Lüliang Mountains, range in Shanxi province, China. The name Lüliang Mountains generally refers to the whole system of ranges in the west and southwest of Shanxi, separating the north-south section of the Huang He (Yellow River) to the west from the valley of its tributary, the Fen River to the east. Properly, however, the name designates the northern part of this range, lying to the west of the Fen River basin at Taiyuan, where the name also refers to one of several adjacent peaks (Mount Lüliang). The highest peak in the range, Guandi Mountain, reaches 9,288 feet (2,831 metres). The southern part of the range, which has a more marked southwest-northeast axis, is properly called the Huoyan Range.
The ranges have a mean elevation of 5,000 to 6,500 feet (1,500 to 2,000 metres), the highest area being in the north. The higher areas of the chain are free of loess (wind-deposited silt), but the western side of the chain, reaching down to the Huang He valley, is covered with loess and has the heavily dissected landscape characteristic of the loess areas of Shaanxi province. Structurally, the ranges were formed by a series of downwarps (the sinking of rock strata to produce the valleys between adjacent ranges), with the north-south and northeast-southwest axes of the ranges broken up by a series of fault troughs, formed through the mountain-building processes of the Jurassic Period (i.e., about 200 to 145 million years ago). Many of the rocks in these ranges are of Carboniferous and Permian age (i.e., about 250 to 360 million years old) and contain rich coal reserves, which are mined on a large scale at Fenxi. The ranges originally supported a sparse forest, but most of the area is now covered with grass and low scrub.