Dâmrei Mountains

The Dâmrei Mountains (literally the "Elephant Mountains", Khmer: ភ្នំដំរី, Chuŏr Phnum Dâmrei), refer to a mountain range situated in south-western Cambodia, traversing around 110 km (68 mi) north-south as a succession of the Cardamom Mountains, dropping abruptly to the sea near the town of Kampot.[1] The Elephant Mountains represent the easternmost parts of the original extent of the wet evergreen forests that include Cambodia's south and the mountains east of Bangkok in Thailand.[2]

Dâmrei Mountains
Dâmrei Mountains on the horizon
Highest point
Elevation1,081 m (3,547 ft)
Coordinates10°37′00″N 104°03′00″E
Dimensions
Length110 km (68 mi) N/S
Width32 km (20 mi) E/W
Geography
Dâmrei Mountains
Location of the Dâmrei Mountains in Cambodia
LocationCambodia
Parent rangeCardamom Mountains
Climbing
First ascentUnknown
Easiest routeDrive

Description

Panoramic view of Kampot and the sea from Phnom Bokor

The range is a southern offshoot of the Krâvanh or Cardamom Mountains, occupying a much smaller area. The highest elevation is Phnom Bokor at 1,081 metres (3,547 ft) above sea level. Located close to the shores of the Gulf of Siam, the densely wooded hills receive some of the heaviest rainfall in Cambodia, averaging 150–200 inches (3,800–5,000 mm) annually on their western slopes (which are subject to southwest monsoons) but only 40–60 inches (1,020–1,520 mm) on their eastern slopes, because of the rain shadow.[3]

The Dâmrei Mountains were, until 1975, the principal centre of Cambodia's pepper-growing industry. After the intervening years of civil war and upheavals pepper-growing has revived slowly beginning from the late 1990s.[4][5][6][7]

National park and tourism

the old road to Bokor, Damrei Mountains

Phnom Bokor National Park occupies most of the highland plateaus and summits of the Dâmrei Mountains. The authorities are trying to curb illegal logging. The park has a great variety of plant species, including rare orchids,[8] an endemic pitcher plant only first described in 2009,[9] as well as some spectacular waterfalls during the rainy season.

There are several historic and cultural sites in the national park area. Bokor Hill Station (Station d'altitude de Bokor) is an abandoned French settlement on top of Phnom Bokor, where elite French colonial officers spent holidays during the hot season. The place also has a church and a palace, all in a dilapidated condition. Nearby there is a Cambodian army outpost which doubles as a youth hostel. Both sites are now becoming tourist attractions, and the road to reach them, originally built in 1907 at the cost of many human lives, has recently been modernised.[10] As of 2014, the 32 km road connecting National Route 3 to Phnom Bokor is completed. In 2012, the large luxury hotel of Thansur Bokor Highland Resort, located near the Bokor Hill Station, was completed.

gollark: That's basically the entire point of their design.
gollark: You could, but hash functions are designed not to exhibit any patterns.
gollark: This sort of thing is very good at the particular task it's optimized for, but expensive (initial-cost-wise, it's easy to churn out more of them) and entirely unable to do anything else, unlike general-purpose CPUs/GPUs, which are also hilariously expensive in initial investment but can do basically anything and are reusable all over the place.
gollark: Fortunately, we have good cryptography now as export controls were stupid and didn't actually work.
gollark: Well, "very good" varies.

See also

References

  1. "Countries and Territories of the World". Google Books. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  2. "Southeastern Asia: Southern Cambodia stretching into Thailand and Vietnam". WWF. Retrieved May 12, 2015.
  3. "Kingdom of Cambodia". Encyclopedia of the Nations. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  4. "Dâmrei Mountains". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  5. "World and Its Peoples: Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam". Google Books. Retrieved May 12, 2015.
  6. "About: Dâmrei Mountains". OpenLink Virtuoso. December 5, 2013. Retrieved May 20, 2015.
  7. "Chuŏr Phnum Dâmrei". Geo-View. Retrieved May 20, 2015.
  8. Evolution of pollinaria structure in cambodian orchids
  9. "Nepenthes bokorensis - Details". Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  10. Mogenet Luc, La création de la station climatique du Bokor (Cambodge), présentation commentée de sources d’archives inédites, Péninsule, 2007 (2) N°55, Paris, 2008
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.