xii Preface
Taiwan
Hainan
YellowRiver
WestRiver
LiaoRiver
HuaiRiver
YangziR
iver
Yellow
Sea
East
China
Sea
South
China
Sea
Bay of Bengal
GobiDesert
Ku
nlun
Mountains
Gr
ea
ter
Hi
ng
ga
nR
an
ge
TianShan
Jinling
Mountains
Sichuan
Basin
Tarim Basin
(Taklamakan Desert)
Yunnan
Plateau
Qinghai-Tibetan
Plateau
Ordos
Plateau
Him
alay
anM
oun
tains
North
China
Plain
Manchurian
Plain
0
0 600 km
400 mi
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
OFCHINA
Over 10,
5,001–10,
2,001–5,
1,001–2,
501–1,
0–
Below sea level
Over 3,
1,526–3,
611–1,
306–
153–
0–
Below sea level
Elevation
Feet Meters
Eurasian subcontinent, which seems a logical starting point for this sur-
vey. For much of China’s history, Chinese rule only included the eastern
half of today’s People’s Republic of China (excluding much of Manchu-
ria in the northeast, Mongolia in the north, Xinjiang in the northwest,
and the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau in the west and southwest).
The eastern Eurasian subcontinent forms a kind of checkerboard of
mountain ranges running north to south and east to west, surrounded
by steppe lands, deserts, and mountains. To the north of China are the