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2.11.6
The HuangHe [fig 2.11.6(a)]
Facts:
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Continent
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Asia
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Countries it
flows through
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China
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Length
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5464
kilometres
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Number of
tributaries
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Over 5
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Source
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Qinghai
Province, western China
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Mouth
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Gulf of
Bohai
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Location:
Fig
2.11.6(a)
The
Huang He is the second longest river in China. It
begins on a high plateau in Qinghai Province in the
western part of China. It flows across China until
it enters the sea at the Gulf of Bohai. But the mouth
of the Huang He has changed its location over the
centuries. At different times the mouths have been
as much as 800 kilometres apart. The Huang He is the
world's muddiest river. Much of the sediment in the
river is carried in solution
and suspension.
Fig
2.11.6(b)
Flooding:
More
than 100 million people live along the banks of the
Huang He. In some places the water level of the
river is higher than the land. People have built
dykes (mounds of earth) to try and stop the river
from flooding.
The river is often called "China's sorrow"
because millions of people have been killed by
flooding. In September 1887 the Huang He river burst
its banks and destroyed 1500 towns and villages. One
million people died. The flood was caused by weeks
of heavy rain.
Agriculture:
Cereal
crops like wheat, millet and rice are grown along
the banks of the Huang He because the soils of the
floodplain are so rich.
The
Huang He and the Yangtze:
In
500BC the Chinese people decided to build a canal
to link the Huang He and Yangtze rivers together. It
was called the Grand Canal. This was to make
transport around the large country of China much
easier as people used boats then. Work continued on
the canal for hundreds of years and it is still used
today.
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