Ara (mountain)

Ara
Mount Ara
Arayi Ler
Highest point
Elevation 2,614 m (8,576 ft)(other sources mention 2,576 m[1])
Mount Ara
Aerial photo of Mount Ara
Wild mountain sorrel, poppies and other items of tribute sold on Mount Ara to the pilgrims of Tsaghkevank (Kuys Varvara) 40 days after Resurrection Day (Easter). Sorrel is often braided in this fashion in Armenia and Artsakh and can be dried for extended use
Ruins of Gharghavank on a hillside of Mount Ara
View of Yeghvard from Mount Ara

Arayi Ler, also known as Mount Ara, is a polygenetic stratovolcanic cone in Armenia's[2] Kotayk Province. The town of Zoravan and a nearby church, Gharghavank, are located along the mountain's lower slopes. The town of Yeghvard is below the mountain.

Located north of Yerevan, the mountain has a destroyed crater and a base diameter of 9km at an altitude of 1,900m. The volcano is constructed from lava and agglomerate layers with intrusions of andesite and dacite. The slopes on the north and east are forested. One flank cone south of Arailer has erupted andesite. Andesite also appears in the former crater and lava flows spread to the Hrazdan River. One K-Ar date indicates an age of 1.3 Ma, there are two subsidiary cones Nokhut and Shakhvard.[1]

The mountain has a high biodiversity with Sympecma paedisca, Colias aurorina, Parnassius mnemosyne rjabovi, Armenohelops armeniacus, Cylindronotus erivanus, Conizonia kalashiani, Parnassius apollo kashtshenkoi, Dorcadion kasikoporanum, Papilio alexanor orientalis, Proterebia afra hyrcana and Tetralonia macroglossa represented. Conizonia is endemic on Arailer. The ecosystem is well preserved apart from a minor threat from grazing.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 Lebedev, V. A.; Chernyshev, I. V.; Yakushev, A. I. (2011). "Initial time and duration of quaternary magmatism in the Aragats neovolcanic area (Lesser Caucasus, Armenia)". Doklady Earth Sciences. 437 (2): 532–536. doi:10.1134/S1028334X11040209. ISSN 1028-334X.
  2. Khachatur Meliketsian (August 2013). Pliocene-Quaternary volcanism of the Syunik upland (Armenia) (Report). Veröffentlichungen des Landesamtes für Denkmalpflege und Archäologie Sachsen-Anhalt. p. 249. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  3. Dr. Gayane Karagyan. Identification of Priority Areas for the Conservation of Endangered Insect Species of Ararat Valley in Armenia (Report). The Rufford Foundation. pp. 15–16.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mount Ara.

Coordinates: 40°24′20″N 44°27′08″E / 40.4056°N 44.4522°E / 40.4056; 44.4522

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.