Zoigê County | |
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County | |
Tibetan transcription(s) | |
• Tibetan | མཛོད་དགེ་རྫོང༌། |
• Wylie | mdzod dge rdzong |
Chinese transcription(s) | |
• Simplified | 若尔盖县 |
• Traditional | 若爾蓋縣 |
• Pinyin | Ruò'ěrgài Xiàn |
Baozuo township in Zoigê County
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Zoigê County (pink) in Ngawa Prefecture (yellow) and Sichuan |
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Location of the seat in Sichuan | |
Coordinates: 33°37′12″N 102°56′24″E / 33.62000°N 102.94000°ECoordinates: 33°37′12″N 102°56′24″E / 33.62000°N 102.94000°E | |
Country | People's Republic of China |
Province | Sichuan |
Prefecture-level city | Ngawa |
County seat | Dazhasi (达扎寺镇) |
Area | |
• Total | 10,620 km2 (4,100 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Total | 69,000 |
• Density | 6.5/km2 (17/sq mi) |
• Major nationalities | Tibetan - 90.4% |
Time zone | China Standard (UTC+8) |
Postal code | 624500 |
Area code(s) | 0837 |
Zoigê County (Tibetan: མཛོད་དགེ་རྫོང༌།, Wylie: mdzod dge rdzong, Chinese: 若尔盖县; pinyin: Ruò'ěrgài Xiàn) is a county of Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan province, China, bordering Gansu to the north. It is the northernmost county of the province. It is part of Tibetan traditional part called Amdo.
It has an area of 10,620 km2 (4,100 sq mi) and 69,900, 90.4% of which are Tibetan people.
Zoigê County is found in the easternmost sections of the Qinghai Plateau. The county is primarily a highland basin made up of the Zoigê Marshes between the Min Mountains and Ani Maching Mountains. The western border of the county, shared with Maqu County in Gansu, is formed by the first major bend of the Yellow River where it changes course nearly 180 degrees and heads back towards Qinghai.
Zoigê has an alpine subarctic climate (Köppen Dwc), featuring very cold nights even in summertime, and very cold winters with extreme diurnal temperature ranges. Snow can fall any time of the year and usually does not melt until summer due to repeated nightly freezing even when maxima are above 0 °C (32 °F). Therefore, access to Zoigê is heavily restricted during the winter months from late October to early May. Sitting at an altitude of more than 11,000 feet, high-altitude sickness is another common problem for tourists.