China stretches some 5,000 kilometers across the East Asian landmass
in an erratically changing configuration of broad plains, expansive
deserts, and lofty mountain ranges, including vast areas of inhospitable
terrain. The eastern half of the country, its seacoast fringed with
offshore islands, is a region of fertile lowlands, foothills and
mountains, desert, steppes, and subtropical areas. The western half of
China is a region of sunken basins, rolling plateaus, and towering
massifs, including a portion of the highest tableland on earth. The
vastness of the country and the barrenness of the western hinterland
have important implications for defense strategy. In spite of many good
harbors along the approximately 18,000- kilometer coastline, the nation
has traditionally oriented itself not toward the sea but inland,
developing as an imperial power whose center lay in the middle and lower
reaches of the Huang He (Yellow River) on the northern plains.
Figures for the size of China differ slightly depending on where one
draws a number of ill-defined boundaries. The official Chinese figure is
9.6 million square kilometers, making the country substantially smaller
than the Soviet Union, slightly smaller than Canada, and somewhat larger
than the United States. China's contour is reasonably comparable to that
of the United States and lies largely at the same latitudes.
Boundaries
In 1987 China's borders, more than 20,000 kilometers of land frontier
shared with nearly all the nations of mainland East Asia, were disputed
at a number of points. In the western sector, China claimed portions of
the 41,000-square-kilometer Pamir Mountains area, a region of soaring
mountain peaks and glacial valleys where the borders of Afghanistan,
Pakistan, the Soviet Union, and China meet in Central Asia. North and
east of this region, some sections of the border remained undemarcated
in 1987. The 6,542-kilometer frontier with the Soviet Union has been a
source of continual friction. In 1954 China published maps showing
substantial portions of Soviet Siberian territory as its own. In the
northeast, border friction with the Soviet Union produced a tense
situation in remote regions of Nei Monggol Autonomous Region (Inner
Mongolia) and Heilongjiang Province along segments of the Ergun He
(Argun River), Heilong Jiang (Amur River), and Wusuli Jiang (Ussuri
River). Each side had massed troops and had exchanged
charges of border provocation in this area. In a September 1986 speech
in Vladivostok, Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev offered the Chinese a
more conciliatory position on Sino-Soviet border rivers. In 1987 the two
sides resumed border talks that had been broken off after the 1979
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Although the border issue remained
unresolved as of late 1987, China and the Soviet Union agreed to
consider the northeastern sector first.
A major dispute between China and India focuses on the northern edge
of their shared border, where the Aksai Chin area of northeastern Jammu
and Kashmir is under Chinese control but claimed by India. Eastward from
Bhutan and north of the Brahmaputra River (Yarlung Zangbo Jiang) lies a
large area controlled and administered by India but claimed by the
Chinese in the aftermath of the 1959 Tibetan revolt. The area was
demarcated by the British McMahon Line, drawn along the Himalayas in
1914 as the Sino-Indian border; India accepts and China rejects this
boundary. In June 1980 China made its first move in twenty years to
settle the border disputes with India, proposing that India cede the
Aksai Chin area in Jammu and Kashmir to China in return for China's
recognition of the McMahon Line; India did not accept the offer,
however, preferring a sector-by-sector approach to the problem. In July
1986 China and India held their seventh round of border talks, but they
made little headway toward resolving the dispute. Each side, but
primarily India, continued to make allegations of incursions into its
territory by the other.
China, Taiwan, and Vietnam all claim sovereignty over both the Xisha
(Paracel) and the Nansha (Spratly) islands, but the major islands of the
Xisha are occupied by China. The Philippines claims an area known as
Kalayaan (Freedom Land), which excludes the Nansha in the west and some
reefs in the south. Malaysia claims the islands and reefs in the
southernmost area, and there also is a potential for dispute over the
islands with Brunei.
The China-Burma border issue was settled October 1, 1960, by the
signing of the Sino-Burmese Boundary Treaty. The first joint inspection
of the border was completed successfully in June 1986. In 1987 the
island province of Taiwan continued to be under the control of the
Guomindang authorities.
Terrain and Drainage
Terrain and vegetation vary greatly in China. Mountains, hills, and
highlands cover about 66 percent of the nation's territory, impeding
communication and leaving limited level land for agriculture. Most
ranges, including all the major ones, trend eastwest . In the southwest,
the Himalayas and the Kunlun Mountains enclose the Qing Zang Plateau,
which encompasses most of Xizang Autonomous Region (also known as Tibet)
and part of Qinghai Province. It is the most extensive plateau in the
world, where elevations average more than 4,000 meters above sea level
and the loftiest summits rise to more than 7,200 meters.
From the Qing Zang Plateau, other less-elevated highlands, rugged
east-west trending mountains, and plateaus interrupted by deep
depressions fan out to the north and east. A continental scarp marks the
eastern margin of this territory extending from the Greater Hinggan
Range in northeastern China, through the Taihang Shan (a range of
mountains overlooking the North China Plain) to the eastern edge of the
Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau in the south. Virtually all of the
low-lying areas of China--the regions of dense population and intensive
cultivation--are found east of this scarp line.
East-west ranges include some of Asia's greatest mountains. In
addition to the Himalayas and the Kunlun Mountains, there are the
Gangdise Shan (Kailas) and the Tian Shan ranges. The latter stands
between two great basins, the massive Tarim Basin to the south and the
Junggar Basin to the north. Rich deposits of coal, oil, and metallic
ores lie in the Tian Shan area. The largest inland basin in China, the
Tarim Basin measures 1,500 kilometers from east to west and 600
kilometers from north to south at its widest parts.
The Himalayas form a natural boundary on the southwest as the Altai
Mountains do on the northwest. Lesser ranges branch out, some at sharp
angles from the major ranges. The mountains give rise to all the
principal rivers.
The spine of the Kunlun Mountains separates into several branches as
it runs eastward from the Pamir Mountains. The northernmost branches,
the Altun Shan and the Qilian Shan, rim the Qing Zang Plateau in
west-central China and overlook the Qaidam Basin, a sandy and swampy
region containing many salt lakes. A southern branch of the Kunlun
Mountains divides the watersheds of the Huang He and the Chang Jiang
(Yangtze River). The Gansu Corridor, west of the great bend in the Huang
He, was traditionally an important communications link with Central
Asia.
North of the 3,300-kilometer-long Great Wall, between Gansu Province
on the west and the Greater Hinggan Range on the east, lies the Nei
Monggol Plateau, at an average elevation of 1,000 meters above sea
level. The Yin Shan, a system of mountains with average elevations of
1,400 meters, extends east-west through the center of this vast desert
steppe peneplain. To the south is the largest loess plateau in the
world, covering 600,000 square kilometers in Shaanxi Province, parts of
Gansu and Shanxi provinces, and some of Ningxia-Hui Autonomous Region.
Loess is a yellowish soil blown in from the Nei Monggol deserts. The
loose, loamy material travels easily in the wind, and through the
centuries it has veneered the plateau and choked the Huang He with silt.
Because the river level drops precipitously toward the North China
Plain, where it continues a sluggish course across the delta, it
transports a heavy load of sand and mud from the upper reaches, much of
which is deposited on the flat plain. The flow is channeled mainly by
constantly repaired manmade embankments; as a result the river flows on
a raised ridge fifty meters or more above the plain, and waterlogging,
floods, and course changes have recurred over the centuries.
Traditionally, rulers were judged by their concern for or indifference
to preservation of the embankments. In the modern era, the new
leadership has been deeply committed to dealing with the problem and has
undertaken extensive flood control and conservation measures.
Flowing from its source in the Qing Zang highlands, the Huang He
courses toward the sea through the North China Plain, the historic
center of Chinese expansion and influence. Han people have farmed the
rich alluvial soils of the plain since ancient times, constructing the
Grand Canal for north-south transport. The plain itself is actually a
continuation of the Dongbei (Manchurian) Plain to the northeast but is
separated from it by the Bo Hai Gulf, an extension of the Huang Hai
(Yellow Sea).
Like other densely populated areas of China, the plain is subject not
only to floods but to earthquakes. For example, the mining and
industrial center of Tangshan, about 165 kilometers east of Beijing, was
leveled by an earthquake in July 1976 that reportedly also killed
242,000 people and injured 164,000.
The Qin Ling mountain range, a continuation of the Kunlun Mountains,
divides the North China Plain from the Chang Jiang Delta and is the
major physiographic boundary between the two great parts of China
Proper. It is in a sense a cultural boundary as well, influencing the
distribution of custom and language. South of the Qin Ling divide are
the densely populated and highly developed areas of the lower and middle
plains of the Chang Jiang and, on its upper reaches, the Sichuan Basin,
an area encircled by a high barrier of mountain ranges.
The country's longest and most important waterway, the Chang Jiang is
navigable over much of its length and has a vast hydroelectric
potential. Rising on the Qing Zang Plateau, the Chang Jiang traverses
6,300 kilometers through the heart of the country, draining an area of
1.8 million square kilometers before emptying into the East China Sea.
The roughly 300 million people who live along its middle and lower
reaches cultivate a great rice- and wheat-producing area. The Sichuan
Basin, favored by a mild, humid climate and a long growing season,
produces a rich variety of crops; it is also a leading silk-producing
area and an important industrial region with substantial mineral
resources.
Second only to the Qin Ling as an internal boundary is the Nan Ling,
the southernmost of the east-west mountain ranges. The Nan Ling
overlooks the part of China where a tropical climate permits two crops
of rice to be grown each year. Southeast of the mountains lies a
coastal, hilly region of small deltas and narrow valley plains; the
drainage area of the Zhu Jiang (Pearl River) and its associated network
of rivers occupies much of the region to the south. West of the Nan
Ling, the Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau rises in two steps, averaging 1,200 and
1,800 meters in elevation, respectively, toward the precipitous mountain
regions of the eastern Qing Zang Plateau.
The Hai He, like the Zhu Jiang and other major waterways, flows from
west to east. Its upper course consists of five rivers that converge
near Tianjin, then flow seventy kilometers before emptying into the Bo
Hai Gulf. Another major river, the Huai He, rises in Henan Province and
flows through several lakes before joining the Chang Jiang near
Yangzhou.
Inland drainage involving a number of upland basins in the north and
northeast accounts for about 40 percent of the country's total drainage
area. Many rivers and streams flow into lakes or diminish in the desert.
Some are useful for irrigation.
China's extensive territorial waters are principally marginal seas of
the western Pacific Ocean; these waters wash the shores of a long and
much-indented coastline and approximately 5,000 islands. The Yellow,
East China, and South China seas, too, are marginal seas of the Pacific
Ocean. More than half the coastline (predominantly in the south) is
rocky; most of the remainder is sandy. The Bay of Hangzhou roughly
divides the two kinds of shoreline.
Climate
Monsoon winds, caused by differences in the heat-absorbing capacity
of the continent and the ocean, dominate the climate. Alternating
seasonal air-mass movements and accompanying winds are moist in summer
and dry in winter. The advance and retreat of the monsoons account in
large degree for the timing of the rainy season and the amount of
rainfall throughout the country. Tremendous differences in latitude,
longitude, and altitude give rise to sharp variations in precipitation
and temperature within China. Although most of the country lies in the
temperate belt, its climatic patterns are complex.
China's northernmost point lies along the Heilong Jiang in
Heilongjiang Province in the cold-temperate zone; its southernmost
point, Hainan Island, has a tropical climate (see table 4, Appendix A).
Temperature differences in winter are great, but in summer the diversity
is considerably less. For example, the northern portions of Heilongjiang
Province experience an average January mean temperature of below 0�C,
and the reading may drop to minus 30�C; the average July mean in the
same area may exceed 20�C. By contrast, the central and southern parts
of Guangdong Province experience an average January temperature of above
10�C, while the July mean is about 28�C.
Precipitation varies regionally even more than temperature. China
south of the Qin Ling experiences abundant rainfall, most of it coming
with the summer monsoons. To the north and west of the range, however,
rainfall is uncertain. The farther north and west one moves, the
scantier and more uncertain it becomes. The northwest has the lowest
annual rainfall in the country and no precipitation at all in its desert
areas.
Wildlife
China lies in two of the world's major zoogeographic regions, the
Palearctic and the Oriental. The Qing Zang Plateau, Xinjiang and Nei
Monggol autonomous regions, northeastern China, and all areas north of
the Huang He are in the Palearctic region. Central, southern, and
southwest China lie in the Oriental region. In the Palearctic zone are
found such important mammals as the river fox, horse, camel, tapir,
mouse hare, hamster, and jerboa. Among the species found in the Oriental
region are the civet cat, Chinese pangolin, bamboo rat, tree shrew, and
also gibbon and various other species of monkeys and apes. Some overlap
exists between the two regions because of natural dispersal and
migration, and deer or antelope, bears, wolves, pigs, and rodents are
found in all of the diverse climatic and geological environments. The
famous giant panda is found only in a limited area along the Chang
Jiang.