Reviewed 24thAugust2019

    We intended to visit this attraction, but it just seemed too busy, as the car park was full of tour buses. Instead of paying the RMB40 entrance fee, we decided to take photos from the car park, as we had visited many sites in Turpan...More

  • Stephen T

    Stephen T

    Reviewed 1stMay2015

    No need visit this site as it can be seen from a distance. It is just red rocks that you need not pay to view

  • prinszn21

    prinszn21

    Reviewed 31stOctober2015

    Just stand at the side, you will be amazing how beautiful this flaming mountain, no need to pay for this attraction, a good object for photographers to take another amazing landscape in Xinjiang

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