Tibet at a glance

Tibet lies at the centre of Asia, with an area of 2.5 million square kilometers. The earth’s highest mountains, a vast arid plateau and great river valleys make up the physical homeland of 6 million Tibetans. It has an average altitude of 13,000 feet above sea level.

Tibet is comprised of the three provinces of Amdo (now split by China into the provinces of Qinghai, Gansu & Sichuan), Kham (largely incorporated into the Chinese provinces of Sichuan, Yunnan and Qinghai), and U-Tsang (which, together with western Kham, is today referred to by China as the Tibet Autonomous Region).

The Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) comprises less than half of historic Tibet and was created by China in 1965 for administrative reasons. It is important to note that when Chinese officials and publications use the term “Tibet” they mean only the TAR.

Tibetans use the term Tibet to mean the three provinces described above, i.e., the area traditionally known as Tibet before the 1949-50 invasion.

Today Tibetans are outnumbered by the Han Chinese population.

SIZE 2.5 million sq. km.
CAPITAL Lhasa
POPULATION 6 million Tibetans and an estimated 7.5 million Chinese, most of whom are in Kham and Amdo.
LANGUAGE Tibetan (of the Tibeto-Burmese language family). The official language is Chinese.
STAPLE FOOD Tsampa (roasted barley flour)
NATIONAL DRINK Salted butter tea
TYPICAL ANIMALS Wild yak, Bharal (blue) sheep, Musk deer, Tibetan antelope, Tibetan gazelle, Kyang (wild ass), Pica
TYPICAL BIRDS Black necked crane, Lammergeier, Great crested grebe, Bar-headed goose, Ruddy shel duck, Ibis-bill
MAJOR ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS Rampant deforestation in Eastern Tibet, poaching of large mammals
AVERAGE ALTITUDE 14,000 ft.
HIGHEST MOUNTAIN Chomo Langma (Mt. Everest) 29, 028 ft.
AVERAGE RAINFALL Varies widely. In the west it is 1 mm in Jan. to 25 mm in July. In the east, it is 25-50 in Jan. and 800 in July
AVERAGE TEMPERATURE July 58 f; Jan. 24 f.
MINERAL DEPOSITS Borax, uranium, iron, chromite, gold
MAJOR RIVERS Mekong, Yangtse, Salween, Tsangpo, Yellow
ECONOMY Tibetans: predominantly in agriculture and animal husbandry. Chinese: predominantly in government, commerce and the service sector.
PROVINCES U-Tsang (Central Tibet), Amdo (N.E. Tibet), Kham (S.E. Tibet)
BORDERING COUNTRIES India, Nepal, Bhutan, Burma, China
NATIONAL FLAG Snow lions with red and blue rays. Outlawed in Tibet.
POLITICAL AND
RELIGIOUS LEADER The 14th Dalai Lama. In exile in Dharamsala, India.
GOVERNMENT IN EXILE Parliamentary
GOVERNMENT Communist