|
Topography
|
|
|
|
2004-10-27
|
| China’s topography
was completely formed around the emergence of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau,
the most important geological event over the past several million years.
Taking a bird’s-eye view of China, the terrain gradually descends
from west to east like a staircase. Due to the collision of the Indian and
Eurasian plates, the young Qinghai-Tibet Plateau rose continuously to become
the top of the four-step “staircase,” averaging more than 4,000
m above sea level, and called “the roof of the world.” Soaring
8,848 m above sea level on the plateau is Mt. Qomolangma, the world’s
highest peak and the main peak of the Himalayas. The second step includes
the gently sloping Inner Mongolia Plateau, the Loess Plateau, the Yunnan-Guizhou
Plateau, the Tarim Basin, the Junggar Basin and the Sichuan Basin, with
an average elevation of between 1,000 m and 2,000 m. The third step, dropping
to 500-1,000 m in elevation, begins at a line drawn around the Greater Hinggan,
Taihang, Wushan and Xuefeng mountain ranges and extends eastward to the
coast of the Pacific Ocean. Here, from north to south, are the Northeast
Plain, the North China Plain and the Middle-Lower Yangtze Plain. Interspersed
amongst the plains are hills and foothills. To the east, the land extends
out into the ocean, in a continental shelf, the fourth step of the staircase.
The water here is less than 200 m deep. The area of mountains and hills
and plateaus account for 65 percent of the total land area of China. |
|
|