The
Huaihe, an important river in central China, flows from
west to east, with the Huanghe in the north and Yangtze
River in the south. Starting in the Tongbai Mountains
in Henan, it has its upper reaches in Henan, its middle
reaches in Anhui and its lower reaches in Jiangsu. Its
trunk is about 1,000 kilometers long and its catchment
area about 185,700 square kilometers. The Huaihe basin
is mostly plain and has a cultivated area of more than
200 million mu.
The Huaihe had its outlet to the sea about eight centuries
ago. In 1194, the Huanghe breached its own dykes and merged
with the downriver course of the Huaihe. Before it reverted
to its old course in mid-19th century, the Huanghe had
deposited large amounts of mud and silt in the lower reaches
of the Huaihe and sealed up the latter’s outlet
to the sea. With the passage of time, the waters of the
Huaihe converged to form two large lakes, Hongze and Gaoyou.
In its high-water season the Huaihe flows through the
Honze and Gaoyou lakes and the Grand Canal into the Yangtze
River near Yangzhou before emptying into the sea. Because
its lower reached its dykes and caused 250 major floods
in the five centuries or more before 1949. Since the birth
of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, many
reservoirs and flood-detention projects have been built
in its upper and middle reaches, new courses have been
laid out in its lower reaches and its outlet to the sea
has been widened. In this way, the greater part of its
water now flows into the Yangtze River and the rest into
the Huanghai Sea through the new channels. Today, the
Huaihe basin has an irrigated area of about 100 million
mu, and the disaster-ridden, low yielding region is on
its way to prosperity.
(1
mu=0.1644 acre=0.0667 hectare; ha)
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