Shuanghu County
County in Tibet, China / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dear Wikiwand AI, let's keep it short by simply answering these key questions:
Can you list the top facts and stats about Shuanghu County?
Summarize this article for a 10 year old
Shuanghu County (Chinese: 双湖县), also transliterated from Tibetan as Tsonyi County[3][4][5] or Co Nyi County[6][7] (Tibetan: མཚོ་གཉིས་རྫོང་།; Chinese: 错尼县), is a county under the jurisdiction of the prefecture-level city of Nagqu, in the northernmost part of the Tibet Autonomous Region, China. It was formed in 2012, combining the territory of the former Shuanghu Special District (Chinese: 双湖特别区, Tibetan: མཚོ་གཉིས་དམིགས་བསལ་སྲིད་འཛིན་ཁུལ་) with the eastern half of Nyima County. Much of the county is within the Changtang area.
Shuanghu County
双湖县 • མཚོ་གཉིས་རྫོང་། Tsonyi, Co Nyi | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 33°11′32″N 88°50′10″E | |
Country | China |
Autonomous region | Tibet |
Prefecture-level city | Nagqu |
County seat | Domar Township |
Area | |
• Total | 116,440.91 km2 (44,958.09 sq mi) |
Elevation | 4,960 m (16,270 ft) |
Population (2020)[2] | |
• Total | 10,881 |
• Density | 0.093/km2 (0.24/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+8 (China Standard) |
Website | www |
Shuanghu County | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese name | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | 双湖县 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 雙湖縣 | ||||||
| |||||||
Tibetan name | |||||||
Tibetan | མཚོ་གཉིས་རྫོང་། | ||||||
| |||||||
Both Tibetan and Chinese name translates to "twin lake" or "two lakes", the two lakes referred to as Khangro Lake (khang ro tshwa kha) and Rêjo Lake (re co tshwa kha) respectively. Shuanghu County is at very high elevation, mostly above 5,000 meters above sea level, and very sparsely populated (averaging around 0.12 people per square kilometre, but concentrated in the southern portion of the county). The vast majority of its population practices nomadic pastoralism (mostly goats and sheep).[8] The climate is very rough, cold and dry. There is a weather station in Shuanghu, established in 1999,[9] which on average measures negative temperatures (Celsius scale) throughout the year. The highest temperature on record is +2.3 °C (July 2000), the lowest −62.4 °C (January 2006).