Senjōjiki Cirque

Senjōjiki Cirque (千畳敷カール) is a cirque (glacial landform) that lies just under Mount Hōken, Kiso Mountains in Nagano prefecture, Japan. It is called "Senjōjiki Kaaru" in Japanese. "Senjōjiki" means the wideness of 1000 tatami mats.

Mount Hōken(left) and Senjōjiki Cirque (September)
Mount Hōken(left) and Senjōjiki Cirque in February

Access to the cirque is easy via the "Komagatake Ropeway" aerial lift which runs all year from the bottom of cirque. It is useful not only for mountaineers but also by sightseers.

In summer, it is filled by numerous alpine flowers, and in winter it change to snowy mountain landscape. Skiing operates from the middle of April to the end of May.

The landscape of Senjōjiki Cirque and its formation

There are several glacial landforms confirmed near Mount Hōken, such as Senjōjiki cirque, Nogaike cirque, and Snnosawa cirques. Mount Hōken itself is a pyramidal peak made by glacial-erosion. Senjōjiki Cirque is located on the top of Nakagoshodani Valley. It forms typical cirque landscape, with flat cirque bottom, steep cirque wall with naked rock. The bottom of the cirque is about 2600m above sea level. 11 terminal moraines are confirmed around the cirque bottom. Geologist Tatsuto Aoki examined glacial deposits from moraines of Senjojiki and Nogaike cirques, and found they were created 17 to 25 thousands year ago, at the time of the last maximum glacial age.[1]

Plants around Senjōjiki Cirque

In summer, Senjōjiki Cirque is filled by alpine flowers. Communities of Veratrum viride, Trollius riederianus var. japonicus, Geum pentapetalum, Anemone narcissiflora and others are seen. Botanist Takeo Hayashi confirmed 128 species around Senjōjiki Cirque.[2]

Avalanches

Because of the landscape, avalanches often occur. On 4 January 1995, 6 people were killed in one such event.[3]

See also

References

  1. Tatsuto Aoki (June 2000). "Chronometry of Glacial Deposits by the 10Be Exposure Dating Method: A Case Study in the Senjōjiki and Nogaike Cirques, Northern Kiso mountain range, central Japan". Japan Association for Quaternary Research (in Japanese). 39 (3): 189–198. doi:10.4116/jaqua.39.189. Archived from the original on 31 October 2018 via Japan Science and Technology Agency scholarly publications. Many morainic boulders from each moraine have shown the contiguous values of the exposure age (17-25ka), and this age is correlated with the last glacial maximum stage.
  2. Takeo Hayashi "Flora of Kiso-Komagatake"
  3. The Yomiuri Simbun 6 Jan.1995

35°46′47.35″N 137°48′43.61″E

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.