Tuesday, November 01, 2005

Yangtze



Chang Jiang
A shipyard on the banks of the Chang Jiang building commercial river freight boats
Length 6,380 km
Elevation of the source m
Average discharge 31,900 m�/s
Area watershed 1,800,000 km�
Origin Qinghai Province and Tibet
Mouth East China Sea
Basin countries China


The Chang Jiang (Traditional Chinese: 長江, Simplified Chinese: 长江, pinyin: ch�ng jiāng, Wade-Giles: Ch'ang Chiang, lit. "Long River") is the longest river in Asia and the third longest in the world after the Amazon in South America and the Nile in Africa.

The river is also called Yangtze River (扬子江, Y�ngzǐ Jiāng or Yangtze Kiang). The name Yangzi was originally used by local people only to refer to the lower reaches of the river. However, because this was the name first heard by missionaries, it has been applied in English to the entire river. The Chang Jiang is sometimes referred to as the Golden Waterway.

The river is about 6,380 km long. It has traditionally been considered a dividing point between north China and south China, although the Huang He also shares the claim.
Contents
1 Characteristics
2 Major cities along the river
3 Tributaries
4 Related topics
5 Further reading
6 External Links
Characteristics
Tombs on a hill facing the Chang Jiang as it flows by
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Tombs on a hill facing the Chang Jiang as it flows by

The Chang Jiang flows into the East China Sea. As of June 2003 the Three Gorges Dam now spans the river, flooding Fengjie, the first of a number of towns affected by the massive flood control and power generation project. The project is the largest comprehensive irrigation project in the world. It will free people living along the river from floods that have repeatedly threatened them in the past, and will also offer them electricity and water transport - though at the expense of permanently flooding many existing towns and causing large-scale changes in local ecology.

The river is the sole habitat of the critically endangered Chinese River Dolphin and Chinese paddlefish.

The river is a major transportation artery for China connecting the interior with the coast. River traffic includes commercial traffic transporting bulk goods such as coal as well as manufactured goods and passengers. River cruises of several days duration especially through the beautiful and scenic Three Gorges area are becoming popular as a tourism industry grows in China.

Flooding along the river has been a major problem, most recently in 1998, but more disasterously the 1954 Yangtze river floods killed around 30,000 people. Other severe floods include those of 1911 which killed around 100,000, 1931 (145,000 dead) and 1935 (142,000 dead).
Cities on the Yangtze, between Wuhan and Shanghai
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Cities on the Yangtze, between Wuhan and Shanghai
Major cities along the river

* Yibin
* Panzhihua
* Luzhou
* Chongqing
* Yichang
* Jingzhou
* Shishou
* Yueyang
* Xianning
* Wuhan
* Ezhou
* Huangshi
* Huanggang
* Chaohu
* Chizhou
* Jiujiang
* Anqing
* Tongling
* Wuhu
* Hefei
* Chuzhou
* Maanshan
* Taizhou
* Yangzhou
* Zhenjiang
* Nanjing
* Nantong
* Shanghai

A loading point for coal barges on the Chang Jiang
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A loading point for coal barges on the Chang Jiang
Tributaries

* Xiangjiang
* Lishui (Li)
* Zijiang (Zi)
* Yuanjiang (Yuan)
* Han River

Related topics

* Yangzi Delta
* List of rivers in China
* Three Gorges Dam
* Geography of China
* Yangtze Service Medal

Further reading

* Simon Winchester, The River at the Center of the World:A Journey up the Yangtze Back in Chinese Time, Holt, Henry Company, 1996, hardcover, ISBN 0805038884; trade paperback, Owl Publishing, 1997, ISBN 0805055088; trade paperback, St. Martins, 2004, 432 pages, ISBN 0312423373

External Links

* Information and a map of the Chaing Jiang's watershed (http://earthtrends.wri.org/maps_spatial/maps_detail_static.cfm?map_select=376


Chang Jiang (Cantonese: Cheung Kong), named after this river, is also the name of the holding company controlled by Li Ka-Shing, one of Asia's richest tycoons.

In 2004 Martin Strel from Slovenia swam the river from the Tiger Leaping Gorge to Shanghai (4600 km, 2860 miles).

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Yangtze".
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