Tibet At a Glance

SIZE

1 million square miles (10th largest country in the world)

CAPITAL
Lhasa

POPULATION

6 million Tibetans and an unknown number of Chinese

RELIGION

Tibetan Buddhism is practiced by 99 percent of the Tibetan population; Bon, the traditional religion,

along with Islam and Christianity, are practiced by some Tibetans

LANGUAGE

Tibetan (of the Tibeto-Burmese language family); since China’s occupation, the official language has

been Chinese

STAPLE FOOD
Tsampa (roasted barley flour)

NATIONAL DRINK
Salted butter tea

COMMON ANIMALS

Yak, Dzo, Dzomo (mixed breed), bharal (blue sheep), musk deer, Tibetan antelope, Tibetan gazelle, kiang

(wild ass) and pika

COMMON BIRDS

Black-necked crane, lammergeyer (bearded vulture), great crested grebe, bar-headed goose, ruddy

shelduck and ibisbill

MAJOR ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS

Receding glaciers, mining, damming of rivers, deforestation, desertification and poaching of large

mammals

AVERAGE ALTITUDE
14,000 ft.

TALLEST MOUNTAIN
Chomo Langma (Mt. Everest), 29,028 ft.

AVERAGE TEMPERATURE

24 degrees Fahrenheit in January; 58 degrees Fahrenheit in July

MINERAL DEPOSITS

Borax, uranium, iron, chromite, lithium, and gold

MAJOR RIVERS

Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra), Dza Chu, (Mekong), Drichu (Yangtze), Gyalmo Ngulchu (Salween), Ma

Chu (Yellow), Senge Tsangpo (Indus) and Mapcha Khabab (Karnali)

ECONOMY

Primarily agriculture and animal husbandry for Tibetans; primarily government, commerce and the

service sector for Chinese

PROVINCES

U-Tsang (Central Tibet), Amdo (Northeast Tibet) and Kham (Southeast Tibet)

BORDERING COUNTRIES
India, Nepal, Bhutan, Burma and China

NATIONAL FLAG

Snow lions with red and blue rays; the flag is outlawed inside Tibet

RELIGIOUS LEADER

The 14th Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in Dharamsala, India

POLITICAL LEADER

Sikyong (president) of the Central Tibetan Administration, currently Penpa Tsering, who’s also based in

Dharamsala

GOVERNMENT

In Tibet, communist since China’s occupation began; in exile, democratic under the Central Tibetan

Administration

RELATIONSHIP WITH THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA

Colonial

LEGAL STATUS
Occupied