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Jinsha River

Chinese river, part of the Yangtze


Summary

Chinese river, part of the Yangtze

FieldValue
nameJinsha
name_native金沙江
name_otherYangtze (长江)
name_etymologyChinese: "Gold Dust River"
imageTiger Leaping Gorge.jpg
image_size300px
image_captionJinsha flowing along the bottom of Tiger Leaping Gorge
mapJinsharivermap.jpg
map_captionMap of the Jinsha River drainage basin
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1China
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2Qinghai, Tibet Autonomous Region, Yunnan, Sichuan
subdivision_type5Cities
subdivision_name5Lijiang, Yunnan, Panzhihua
length*2290 kmapprox.
discharge1_avg4471 m3/s
discharge1_max35000 m3/s
source1Tongtian River
source1_locationConfluence of the Tongtian and Batang Rivers, Qinghai
source1_coordinates
source1_elevation4500 m
mouthYangtze River
mouth_locationConfluence with Min Jiang at Yibin, Sichuan
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation300 m
progressionYangtze → East China Sea
river_systemYangtze River basin
basin_size485000 km2approx.
tributaries_leftBeilu River, Yalong River
tributaries_rightPudu River, Dadan River, Xiaojiang River, Niulan River
  • 3,454 km total length including Tongtian - Dam Qu River

The Jinsha River (, Tibetan: Dri Chu, འབྲི་ཆུ, ) is the Chinese name for the upper stretches of the Yangtze River. It flows through the provinces of Qinghai, Sichuan, and Yunnan in western China. The river passes through Tiger Leaping Gorge.

It is sometimes grouped together with the Lancang (upper Mekong) and Nu (upper Salween) as the Sanjiang ("Three Rivers") area, part of which makes up the Three Parallel Rivers of Yunnan Protected Areas.

The river is important in generating hydroelectric power, and several of the world's largest hydroelectric power stations are on the Jinsha river.

Name

The river was first recorded as the Hei (黑水, Hēishuǐ, lit. "Blackwater") in the Warring States' "Tribute of Yu". It was described as the Sheng (t 繩水, s 绳水, Shéngshuǐ, "Rope River") in the Han-era Classic of Mountains and Seas. During the Three Kingdoms, it was known as the Lu (t 瀘水, s 泸水, Lúshuǐ).

Owing to earlier romanization systems, the river has been known as the Chin-sha Chiang and Kinsha Kiang (when it was not simply described as the Yangtze) in English sources for the last three centuries. The most common present name, Jinsha is the Hanyu Pinyin romanization of the same Chinese characters as the other two.

Although the name is generally over-literally translated as the "Gold Sand" or "Golden-Sanded River", the name is not poetic or descriptive of the color of the river's banks. Rather, {{linktext|金沙}} described actual placer gold, alluvial gold powder sometimes still panned from the river's waters. The name "Jinsha" originates in the Song dynasty when the river attracted large numbers of gold prospectors. Gold prospecting along the Jinsha continues to this day.

The Jinsha culture in prehistoric China derives its name from a road near its type site and not from the river directly.

Geography

Route

The Jinsha River is simply the upper course of the Yangtze, although the Yalong and Min rivers were sometimes considered to have been the main course before the advent of modern geography. It is traditionally considered to begin at the confluence of the Tongtian and Batang rivers near Gyêgu in Qinghai.

As the Jinsha River, it then flows south through a deep gorge parallel to the similar gorges of the upper Mekong and upper Salween rivers, from which it is separated by the Ningjing Mountains. It forms the western border of Sichuan for some 250 miles (400 km) and then flows into Yunnan province. After a large, 200 mile (320 km) long loop to the north of Dali Bai Autonomous Prefecture, the Jinsha swings northeast, forming the Sichuan-Yunnan provincial boundary until it joins the Min River at Yibin in Sichuan to form the Yangtze.

Lashihai Wetland is in the basin of the Jinsha River. The lake and wetland supplies drinking water to Lijiang, provides flood control, storage, and water balance functions for the Jinsha and Yangtze watersheds, and is habitat to thousands of resident and migratory waterbirds.

Gradients

The upper course of the river falls about 14 feet per mile (2.7 m/km). Below Batang in Sichuan, the gradient gradually decreases to about 8 feet per mile (1.5 m/km) but the Jinsha is not navigable. Its upper course through the gorges, particularly, is more of an obstacle than an aid to transportation.

Dams

The Jinsha is being heavily developed, primarily for hydroelectric power. By March 2014, a total of 25 dams were completed, under construction or planned for the river. Those dams are listed below from downstream to upstream. After completion of the Baihetan Dam in 2022, five of the largest hydroelectric power stations in the world with sizes of at least 3,000 MW, are on the river. When all the hydropower stations are in operation on the Jinsha River, they constitute the world’s largest clean energy corridor. However, some of these dams (e.g. Gangtuo Dam) are being developed in Tibet and local protests have been violently suppressed by Chinese authorities, leading to concerns of human rights violations.

  • Xiangjiaba Dam – completed, 6,000 MW
  • Xiluodu Dam – completed, 13,860 MW
  • Baihetan Dam – completed, 16,000 MW
  • Wudongde Dam – completed, 10,200 MW
  • Yinjiang Dam – completed, 345 MW
  • Jinsha Dam – completed, 560 MW
  • Guanyinyan Dam – completed, 3,000 MW
  • Ludila Dam – completed, 2,160 MW
  • Longkaikou Dam – completed, 1,800 MW
  • Jinanqiao Dam – completed, 2,400 MW
  • Ahai Dam – completed, 2,000 MW
  • Liyuan Dam – completed, 2,400 MW
  • Liangjiaren Dam – controversial, 3,000 MW
  • Longpan Dam – controversial, 4,200 MW
  • Bengzilan Dam – planned, 2,100 MW
  • Rimian Dam – programmed, 3,720 MW
  • Changbo Dam – completed, 1,200 MW
  • Suwalong Dam – completed, 1,160 MW
  • Batang Dam – programmed, 740 MW
  • Lawa Dam – programmed, 2,240 MW
  • Yebatan Dam – programmed, 2,080 MW
  • Boluo Dam – planned, 960 MW
  • Yanbi Dam – planned, 300 MW
  • Gangtuo Dam – planned, 1,100 MW
  • Guotong Dam – planned, 140 MW

History

Imperial China

The pre-imperial "Tribute of Yu" recorded the traditional view of the Yangtze River as originating with the Min or Yalong instead of the Jinsha and this remained unchallenged for millennia, even after Li Daoyuan's Commentary on the Water Classic recorded much of the Jinsha's extensive river system during the Northern Wei. The Ming-era geographer Xu Xiake was the first to correct this, although it remained a common misconception in China as late as the early 20th century.

People's Republic

The Jinsha River is under heavy development by China, with over sixteen dam projects in various phases of development along the river, and many on its tributaries as well, especially the Yalong. Four dams along the lower part of the river are under construction or have already been completed to generate hydroelectric power and to trap silt that would otherwise create problems at the Three Gorges Dam. The ten largest dams will produce 55,710 megawatts of power.

References

  • {{cite journal | last = Jun | first= Huang |author2=Zulin Zhang |author3=Gang Yu | title=Occurrence of dissolved PAHs in the Jinsha River (Panzhihua)—upper reaches of the Yangtze River, Southwest China | journal =J. Environ. Monit. | volume = 5| issue =4 | pages = 604–09 | year =2003 | url=http://www.rsc.org/publishing/journals/EM/article.asp?doi=b210670a | doi =10.1039/b210670a
  • International Rivers, (2009-1-16). Jinsha River Dams Retrieved 2010-1-25.

References

  1. Little, Archibald. ''The Far East'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=kxNxhSy1BZUC&pg=PA63 p. 63]. 1905. Reprint: Cambridge Univ. Press (Cambridge), 2010. Accessed 13 August 2013.
  2. E.g., in the "Annual Report of the Chinese Academy of Geological Research", p. 24. Geological Publishing House, 1994.
  3. It has also appeared as the '''Li''' ({{lang. zh. 丽水, ''Lìshuǐ'', "Beautiful River"); '''Mahu''' ({{lang. zh. 马湖江, ''Mǎhújiāng'', "Horse Lake River"); and '''Shen''' ({{lang. zh. 神川, ''Shénchuān'', "Holy River" or "River of Spirits").{{citation needed. (August 2013)
  4. Pletcher, Kenneth. ''The Geography of China: Sacred and Historic Places'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=tfVN0Gwx67YC&pg=PA359 p. 359]. Britannica Educational Publishing (New York), 2011. Accessed 16 August 2013.
  5. E.g., in Davis, John. ''The Chinese: A General Description of the Empire of China and Its Inhabitants'', Vol. 1, [https://books.google.com/books?id=A6RNeE46WtUC&pg=PA132 pp. 132 ff]. C. Knight, 1836.
  6. link. (April 17, 2012)
  7. Fan Chengda. James M. Hargett (trans.) ''Riding the River Home: A Complete and Annotated Translation of Fan Chengda's (1126–1193) Travel Diary Record of a Boat Trip to Wu'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=AnMLAQAAMAAJ&q=history+gold+china+jinsha p. 77]. Chinese Univ. of Hong Kong (Hong Kong), 2008. Accessed 15 August 2013.
  8. "Lashihai Wetland".
  9. Dong, Luan. "INTERACTIVE: Mapping China's "Dam Rush"". Wilson Center.
  10. (March 2014). "The Last Report on China's Rivers". China's Rivers Report.
  11. (2020-07-03). "China's Era of Mega-Dams Is Ending as Solar and Wind Power Rise". Bloomberg.com.
  12. "How China is leading the world in clean energy".
  13. (2024-12-23). "Tibet: How China cracked down on rare protests over Gangtuo / Kamtok dam". news.bbc.com.
  14. (2024-07-08). "United Nations special rapporteurs' letter".
  15. (2025-01-22). "Four Major Hazards of the Jinsha River Tiger Leaping Gorge Hydropower Project./Fan Xiao". The Adams-Solomon Report.
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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