PLATE XXIX. 



Fig. 1.— Northern view of the same Mal-i-saii from near Chiu-au (§t ^) 

 (cfr. PI. XXVIII. fig. 2). 



FicT. 2.— There is a pass between Chin-an and Song-dam (|2j M)' C'^^ll^d 

 the Pha-kogai, wdiich we had just pissed over and now cast a 

 retrospective ghince npon it. It is built of metagneiss with in- 

 jected pegmatite, perthite and tourmaline dyke-rocks. It is an 

 important topographic element which coming northwards from the 

 Pi-hong-chhi (H. XIII. fig. 2, p. 78) passes here farther north- 

 wards to the Chhyu-phung-uyöng pass (|;/t M M) (P- l^^)- 



Fig. 3.— Eastward view from the top of the Phan-kogrd on an orthogneiss 

 terrane, looking down, in a snowy morning, the little intormontane 

 tlat of Chyang-gyöi-jyang {^mWj) Woi^tl which was seen on 

 the eastern horizon tlie mighty ridge of the snow-covered Yuk- 

 sim-nyöng pass at the boundary between the two provinces of 

 Kyöng-sang-l)o and Chyöl-la-Do (p. 127). 



