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View Full Version : Hazarchishma Natural Bridge: an enormous stone arch discovered in Afghanistan



Eldritch
03-31-2011, 07:45 PM
Hazarchishma Natural Bridge

http://www.naturalarches.org/big9_files/Hazarchishma2-1680.jpg

http://www.naturalarches.org/big9_files/Hazarchishma1.jpg

http://www.naturalarches.org/big9_files/Hazarchishma4.jpg

http://www.naturalarches.org/big9_files/Hazarchishma5.jpg

http://www.naturalarches.org/big9_files/HazarchishmaMap.jpg
Map courtesy Wildlife Conservation Society/Ayub Alavi


In November 2010, a Wildlife Conservation Society Afghanistan Program field survey team discovered a large natural arch in the Hindu Kush Mountains of central Afghanistan. Members of the team returned in February 2011 and measured the span of the arch, using NABS standards, at 211 feet.

Hazarchishma Natural Bridge is located 100 km north of Band-e-Amir National Park at the northern edge of Bamyan Province, near the border with Samangan Province. The arch is a young meander natural bridge carved through limestone karst in Jawzari Canyon (Dara-i-Jawzari), which joins the Ajar valley as part of the Amu Darya watershed and the main Caspian basin. In the recent geological past, the river became subterranean, leaving Dara-i-Jawzari dry. The elevation of the arch is 3100 meters (10,000 feet) above sea level.

The Bridge is formed of massive limestone which co-exists with marl limestone shales, bituminous shales, marlstone, limestone, conglomerates, and sandstones as the over- and under-laying layers. These rock formations and layers are from the Jurassic to the Lower Eocene in the Cenozoic.

The area is also of archaeological importance. The canyon below Hazarchishma village in which the natural bridge is located contains a series of caves that may have been occupied by cave-dwelling humans. This canyon lies on an ancient route between north and south and even now this route is locally used. An ancient fort was also observed during the previous field survey supporting the idea that this route must have been of some importance in earlier times.

Link. (http://cryscresc.net/hazarchishma-natural-bridge)

Amazing to think how something like this has remained undiscovered until now -- even in Afghanistan.