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Engilchek Glacier

Coordinates: 42°09′30″N 79°56′0″E / 42.15833°N 79.93333°E / 42.15833; 79.93333
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(Redirected from South Inylchek Glacier)
Engilchek Glacier
South Engilchek Base Camp
Map showing the location of Engilchek Glacier
Map showing the location of Engilchek Glacier
Location in Kyrgyzstan. (The uppermost 16 km of the South Engilchek Glacier is in China, and the uppermost 14 km of the North Engilchek Glacier is in Kazakhstan.)
TypeValley glacier
LocationCentral Tian Shan mountains, Kyrgyzstan, China, and Kazakhstan
Coordinates42°09′30″N 79°56′0″E / 42.15833°N 79.93333°E / 42.15833; 79.93333
Area17.2 square kilometres (7 sq mi)
Length60.5 kilometres (38 mi)
Gorkiy Peak from South Engilchek Glacier

Engilchek Glacier (Kyrgyz: Эңилчек, Russian: Энильчек - Enilchek, also Иныльчек - Inylchek) is a glacier in the Central Tian Shan Mountains of Issyk-Kul Region, northeastern Kyrgyzstan. Its snout is 50 km east of the village of Engilchek. The South Engilchek Glacier ranks as the sixth longest non-polar glacier in the world and is the largest and fastest moving glacier in Kyrgyzstan. The main glacier has two arms, the North and South Engilchek Glaciers. The latter is longer and provides an overall length of 60.5 kilometres (38 mi).[1] with an area of 17.2 square kilometres (7 sq mi) and an ice thickness of roughly 150–200 m in the bottom parts.[2] The glacier stems from the Chinese-Kazakh-Kyrgyz massif of Khan Tengri and Pik Pobedy and the upper part of the glacier falls in all three countries.[3] Meltwater from the glacier feeds the Engilchek River, a tributary of the Saryjaz (known as Aksu in China), which crosses the Chinese border into the Tarim Basin. Water from this glacier also feeds the seasonal glacial Lake Merzbacher which causes frequent glacial lake outburst floods in the Engilchek River valley.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Häusler, Hermann. "Results from the 2009 geoscientific expedition to the Inylchek glacier, Central Tien Shan (Kyrgyzstan)" (PDF). Austrian Journal of Earth Sciences. 104 (2): 47–57. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  2. ^ "Inylchek Glacier". Central Asia Adventures. Archived from the original on 18 June 2012. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  3. ^ "Engil'chek Glacier". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  4. ^ Bormudoi, A; Shabunin, A; Hazarika, M; Zaginaev, V; Samarakoon, L. "Studying the outburst of the Merzbacher lake of Inylchek glacier, Kyrgyzstan with Remote Sensing and Field Data". Retrieved 20 June 2015. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)