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Alternative terms
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Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sand-buried Ruins of Khotan: Personal Narrative of a Journey of by Mark Aurel Stein, Aurel Stein (1904)
"ON MUZTAGH-ATA. THE 14th of July brought no change in the weather, and was by
necessity a day of repose. I used it to collect information as to my intended ..."
2. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1902)
"within the comparatively short time available to establish a series of excellent
survey stations on various high spurs descending from Muztagh- Ata. ..."
3. A Sketch of the Geography and Geology of the Himalaya Mountains and Tibet by Sidney Gerald Burrard, Henry Hubert Hayden (1908)
"The unchallenged pre-eminence of Muztagh Ata over the peaks " which cluster ...
Sven Hedin made three attempts to climb Muztagh Ata, but was not successful. ..."
4. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain) (1900)
"There is one point which is of peculiar interest to me, and that is the determination
of the altitude of that great peak Muztagh-Ata, the great ..."
5. Mountain Panoramas from the Pamirs and Kwen Lun by Aurel Stein (1908)
"The atmospheric conditions of the Muztagh-ata region proved peculiarly liable to
rapid changes, which greatly hampered photographic work during my week's ..."
6. Preliminary Report on a Journey of Archaeological and Topographical by Aurel Stein, Great Britain India Office (1901)
"Individual peaks in these ranges rise above 24000 feet, and seem almost to rival
the great Muztagh-Ata. The photo-theodolite proved particularly useful in ..."
7. The Indian Borderland, 1880-1900 by Thomas Hungerford Holdich (1901)
"The Muztagh Ata (which belongs to the ... Muztagh Ata. Ripening crops, water-mills,
and stone-built hamlets gradually multiplied on our right hand and on ..."
8. India by Thomas Hungerford Holdich (1905)
"It is here that the Muztagh Ata of Sven Hedin, 23000 feet above sea- level, rears
its white dome and pinnacles to the sky ; and there are several other ..."