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Jing River

River in Gansu and Shaanxi, China


Summary

River in Gansu and Shaanxi, China

FieldValue
nameJing River
image7001在泾河上 03.jpg
image_captionJing River in Jingyang County, close to where it flows into the Wei River
mapWeirivermap.png
basin_size45421 km2
length455.1 km
basin_population9.48 million
mouth

The Jing River () or Jing He (Pinyin: Jīng Hé), also called Jing Shui (), is a tributary of the Wei River (), which in turn is the largest tributary of the Yellow River.

The Jing River flows for 455.1 km, with a basin area of 45421 km2. The river's flow varies greatly throughout the year, and soil erosion causes serious problems in its basin. Summer floods cause the Jing to be laden with sediment; in the dry season, the river flows with relatively clear water.

The river flows through important farming areas, and its basin is inhabited by 9.5 million people.

Water in the Jing River comes from Mount Liupan in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region and flows through Gansu and Shaanxi, where it joins the Wei River in Gaoling District of Xi'an. Other than its upper reaches, the river flows through loess landscape throughout its length.

According to Chinese mythology a Dragon King ruled over the river. The Jing River basin is one of birthplaces of ancient Chinese civilization such as the Zhou dynasty.

Tributaries

Major tributaries of the Jing include the Malian, Pu, and Hong.

References

References

  1. (2015-11-15). "Spatiotemporal variation and driving forces of reference evapotranspiration in Jing River Basin, northwest China: Spatiotemporal Variation and Driving Forces of Et o". Hydrological Processes.
  2. Chan, Kennis. (2015-07-27). "Environmental Engineering and Computer Application: Proceedings of the 2014 International Conference on Environmental Engineering and Computer Application (ICEECA 2014), Hong Kong, 25-26 December 2014". CRC Press.
  3. (1984). "Gansu". Gansu People's Publishing House.
  4. (1996). "Field Trip Guide: Precambrian geology and mineral resources and seismology". Geological Publishing House.
  5. Zhang, Jinliang. (October 2020). "Causes of Variations in Sediment Yield in the Jinghe River Basin, China". [[Scientific Reports]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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