Rivers that flow through China are as follows. The list is organized according to the body of water into which each river empties, beginning with the Sea of Okhotsk in the northeast, moving clockwise on a map and ending with the Arctic Ocean.
- Wei (æ½Âæ²³)
- Zhang (漳河)
- Yongding (æ°¸å®Âæ²³)
- Sanggan River (æ¡Â干河)
- Yang He (æ´Âæ²³)
- Daqing River (大æ¸Â
æ²³)
- Juma River (æÂÂ马河)
- Wei (å«河)
- Tuhai River (å¾Âé§Âæ²³)
- Sênggê Zangbo (à ½¦à ½ºà ½Âà ¼Âà ½Âà ½ºà ¼Âà ¼Âà ½Âà ½Âà ½Âà ¼Âà ½Âà ½¼, ç®æ³Âæ²³) / Indus River
- Panjnad River (Pakistan)
- Langqên Zangbo (à ½Âà ¾³à ½Âà ¼Âà ½Âà ½ºà ½Âà ¼Âà ½Âà ½Âà ½Âà ¼Âà ½Âà ½¼, 象æ³Âæ²³) / Sutlej River
Ili Basin
Lake Alakol
- Eastern Zhejiang Canal (æµÂä¸Âè¿Âæ²³), connecting the Qiantang, Cao'e, and Yong watersheds
- Grand Canal of China (京æÂÂ大è¿Âæ²³), connecting the Qiantang, Yangtze, Huai, Yellow R., and Hai watersheds
- SouthâÂÂNorth Water Transfer Project, various canals repurposed to move vast amounts of water to the north
- Lingqu Canal (çµ渠), connecting the Yangtze and Pearl watersheds
- IrtyshâÂÂKaramayâÂÂÃÂrümqi Canal, providing irrigation to the grasslands and deserts of Xinjiang
See also
References
External links
- Interactive map with China's river basins, showing river names in Chinese.
- Table of rivers in China with Chinese names and useful data (dead link 01:15, 4 March 2013 (UTC))