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The Dawna Range (Burmese: ဒေါနတောင်တန်း; MLCTS: Dau:na. Taung:tan:;[1] Thai: ทิวเขาถนนธงชัยตะวันตก, ทิวเขาดอยมอนกุจู), also known as Dawna Hills,[2] is a mountain range in eastern Burma and northwestern Thailand. Its northern end is located in Kayah State where it meets the Daen Lao Range, a subrange of the Shan Hills. The range runs southwards along Kayin State as a natural border with Mon State in the west forming parallel ranges to the northern end of the Tenasserim Hills further south and southeast. The Dawna Range extends east of the Salween southwards from the Shan Hills for about 350 km, at the western limit of the Thai highlands.[3] Its southern end reaches the Thai-Myanmar border in the Umphang area, entering Thailand west of Kamphaeng Phet. The Thungyai Naresuan Wildlife Sanctuary is in the Thai side of the range.[4]

Dawna Range
View of the Dawna Hills and route 1090 between Mae Sot and Umphang, Tak Province, Thailand
Highest point
PeakMela Taung
Elevation2,080 m (6,820 ft)
Coordinates17°12′N 98°5′E
Dimensions
Length350 km (220 mi)
Geography
Dawna Range-Southeast asia.jpg
CountriesBurma and Thailand
Parent rangeShan Hills
Geology
Type of rockGranite, limestone
Limestone landscape in the western foothills of the Dawna Range near Mudon, Mon State, Burma
Limestone landscape in the western foothills of the Dawna Range near Mudon, Mon State, Burma
The setting sun seen from the top of Mu Ko Chu mountain (1,964 m) in Mae Wong National Park, Thailand
The setting sun seen from the top of Mu Ko Chu mountain (1,964 m) in Mae Wong National Park, Thailand

Some geographers include the Dawna Range as the western and the southern part of the Thanon Thong Chai Range (เทือกเขาถนนธงชัย). The highest point of the range is 2,080 m high Mela Taung;[5] 2,005 m high Mulayit Taung is located at the southern end of the range.[6]


Ecology


The Dawna Range provides a habitat for the tiger,[7] the wild Asian elephant and Fea's muntjak. Endangered species in the area are the plain-pouched hornbill and Gurney's pitta.[8] There are other rare species some of which have only recently been discovered.[9]

This narrow steep-sided range is geologically and ecologically homogeneous with the neighboring head of the Tenasserim Hills and the Karen Hills further north, so that frequently it is considered as a whole under the name "Dawna Tenasserim"[10] or as "Kayah-Karen/Tenasserim".[11] The Dawna Range is covered with tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests. The Kayah-Karen montane rain forests that cover the mountains are part of the Kayah-Karen/Tenasserim moist forests ecoregion[12] which is included in the Global 200 list of ecoregions identified by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) as priorities for conservation.


Protected areas


Protected areas of the Dawna range are part of the Western Forest Complex.[13]


Burma


Thailand


History


In 1944 and 1945, at the time of the Japanese conquest of Burma during World War II, the eastern Dawna mountains provided a base from which the Karen troops led by Bo Mya fought against the Japanese Imperial Army on the side of the British.[15]

Owing to the unrest in Burma and the human rights abuses by the Tatmadaw,[16] some refugee camps have been established for the cross-border refugees in the Thai side of the range. The largest is the Mae La refugee camp, established in 1984 in Tha Song Yang District, Tak Province and currently houses over 40,000 refugees[17] Landmines have been laid in the border area and this affects wildlife as well.[18]


See also



References





На других языках


- [en] Dawna Range

[es] Cordillera Dawna

La cordillera Dawna (en birmano: ဒေါနတောင်တန်း; MLCTS: Dau:na. Taung:tan:;[1] tailandés: ทิวเขาถนนธงชัยตะวันตก, ทิวเขาดอยมอนกุจู), es una cadena montañosa del este de Birmania y del noroeste de Tailandia.[2] Su extremo septentrional se encuentra en el estado de Kayah, donde se une a la cordillera Daen Lao, una subcordillera de las montañas Shan. La cordillera se extiende hacia el sur a lo largo del estado de Kayin como frontera natural con el estado de Mon, en el oeste, formando cordilleras paralelas al extremo norte de las montañas Tenasserim, más al sur y al sureste. La cordillera Dawna se extiende al este del río Salween hacia el sur desde las montañas Shan a lo largo de unos 350 km, en el límite occidental de las tierras altas tailandesas.[3] Su extremo sur llega a la frontera entre Tailandia y Myanmar en la zona de Umphang, entrando en Tailandia al oeste de Kamphaeng Phet. El Santuario de Vida Silvestre de Thungyai Naresuan está en el lado tailandés de la cordillera.[4]

[it] Dawna

La catena dei monti Dawna (in birmano: ဒေါနတောင်တန်း, traslitterazione: Dau:na. Taung:tan:;[2] in thailandese: ทิวเขาดอยมอนกุจู?, traslitterato: Thiw Khao Doi Monguju)[3] è una catena montuosa situata tra la parte orientale della Birmania e quella nord-occidentale della Thailandia.



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