Nanyang Basin
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The Nanyang Basin (
Geography
The basin lies between 80 and 140 meters above sea level.[1] Most of the minor tributaries within the basin feed into the Tangbai River (Chinese: 唐白河; pinyin: Tángbái Hé; Jyutping: Tong4baak6 ho4), which flows into the Han at the city of Xiangyang (simplified Chinese: 襄阳; traditional Chinese: 襄陽; pinyin: Xiāngyáng; Jyutping: Soeng1joeng4).[1]
The basin also includes the source of the Huai River. Many other tributaries in the basin flow northward into the Yellow River. Thus the basin is a watershed of three major river basins, and is part of a transition zone between the north and the south of China, often forming a buffer zone in Chinese history.[2]
The basin is flanked on three sides by highlands: to the west are the Daba Mountains, to the north lie the Funiu Mountains, an eastern extension of the Qinling Mountains; to the east are the Tongbai Mountains , which separate the valley from the Huai River drainage.[1] To the south and southeast lies the Jianghan Plain, to which lowland access is provided through the Han River valley and the Yun River corridor, with the Dahong Mountains intervening.[1]
The basin is home to some of the major historic cities of central China. The eponymous city of
Suizhou in the far southeast of the basin along the Yun River, is where the Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng, with its famous bianzhong, was discovered in the 1970s. It is presumed that the state of Zeng was located here.[1]
Xichuan County (simplified Chinese: 淅川县; traditional Chinese: 淅川縣; pinyin: Xīchuān Xiàn; Jyutping: Sik1cyun1 jyun6), situated in the northwest of the basin, is presumed to be the cradle of the state of Chu, a major polity of early Chinese history.[1] The first capital of the state, Danyang (simplified Chinese: 丹阳; traditional Chinese: 丹陽; pinyin: Dānyáng; Jyutping: Daan1joeng4), is located in the county, and now falls under the city of Nanyang.
History
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References
- ^ ISBN 978-1-139-85131-2. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
- ISBN 978-1-139-45688-3. Retrieved 25 March 2024.