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| Qutang Gorge |
The source of the Yangtze
(Changjiang ) River lies in the west of Geladandong Mountain, the
principal peak of the Tanggula Mountain chain in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau,
southwest of China. It is here in the Tuotuo River that China's longest river,
about 6,380 kilometers long, rises and flows on from west to east through
provinces, cities and autonomous regions of Qinghai, Tibet, Sichuan, Yunnan,
Chongqing, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Anhui, Jiangsu and Shanghai, finally emptying
into the East China Sea from Shanghai. The Yangtze River is the largest river in
China, and the third longest in the world, next only to the Nile in northeast
Africa and the Amazon in South America. It is also a cradle of ancient Chinese
civilization.
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| Wuxia Gorge |
The north boundary of the
system of Yangtze River is lined with Qinling - Funiu - Tongbai - Dabie
Mountains together with the Yellow and the Huaihe rivers, while the south
boundary is lined with Nanling - Dagengling - Wuyi - Tianmu Mountains
together with the Pearl River and the Min River system. Running through 11
provinces, cities and autonomous regions, and spanning 31 longitudes and 11
latitudes, the Yangtze River covers a drainage area of over 1.8 million square
meters, which equals to one fifth of the nation's general acreage. In terms of
area, plateaus accounts for 65% of the valley, hills 22%, plains 11% and rivers
and lakes 2%.
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| Xiling Gorge |
The Yangtze River is
divided into three sections: the upper, middle and lower reaches. Each section
has geographical differences from the others. The upper reaches lie between the
source and the town of Yichang in Hubei Province. Sections of the upper reaches
have different names beginning with the Tuotuo River, then on to the Tongtian,
Jinsha and Chuanjiang rivers, with a total length of 4,529 kilometers. The
middle reaches stretch from Yichang down to Hukou in Jiangxi Province, with a
total length of 927 kilometers; and the lower, from Hukou to Shanghai with 844
kilometers in length.
The Yangtze River makes an incessant
rush into the East China Sea from Shanghai. It has enormous hydroelectric
resources, with an annual potential of up to 268 million kilowatts.
The most impressive section of the river is
the three Yangtze River gorges: the Qutang Gorge, Wuxia Gorge and Xiling Gorge,
collectively known as the Sanxia, or Three Gorges. In 1994 construction began on
the massive Three Gorges Dam near Yichang. Scheduled for completion in 2009, the
dam will measure about 180 meters high and about 2.5 kilometers wide. The dam is
expected to help control the flooding of the Yangtze River valley; in addition,
river flows will make the Three Gorges complex the largest
electricity-generating facility in the world.