The Pamir-Alay is a mountain system in Tajikistan , Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan , encompassing four main mountain ranges extending west from the Tian Shan Mountains, and located north of the main range of Pamir . They are variously considered part of the Tian Shan, of the Pamir, or a separate mountain system. The term "Pamiro-Alay" is also used to refer to the mountain region encompassing the Pamir, the Pamir-Alay proper (then referred to as "Gissaro-Alay") and the Tajik Depression .
2-604: Köýtendag Range is a spur of the Pamir-Alay mountains in the south-east of Turkmenistan , extending along the border with Uzbekistan 's Surxondaryo Region . Its height of 3,139 metres (10,299 ft) at Mount Aýrybaba makes it the highest summit in Turkmenistan. The Köýtendag Nature Reserve is located within the range. This Turkmenistan location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Pamir-Alay The Pamir-Alay stretches between
4-557: The valleys of the rivers Syr Darya ( Fergana Valley ) to its north and Vakhsh to its south. Its highest summit is Pik Skalisty ( Russian : пик Скалистый , "rocky peak"), 5621 m, in the Turkestan Range. The Pamir-Alay is about 900 km long in west–east direction, and up to 150 km wide in the Western part. The Pamir-Alay is subdivided into the following mountain ranges: This Tajikistan location article
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