Kirthar Mountains
Kirthar Mountains (Urdu: كوه کیر تھر) (Sindhi: کير ٿر جبل) or Arbiti Mountains (Arbita, Arbitani according to Ptolemy, named after a local tribe Arabitae) are a Mountain Range located in Balochistan and Sindh provinces of Pakistan. The Range extends southward for about 190 miles (300 km) from the Mula River in east-central Balochistan to Cape Monze (Muari), near Mubarak Village, Karachi on the Arabian Sea.
Kirthar National Park is one of the major wildlife reserves in Sindh, Pakistan. The Kirthar Range forms the boundary between the Lower Indus Plain (east) and southern Balochistan (west). It consists of a series of parallel rock hill ridges rising from 4,000 feet (1,200 m) in the south to nearly 8,000 feet (2,500 m) in the north.
The maximum elevation in the Sindh Segment of Kirthar Mountains was reported in April 2009, as 7,056 feet above sea-level. The discoverer of this peak, Syed Hasan Shahid Bukhari, named the elevation/peak, Koh Benazir, relying on Google Earth telemetry ... Koh Benazir is located in Barough branch of Kirthar mountains, off Dadu, and the discovery of this elevation makes Koh Benazir, the highest mountain peak of Sindh, situated a few miles north-west of the upcoming Gorakh Hill Station,a 5688 feet from sea level plateau in Kirthar mountain range.