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

  • Jennytomkins

    Jennytomkins

    Reviewed 13thOctober2015

    You don't need to pay for this to see this beautiful sight. Don't get trapped into paying to see a statue. Our guide took us further and the sight was better and free. The rock formations are interesting but the colors are beautiful tones of...More

  • FrenchTraveller001

    FrenchTraveller001

    Reviewed 26thAugust2013

    A rather uninteresting red mountain cliff has been turned into a tourist trap, in order to make people pay an entry price to what should normally be free of charge as you can see the cliff anywhere from the G30 highway. The mountains are not...More

  • Sevdal

    Sevdal

    Reviewed 20thAugust2013

    The museum was noth the money worth. Intresting landschape, the most amazing was the intens heat, and the expirience beeing in a desert. Take the pictures from the car, there are fare mor intresting thing to see in the area.

  • 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

  • mario353535

    mario353535

    Reviewed 17thNovember2014

    On Your way to let´s say ´Bezeklik Caves´ it´s nice to stop and have a look at the "Flaming Mountains" (but don´t pay any entry-fee, there´s nothing more to see then from the road). The shape of the slopes looks a bit like flames and...More

  • bethzhang

    bethzhang

    Reviewed 29thJune2016

    Ok to drive past and maybe pull over to take some photos but don't be tempted to pay to go into the Monkey King red mountain complex.

  • FYL003

    FYL003

    Reviewed 23rdOctober2015

    The main site requires admission and was built as a tourist complex. There were some statues put up for photo purposes. This is not the best view of the mountain. The guide should be able to take you to the backside of the mountain following...More

  • 313globetrotter

    313globetrotter

    Reviewed 10thSeptember2015

    FLAMING MOUTAINS (HUOYAN SHAN) has long been in the history of Chinese culture; as it was well written in the infamous book of :"Journey To The West" with the monkey god etc......It is one of the MUST MUST SEE for all Chinese visitors to TURPAN....More

  • Jane W

    Jane W

    Reviewed 12thOctober2018

    The Flaming Mountains weren’t flaming when I viewed them from behind a barbed wire fence, one parking lot over from the tourist’s trap. I think they flame at certain times when the sun illuminates them just so? But still, I loved looking at this rumpled...More

  • lovetoootravel

    lovetoootravel

    Reviewed 28thJune2019

    Beautiful coloured mountains that change colour in different sun lights and cloud cover. At one part, there is a view point where a local sells hard boiled eggs cooked in the hot sand! Taste the same, just slightly discoloured.

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