• Research Paper on:
    Mongolian People's Republic is Not the Average Tourist Attraction

    Number of Pages: 7

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    In seven pages this paper examines the region known as Mongolia in a comprehensive information overview. A map is provided and there are five sources used in the bibliography.

    Name of Research Paper File: D0_BBmngolR.doc

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    Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
    of the newest democracies.The plateau is the traditional home of the Mongol people. During the 1200s the various Mongol tribes, united under Chingis Han (Ghengis Kahn), swept down from the  plateau to carve out a great empire that eventually stretched from China to eastern Europe. Bibliography lists 5 source, including map. BBmongol.doc MONGOLIA: Not for the typical  tourist. Written by for the Paperstore, Inc., October 2000 Introduction: The Mongolian Peoples Republic  is a sparsely populated country comprising a land area over twice as much as Texas but only twelfth of that states population. It shares the vast Mongolian Plateau with portions  in China and the Soviet Union and is the largest land-locked country in the world. The plateau is the traditional home of the Mongol people. During the 1200s the various  Mongol tribes, united under Chingis Han (Ghengis Kahn), swept down from the plateau to carve out a great empire that eventually stretched from China to Eastern Europe. Physical environment:  The Mongolian Plateau is made up of three general regions. The northwest is a massive mountain complex etched with river basins. The southeast contains many mountain chains plus an extensive  zone of lowlands. Mongolia covers a little less than half the plateau. It is bordered by Chinese to the south and east, and Soviet territory to the north.  The Gobi: The third general region, is the Mongolian Gobi, a vast zone of arid and semi-desert occupying almost 30 per cent of the countrys territory. The Gobi is  often imagined to be a place of unbearable heat and lifeless sand dunes, similar to the inhospitable and uninhabitable Sahara desert. However, the reality of the Gobi is much 

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