Yana Mawras

Yana Mawras (Quechua yana black, hispanicized spellings Yanamauras, Yana Mauras) is a volcano in the Andes of Peru, about 3,761 metres (12,339 ft) high. It is situated in the "Valley of the Volcanoes" in the Arequipa Region, Castilla Province, Andagua District. Yana Mawras lies southwest of the Puka Mawras volcano and east of the T'iksu volcano.

References


Yana

Yana may refer to:

Locations

  • Yana, an administrative capital in Bauchi State, Nigeria
  • Yana, Burma, a village in Hkamti Township in Hkamti District in the Sagaing Region of northwestern Burma
  • Yana, India, a village in the Uttara Kannada district of Karnataka, India
  • Yana, Sierra Leone, a town in Northern Province of Sierra Leone
  • Yana River, a river in Sakha in Russia
  • Yana Point, the point forming the west side of the entrance to Bruix Cove, Antarctica
  • People

  • Yana Kudryavtseva (born 1997), Russian rhythmic gymnast
  • Yana Gupta (born 1979), Czech-Indian model-actress
  • Yana Toboso (born 1984), Japanese manga artist
  • A Slavic variation of Jane (given name)
  • Yana, a diminutive of the Russian male first name Averky
  • Yana (singer), a British singer (1932-1989)
  • Other

  • Professor Yana, a fictional character from the Doctor Who episode "Utopia"
  • Yana (Buddhism), a mode or method of spiritual practice in Buddhism
  • Yana language, an extinct language isolate
  • Yana people, a group of Native Americans indigenous to Northern California in the central Sierra Nevada Mountains
  • Yana River

    The Yana River (Russian: Я́на; IPA: [ˈjanə]), is a river in Sakha in Russia, located between the Lena to the west and the Indigirka to the east.

    It is 872 kilometres (542 mi) long, while the upper Yana is 1,320 kilometres (820 mi) long. Its drainage basin covers 238,000 square kilometres (92,000 sq mi), and its annual discharge totals approximately 25 cubic kilometres (20,000,000 acre·ft). Most of this discharge occurs in May and June as the ice on the river breaks up. The Yana freezes up on the surface in October and stays under the ice until late May or early June. In the Verkhoyansk area, it stays frozen to the bottom for 70 to 110 days, and partly frozen for 220 days of the year.

    The river begins at the confluence of the rivers Sartang and Dulgalakh. As the Yana flows into the Yana Bay of the Laptev Sea, it forms a huge river delta covering 10,200 square kilometres (3,900 sq mi). Yarok is a large flat island located east of the main mouths of the Yana.

    There are approximately 40,000 lakes in the Yana basin, including both alpine lakes formed from glaciation in the Verkhoyansk Mountains (lowlands were always too dry for glaciation) and overflow lakes on the marshy plains in the north of the basin. The whole Yana basin is under continuous permafrost and most is larch woodland grading to tundra north of about 70°N, though trees extend in suitable microhabitats right to the delta.

    Yana (Buddhism)

    Yāna (Sanskrit and Pāli: "vehicle") refers to a mode or method of spiritual practice in Buddhism, and in particular to divisions of various schools of Buddhism according to their type of practice.

    Nomenclature, etymology and orthography

    In form, yāna is a neuter action noun (comparable to an English gerund) derived from the Sanskrit root yā- meaning "go" or "move", using any means of locomotion, by land or sea. Hence it may be translated "going", "moving", "marching, a march", "riding, a ride", "travelling, travel", "journey" and so on.

    The word came to be extended to refer to any means used to ease or speed travel: hence such meanings as "vehicle", "carriage", "vessel", "wagon", "ship", and so on, depending on context. "Vehicle" is often used as a preferred translation as the word that provides the least in the way of presuppositions about the mode of travel.

    In spiritual uses, the word yāna acquires many metaphorical meanings, discussed below.

    Teaching story and metaphor

    In the Mahāparinibbāna Sutta (1.33-34), Shakyamuni Buddha relates a profound teaching story on vehicles of conveyance utilizing the sacred river Ganges, all of which may be engaged as a metaphor for yana and a gradual or direct path:

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