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China Yangtze River Information: cruises, maps, pictures, ships, three gorges dam.

Tag: river (page 6 of 11)

Q&A: YANGTZE RIVER HELLLLLPPPPPPP?

Question by hermes: YANGTZE RIVER HELLLLLPPPPPPP?
why have problems occured in the yangtze river?
who relies on this river and for what?
also how have these problems affected the people, communtiy, enviro, industry and land

Best answer:

Answer by Critters
Here are a few sites for you. Just think pollution.

Three Gorges Dam
http://www.internationalrivers.org/en/china/three-gorges-dam

Delegates from over 20 countries are meeting in Changsha, China to explore solutions to environmental problems affecting the Yangtze River.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/04/070417095004.htm

The Water Page – Yangtze River
http://www.africanwater.org/yangtze.htm

Yangtze River management faces huge challenges, WWF expert
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90781/90879/6738722.html

What do you think? Answer below!

yangtze river in china?

Question by yaaghoubleis: yangtze river in china?
Hello!

I would like to see the most beautiful nature of china ,Someone suggests yangtze river,yangtze is long river,

Which city do you suggest near yangtze?

Best answer:

Answer by World Unity/Peace
Visited it a few times via a small city called Zhangjiagang (went there because there was a golf course my dad likes to play in on an island in the river) near Shanghai. If you’ve been to world class places such as the Canadian Rockies, which I have visited before, it wouldn’t even seem anywhere near to being a beautiful place. I’d suggest you visit from a city in western China.

What do you think? Answer below!

why is the Yangtze River important?

Question by shootingstar852: why is the Yangtze River important?

Best answer:

Answer by that bird
The Yangtze River is the longest river in Asia and third longest in the world. The headwaters of the Yangtze are situated at an elevation of about 16,000 feet in the Kunlun Mountains in the southwestern section of Qinghai. It flows generally south through Sichuan into Yuanan then northeast and east across central China through Sichuan, Hubei, Auhui, and Juangsu provinces to its mouth, 3,720 miles, in the East China Sea north of Shanghai. The river has over 700 tributaries
Waters of the Yangtze are often used for rice and wheat irrigation. It also has enormous and inexhaustible hydroelectric resources. In 1995 construction began on the Three Gorges Dam near Yichang and is scheduled for completion in 2009. The dam will measure about 600 feet and about 1.5 miles wide. The dam is expected to help control the flooding of the Yangtze River Valley. The Three Gorges (the Qutang Gorge, the Wuxia Gorge, and Xiling Gorge) will also be the largest electricity generating facility in the world. The hydroelectric generators will provide 1/9 of China’s total power output.

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Q&A: Documentary about the Yangtze River ?

Question by GreenEyes: Documentary about the Yangtze River ?
I am searching for a documentary that I saw maybe 10 years ago about the Yangtze River. It is not the Up the Yangtze that was recently produced and won so many awards.

As I recall, it was produced by a Japanese crew ( maybe 10-12 years ago) and they started their journey from where the River begins in the mountain,s and then they travel all the way to the Delta.
It was an amazing documentary but I lost the sheet where I had written down the name etc.

Has anyone seen it? What was it called?

Best answer:

Answer by Psychedelic Will
Might it be “Still Life”?

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

I need to know the biodiversity of yangtze river?

Question by Jaders: I need to know the biodiversity of yangtze river?
One thing is i dont really now what biodiersity means

Best answer:

Answer by NextRightGuy
Giant panda
The giant panda is universally loved, and has a special significance for WWF as it has been the organization’s symbol since it was formed in 1961.

The unique physical features of the species include broad, flat molars and an enlarged wrist bone that functions as an opposable thumb – both of these adaptations are used for holding, crushing and eating bamboo. Giant pandas are classified as bears and have the digestive system of a carnivore, but they have adapted to a vegetarian diet and depend almost exclusively on bamboo as a food source.

Today, the giant panda’s future remains uncertain. This peaceful, bamboo-eating member of the bear family faces a number of threats. Its forest habitat, in the mountainous areas of southwest China, is fragmented and giant panda populations are small and isolated from each other. Meanwhile, poaching remains an ever-present threat.

Yangtze river dolphin
The Critically Endangered Yangtze river dolphin, or baiji, is one of seven freshwater dolphin species. It once lived in the lower and middle reaches of the Yangtze River, Fuchun River, and in Dongting and Poyang Lakes, China. Today it is the world’s most endangered cetacean. Fewer than 100 were thought to survive in the middle reaches of the Yangtze, however a 2006 survey failed to sight any individuals, raising fears that the species is one step closer to extinction.

http://www.worldwildlife.org/what/wherewework/yangtze/Speciess.html

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What part of the Yangtze river has low currents?

Question by Depressed Geek: What part of the Yangtze river has low currents?

Best answer:

Answer by Charles K
What part of the Yangtze river has low currents?When flooding occurs, it frequently results from the deposit of silt in the bed of the Yangtze. Upon leaving the mountains and entering the plain, the current in the Yangtze sharply decreases, and thus the flow cannot continue to carry the entire amount of silt. As a result, a significant portion is deposited in the bed, causing the bottom to rise. A similar situation occurs in many of the Yangtze’s tributaries. Flooding thus presents a great danger to the inhabitants of the adjacent plains. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/651857/Yangtze-River/48038/Physical-features An acoustic Doppler current profiler is used to characterize the river velocity against the morphology of the Yangtze River from Chonqing to the sea. High flow velocities occur in the Three Gorges section and lower velocities in the middle and lower reaches of the river. This is largely due to the change in river pattern from a high gradient deeply-cut valley to a flat fluvial plain. Flow velocities fluctuate in the middle Yangtze due to the presence of meander bends of different length. There are numerous smaller velocity fluctuations in the lower Yangtze channel that reflect multichannel pattern with numerous sand bars and a river morphology affected by bedrock outcrops. Water depths of 40–100 m occur in the Three Gorges valley but decrease to 15–40 m in the middle and lower Yangtze. At the Gezhou Reservoir, 30 km downstream of the Three Gorges damsite velocity drops to low (< 1.0 m s− 1) 20 km reach. A second low velocity (< 0.5 m s− 1) zone, about 20 km in length, is located in the lower Yangtze near the coast probably due to the tidal influence. The results from this research will serve as a datum for evaluating changes to the river once the Three Gorges dam is completed in 2009.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6V93-4KWK0T6-2&_user=10&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=3ada278855ce271e5dd0d0d8ac2c1a3c

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Can you post sites where i can find GOOD statilite images of the yangtze river?

Question by qwart: Can you post sites where i can find GOOD statilite images of the yangtze river?

Best answer:

Answer by Wizzy Woman
www.lonelyplanet.com

Give your answer to this question below!

Q&A: Can you give me info on the Yangtze River?

Question by qwart: Can you give me info on the Yangtze River?
names of useful site will help too…

you may cut and paste from other websites…

Best answer:

Answer by Dondon
Chang (chăng) or Yangtze (yăng’sē’, yäng’dzŭ’) , Mandarin Chang Jiang, longest river of China and of Asia, c.3,880 mi (6,245 km) long, rising in the Tibetan highlands, SW Qinghai prov., W China, and flowing generally E through central China into the East China Sea at Shanghai. The Chang and its tributaries drain more than 750,000 sq mi (1,942,500 sq km). The river passes through one of the world’s most populated regions and has long been used as a major trade and transportation route.
The Chang’s turbulent upper course, called the Jinsha or Kinsha, is roughly half its total length and flows southeast through forested, steep-walled gorges 2,000–4,000 ft (610–1,220 m) deep. After receiving the Yalong River, its first great tributary, at the Sichuan-Yunnan border, the Chang turns NE toward the Sichuan basin. At Yibin, on the western edge of the Sichuan basin, the river becomes the Chang proper and is joined by the “four rivers of Sichuan” (Min, Tuo, Fou, and Jailing). There is a hydroelectric power plant at Chongqing, on the basin’s eastern edge.

Leaving the Sichuan basin, the Chang receives the Wu River and flows through the spectacular Chang gorges that extend from Fengjieh to Yichang; there the river is a serious hazard and at times navigation is impossible. Temples and pagodas are perched on prominent hills along the gorges. The Gezhouba Dam near Yichang regulates seasonally fluctuating water levels and harnesses the river’s hydroelectric potential. In 1994 construction began farther upriver on the Three Gorges Dam, 30 mi (48 km) west of Yichang; the dam is scheduled to be completed in 2009. It will be the world’s largest concrete structure and largest hydroelectric station. In 2003 sluice gates were closed to begin the process of flooding the scenic gorges and filling a reservoir that will hold as much water as Lake Superior.

East of Yichang, the Chang enters the lake-studded middle basin of Hubei, Hunan, and Jiangxi provs., a rich agricultural and industrial region; Wuhan, at the confluence of the Han and Chang, is the principal city. The huge Dongting and Poyang lakes, which receive the Yuan, Zi, and Xiang rivers and the Gan River, respectively, are linked by numerous channels with the Chang and serve as natural overflow reservoirs. Now shallow because of sedimentation, the lakes are less effective as regulators of the Chang’s flow. Dikes protect large areas of the river’s middle basin from floodwaters. Although the Chang does not often experience the devastating floods that characterize the Huang He (Yellow River), it has occasionally caused wide damage; great floods occurred in 1931, 1954, and 1998. The fertile middle basin is China’s most productive agricultural region; rice is the main crop.

The river enters the East China Sea through the extensive, ever-expanding delta region of Anhui and Jiangsu provs. Dikes have been built to reclaim coastal marshes and create additional farmland. The Chang carries its greatest volume during the summer rainy season. It is navigable for oceangoing vessels to Wuhan, c.600 mi (970 km) upstream; during the summer high-water period, Yichang, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) upstream, is the head of navigation.

In 2000, China announced plans to divert water from the Chang to the Huang He, which often runs dry from overuse, and to Beijing, Tianjin, and other northern cities. An eastern route would bring water from the lower Chang to the Huang He and Tianjin, utilizing in part sections of the Grand Canal, while a central route connect the Han (a tributary of the Chang) and the Chang to the Huang He, Beijing, and Tianjin. These routes are expected to be largely completed in a decade. A third, western route, linking the headwaters of the Chang to those of the Huang He, is expected to take up to 50 years to fully complete.

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Are there any known NBC (nuclear/biological/chemical) testing facilities along the Yangtze river?

Question by Catch 22: Are there any known NBC (nuclear/biological/chemical) testing facilities along the Yangtze river?
Or do you think the Chinese will have this question deleted?

Best answer:

Answer by shawnmang85
Well it hasnt been deleted yet and this is a legit question. I dont know of any but i’m no nbc expert.

Give your answer to this question below!

Compare the problems of water diversions on the Yangtze River in China with those of the Colorado River?

Question by CountryGirl: Compare the problems of water diversions on the Yangtze River in China with those of the Colorado River?

Best answer:

Answer by Ray K
As a river increases in size, the problems associated with diversion increase exponentially. While we were able to bore/drill two diversion tunnels through solid rock, the extreme size of the Yangtze requires tunnels at least 5 times(?) larger or more in number. (As you double the cross sectional area of the tunnel, you should be able to pass 4 X the volume).

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