Yangtze River Essays

  • Yangtze River

    1435 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Yangtze China, the worlds biggest country, is so large it is the home to the fourth longest river in the world. China alone has over 100,000 miles of inland waterways that are open to navigation. The country's most important inland waterway is the Amur River, but that is nothing compared to the Yangtze River. The Yangtze is one of the most economically important water way of not just China, but of the world! Unlike the Amur River the Yangtze River is not icebound in the winter and because

  • The Damming of the Yangtze River

    1245 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Damming of the Yangtze River Since the 1920's, when the dam was first proposed, the Three Gorges Dam has been a topic for debate in the People's Republic of China. The construction of the world's largest hydro-electric project on the Yangtze River would be a detriment to the native flora and fauna, submerge rich farmlands, destroy archaeological sites, and force the evacuation of millions of people. Faced with international, as well as domestic, criticism about the ecological and social havoc

  • Shanghai Case Study

    1663 Words  | 4 Pages

    China is a very beautiful country to visit. They have the Great Wall of China to see, they’ve hosted the 2008 summer Olympics in Beijing which is the country capital. Also when people start talking about china they talk about the different dynasties that was going on during the B.C and A.D years, but one thing I learn more about china is that they have a beautiful city of Shanghai. I really learn a lot about Shanghai. Learning that they would have to fight to protect their city over the years. No

  • Three Gorges Dam

    1276 Words  | 3 Pages

    Since 1914 the idea has arisen of damming the Yangtze River. China plans to do this with a 600-foot, cement wall which will take eleven years to complete and costs could rise to over 75 billion dollars. The dam is claimed to have many advantages for China and the Chinese. Three Gorges is expected to produce around one-tenth of the nation’s energy, without the use of coal, improving air quality. Also, the natural floods that occur with the Yangtze river will be stopped, supposedly saving thousands

  • Funding and Lending Problems with China’s Three Gorges Dam Project

    2678 Words  | 6 Pages

    Funding and Lending Problems with China’s Three Gorges Dam Project The Three Gorges Project continues to leave a wake of environmental and social transgressions. An assortment of activists and over 45 international groups, including the International Rivers Network and Sierra Club, have fought the project and all its detrimental attributes (Lammers 1). But because of the predetermination of its construction, certain consequences associated with the Three Gorges Dam are inevitable, especially those resulting

  • Essay On The Three Gorges Dam

    1157 Words  | 3 Pages

    coal power plants1 and shipping, which causes acid rain over the region making the Yangtze River is one of the most polluted rivers in the world.4 It does not help that the Yangtze River runs right through Chinas industrial heartland. Using the river to transport their goods to other parts or China adds to the pollution.2 Pollution from mines, hospitals, and garbage dumping is another big problem for the river because the pollution is building up around the dam.1 With the Three Gorges Dam will

  • Three Gorges Dam Impacts

    1697 Words  | 4 Pages

    the largest hydropower in the world, has claimed to be a project that gives “hope” to the people in China. Located on the Yangtze River, the third longest river in the world, the Three Gorges Dam is the symbol of China’s technology and economic progress. For years, the government has claimed that it could benefit people’s living quality by improving the navigation on Yangtze River, providing hydroelectric power, and improving flood control. But does it true? Do the people in China get any benefit from

  • Climate Change In China Essay

    768 Words  | 2 Pages

    level along the coastal areas of China has increased by 90 millimeters ( mm) in the 30 recent years. cities in coastal areas are directly affected by the sea level rose . Shanghai, for example, located in a low lying area near the mouth of the Yangtze River , is highly vulnerable to climate change

  • The Environmental Impact of the Three Gorges Dam

    1376 Words  | 3 Pages

    improper planning, and complete disregard to pleas of warning. The dam was China’s answer to control annual flooding, a problem that in 1998 displaced 300 million Chinese who lived on the banks of the Yangtze River. It was also China’s tactic to increase international trade by deepening the Yangtze River to accommodate large cargo ships farther into Mainland China. Most importantly, it was China’s 24 billion dollar investment to decrease the annual burning of 50 million tons of coal with the goal of

  • Deforestation

    825 Words  | 2 Pages

    caused floods to occur every decade, and once every six years between 1921 and 1949, but once every two years in the 1980s. The situation has dramatically worsened since 1994, with the Yangtze flooding every year. Growing silting of rivers and lakes from the deforested lands in the Yangtze basin and encroachment on river beds by Chinese farmers resulted in record levels of floods in the summer of 1998. The building of The Three Gorges Dam is said to stop flooding greatly. As early as the 1950s deforestation

  • Three Gorges Dam Case Study

    760 Words  | 2 Pages

    appreciation for it, whereas many other countries, as a whole, are constantly trying to come up with new solutions to solve the problem. The Three Gorges Project has a great influence on the environment and ecology of the reservoir area and the Yangtze River (Major River in China that flows several provinces the biggest conce... ... middle of paper ... ...oints. My qualifications are as follows: I have the drive and ability to do extensive research, the skill to present that research in an engaging

  • Emperor K’ang-hsi

    950 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ku Wen-hsing stating that he had traveled 1000’s of miles in each direction. He had traveled to the provinces of Shansi and Shensi in the west, to the provinces of Manchuria and Ula in the east, north across the Gobi to the Kerulean River and south to the Yangtze River. On his travels, Emperor K’ang-hsi, liked to collect and compare different plats, animals, birds that he came across. He loved to hunt with bows and guns during his travels. Emperor K’ang-hsi hunting practices were not just meant for

  • The Three Gorges Dam

    1072 Words  | 3 Pages

    relief The most significant function of the dam is to control flooding, which is a major problem of a seasonal river like the Yangtze. Millions of people live downstream of the dam, and many large and important cities like Wuhan, Nanjing and Shanghai lie next to the river. Plenty of farm land and the most important industrial area of China are built beside the river. In 1954, the river flooded 47.75 million acres (193,000 km²) of land, killing 33,169 people and forcing 18,884,000 people to move

  • China's forests

    1427 Words  | 3 Pages

    GEOGRAPHICAL BACKGROUND “South West” China encompasses an area known by Westerners as “East Tibet”, by the indigenous Tibetan people as Kham, and by the Republic of China as “Xikang”. It is deeply dissected by four of Asias largest rivers (Bramaputra, Salween, Mekong and Yangtze), which flow in a SE course through deep limestone and sandstone gorges. Elevation ranges from 2000m to more than 7000 m and the area is dominated in the east by Minyak Gangkar (7590m) (Ch. Gongga Shan). The steep slopes are

  • A Brief History of China

    1689 Words  | 4 Pages

    China is on the verge of becoming the next Super Power like the United States and Great Britain. The reason why I am writing this paper is to relay information to you regarding China as it was and how it is now. China blossomed quicker than any other country in the beginning and later stalled in progress throughout its history. Culture is the end statement of a people’s identity. According to Merriam-Webster it is a way of thinking, behaving or working that exists in a place or organization (Dictionary)

  • Pearl Buck: The Bridge Builder

    2391 Words  | 5 Pages

    they returned to Chinkiang, China. According to Theodore Harris, Buck spent her whole childhood there with many Chinese influences. Wang Amah, a Chinese nurse, assisted her mother. She played with Chinese children and lived in a house along the Yangtze River (30-31). These influences later played an integral role in Buck’s success as a novelist. The Encyclopedia Britannica Online says Buck’s early schooling was received in Shanghai. Later, she returned to the United States and graduated from Randolph-Macon

  • Massacre Of Nanking Essay

    1969 Words  | 4 Pages

    Have you ever wondered what it would be like to have a Japanese soldier barge into your house, rape your mother and sister, and then kill your father, all while you’re being forced to watch? Hopefully not, but unfortunately at one point in our history, that has happened to hundreds of thousands of people of Nanking, China. This Rape of Nanking or Massacre of Nanking can sometimes be referred to as the “forgotten Holocaust of WWII” seeing as it took place close to the start of the Second World War

  • British Imperialism in China and Africa

    840 Words  | 2 Pages

    British Imperialism in China and Africa The treatment of the Chinese by the British, during the take over of their country, was just like that of the Africans. The British took over the land and the government, took advantage of the people and exploited them for their resources. The English accomplished these things differently in each situation, but each time, the results were the same. One of the most important aspects of imperialism is the take over of government. The English accomplished

  • Inga 3 Project Paper

    1174 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Inga 3 Project is a Dam building venture in the Congo. The idea was to build hydropower plants to extend energy across the globe. The original idea was to provide free or inexpensive energy and jobs to underdeveloped areas. This would be the third dam in the region. Inga 1 was completed in 1972 and Inga 2 was completed in 1982 and were a part of the Inga-Shaba project. Inga 3 Project is supposed to connect the electric grids of many countries in the region. “Inga 3 is expected to produce

  • Rape of Nanking: Disaster for Power

    725 Words  | 2 Pages

    Within a span of six weeks, about three hundred thousand men and women were either killed or raped in Nanking, China. ( Katsuichi 3). After not surrendering, the Japanese attacked various parts of China in 1937, where they then decided to go to the back then capital Nanking, or Nanjing. “Japanese soldiers swept into the city [...] the next two months [...] murder, rape and killing” ( Nanking Massacre Encyclopedia Gale). The Japanese army made an assault on the Nanking walls from multiple directions