The high alpine Lugu Lake in Yunnan province / China

The high alpine Lugu Lake in Yunnan province / China Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Thomas Boehm / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

C30GBJ

File size:

34.3 MB (1.9 MB Compressed download)

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Dimensions:

4272 x 2805 px | 36.2 x 23.7 cm | 14.2 x 9.4 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

2011

Location:

Lugu Lake,Yunnan Province, China

More information:

Lugu Lake (Chinese: 泸沽湖; Pinyin: Lúgū Hú) is located in the North West Yunnan plateau in the centre of Ningliang Yi Autonomous County in the People's Republic of China. The middle of the lake forms the border between the Ninglang County of Yunnan Province and the Yanqing County of Sichuan province. The formation of the lake is thought to have occurred in a geological fault belonging to the geological age of the Late Cenozoic. It is an alpine lake at an elevation of 2, 685 metres (8, 809 ft) and is the highest lake in the Yunnan Province. The lake is surrounded by mountains and has five islands, four peninsulas, fourteen bays and seventeen beaches.[1][2][3][4][5][6] The lake's shores are inhabited by many minority ethnic groups, such as the Mosuo, Norzu, Yi, Pumi and Tibetan. The most numerous of them all are the Mosuo people, also spelt Moso people, said to be a sub clan of the Naxi People (as per Chinese records of Minorities in China) with ancient family structure considered as "a live fossil for researching the marital development history of Human beings" and "the last quaint Realm of Matriarchy." It is considered as the home of the Moso Tribe[2][3][7][8] However, Mosuo have a separate identity from the Naxis, as it is said that the Chinese used the word Mosuo as a generic term for different ethnic groups, including the Naxi.[7] Lugu Lake is called the "mother lake" by the Mosuo people.[9] The lake is also well-known in Chinese travel pamphlets as the region of “Amazons, ” “The Kingdom of Women” and “Home of the Matriarchal Tribe”, this last name highlighting the dominant role of the Mosuo women in their society.[3] The marriage rites of the Mosuo people are known as “azhu marriage” ceremony and this unique aspect of their social culture has given the title “exotic land of daughters” to the area.[4] It is also known as "A Quaint Realm of Matriarchy."[10][11][12] The matriarchal and matrilineal society of the Mosuos is also termed the “Women’s World.