China Geography
China is bordered by 14 countries -- Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Burma, India, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakstan, Mongolia, and Russia. Marine-side neighbors include eight countries -- North Korea, Korea, Japan, Philippines, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam.
Physical Features
Pamir Plateau |
The highest step of the typical 'ladder topography' is formed by the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau at the average height of over 4,000 meters, with the Kunlunshan range, Qilianshan range and Hengduan mountain chain as the division between this step and the second one. The highest peak in the world, Everest, at 8844.43 meters high is known as 'the Roof of the World'.
On the second step are large basins and plateaus, most of which are 1,000 - 2,000 meters high. The Daxing'an, Taihang, Wu and Xuefeng Mountains divide this step and the next lower one. Plateaus including Inner Mongolian, Loess, Yungui Plateaus, and basins such as Tarim, Junggar, and Sichuan Basins are situated here.
The third step, abundant in broad plains, is dotted with the foothills and lower mountains, with altitudes of over 500 meters. Here are located famous plains: the Northeast, the North China, and the Middle-Lower Yangtze Plains, neighboring with each other from north to south. These well-cultivated and fertile lands produce abundant crops.
Regional Divisions
Although the physical features are as described, people tend to divide China into four regions, that is, the North, South, Northwest and the Qinghai-Tibetan areas. Because of geographical differences, residents of each region have distinctive life styles and customs.
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Rivers and Lakes
China has numerous rivers and lakes. According to statistics, more than 50,000 rivers have drainage areas that exceed 100 square kilometers; more than 1,500 exceed 1,000 square kilometers. These rivers can also be classified as exterior and interior rivers. The Yangtze, the longest in China and even in Asia, is the third-longest in the world. The Yellow River, 'Mother River of the Chinese People', is just behind the Yangtze, both flowing into the Pacific Ocean. The Yarlung Zangbo River belongs to the Indian Ocean water system, and the Irtysh River to the Arctic Ocean. On the other side, the interior rivers drain less area than the exterior ones.
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These provide China with precious resources such as aquatic products, petroleum, natural gas, mines and renewable resources including tide power.
Mountainous Topography
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Coastal areas tend to live on fishing, so seafood is a regular on the table.
The inland plains of northern area are mostly planted with food crops, so wheat and corn are the staple food.
In the south, the mountainous and hilly areas with abundant precipitation are suitable for growing rice, so rice is the staple food. Rice noodles, cake and tangyuan are typical. In Sichuan, Chongqing, Jiangxi and Hunan, locals eat spicy food every day to resist wetness.
Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia with grasslands have developed animal husbandry, so they eat a lot meat every single day.
Folk houses:
Cave dwelling on the Loess Plateau:
Loess Plateau is a region of deep soil with less precipitation and drier. Local people built low-cost cave houses which are warm in winter and cool in summer.
Diaojiaolou (houses on stilts) in Guizhou and Hunan:
Due to rugged terrain, residents built Diaojiaolou to follow the terrain of the mountain slopes.
Quadrangle dwellings in North China Plain
The terrain is flat, so houses are more regular and protected by high walls to keep warm and avoid wind and sand.
Inner Mongolia yurt
The grasslands build up developed animal husbandry. Yurts to facilitate the migration of herdsmen, is a unique form of housing adapted to nomadic life.
In coastal areas, fisherman even live on their fishing boats for months.