Sikhote-Alin

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Central Sikhote-Alin1
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Sikhote-Alin is the home to Amur tigers, the largest felines in the world.
State Party Russian Federation
Type Natural
Criteria x
Identification #766
Region2 Europe and North America
Inscription History
Formal Inscription: 2001
25th WH Committee Session
WH link: http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/766

1 Name as officially inscribed on the WH List
2 As classified officially by UNESCO

The Sikhote-Alin (also spelled Sikhotae-Alin) is a mountain range in Primorsky and Khabarovsk Krais, Russia, extending about 900 km to the northeast of the Russian Pacific seaport of Vladivostok. The highest summit is Anik Mountain (1,933 m).

Sikhote-Alin comprises one of the most extraordinary temperate zones in the world. Species typical of northern taiga (such as reindeer and the brown bear) coexist with tropical species, the Amur tiger, Siberian leopard, and the Himalayan bear. The large Sikhote-Alin and Lazo wildlife refuges were set up to preserve its unusual wildlife. In 2001, UNESCO inscribed Sikhote-Alin onto the World Heritage List, citing its importance for "the survival of endangered species such as the Chinese merganser, Blakiston's Fish Owl, and the Amur tiger".

In the 1910s and 1920s, Sikhote-Alin was extensively explored by Vladimir Arsenyev (18721930) who described his adventures in several books, notably Dersu Uzala (1923), which in 1975 had been turned into an Oscar-winning film by Akira Kurosawa.

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