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Standard:SS7G9 The student will locate selected features in the Southern and Eastern Asia. Locate on a world and regional political-physical map: Ganges River, Huang ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Standard:SS7G9


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StandardSS7G9
  • The student will locate selected features in the
    Southern and Eastern Asia.
  • Locate on a world and regional political-physical
    map Ganges River, Huang He (Yellow River), Indus
    River, Mekong River, Yangtze (Change Jiang)
    River, Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean, Sea of Japan,
    South China Sea, Yellow Sea, Gobi Desert,
    Taklimakan Desert, Himalayan Mountains, and
    Korean Peninsula.
  • Locate on a world and regional political-physical
    map the countries of China, India, Indonesia,
    Japan, North Korea, South Korea, and Vietnam.

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Ganges River - India
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Ganges River
  • The Ganges is 1557 miles long (2506 km)
  • The Ganges Valley, or basin, is 200 to 400 miles
    (322 to 644 km) wide
  • The river starts in the Himalayas.
  • It flows eastward and empties into the Bay of
    Bengal. Its mouth forms a vast delta. At the
    delta it is joined by the southward-flowing
    Brahmaputra River. Their combined delta is the
    largest in the world

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Ganges River
  • Tremendous volume of waste 1 billion liters per
    day of mostly untreated raw sewage
  • Also, inadequate cremation procedures contributes
    to a large number of partially burnt or not burnt
    corpses floating down the Ganges, not to mention
    livestock corpses

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Huang He- Yellow River - China
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Huang He-Yellow River
  • The Yellow River, sometimes simply called "the
    River" in ancient Chinese, is the 2nd longest
    river in China (after the Yangtze River) and the
    7th longest in the world, at 5,463km.
  • It flows through 9 provinces of China and empties
    into the Bohai Sea (near Yellow Sea).
  • It is called the Yellow River because huge
    amounts of loess silt and sand sediment turn
    the water that color. So much of this
    mineral-rich soil ends up in the Yellow River
    that it can fill the riverbed and thus change the
    rivers course.

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Huang He-Yellow River
  • The Yellow River is indicative of the problems
    affecting many of China's rivers. Pollution,
    hydropower, and intensive water extraction for
    human consumption, agriculture, and industrial
    use are all taking their toll on the river.
  • http//www.comcast.net/video/china-battles-river-o
    il-spill/1376364778/
  • The Chinese government estimates that around
    two-thirds of the Yellow River's water is too
    polluted to drink and according to the Institute
    of Public and Environmental Affairs, a
    Beijing-based NGO, 4.3 billion tons of waste
    flowed into the Yellow River in 2005.
  • The Yellow River is known as the "Mother River of
    China" and "the Cradle of Chinese Civilization"
    in China, as its basin is the birthplace of the
    northern Chinese civilizations and the most
    prosperous region in early Chinese history. But
    frequent devastating floods, largely due to the
    elevated river bed in its lower course, have also
    earned it the distinction "China's Sorrow".

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Indus River China, India, Pakistan
  • Indus River, one of the chief rivers of southern
    Asia. From its source in Tibet, China, the Indus
    flows some 1,900 miles (3,100 km) through India
    and Pakistan to the Arabian Sea, an arm of the
    Indian Ocean. All of India's section of the river
    is in Kashmir. The river's drainage basin
    occupies 332,000 square miles (860,000 km2) most
    of it is in Pakistan.
  • The Indus river system provides water for one of
    the largest irrigated areas in the world. Without
    this water most of the basin would be virtually
    uninhabitable.
  • Conflict between Pakistan and India over
    distribution of the water arose shortly after the
    creation of Pakistan in 1947. The dispute was
    settled in 1960 by a treaty between India and
    Pakistan

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Mekong River
  • The Mekong River is the longest river in the
    region.
  • From its source in China, the Mekong flows
    generally southeast to the South China Sea, a
    distance of 4,200 km (2,610 mi).
  • The Mekong crosses China, and forms the border
    between Myanmar (Burma) and Laos and most of the
    border between Laos and Thailand. It then flows
    across Cambodia and southern Vietnam into a rich
    delta before emptying into the South China Sea.
    In the upper course are steep descents and swift
    rapids, but the river is navigable south of
    Louang Phrabang in Laos.

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Mekong River
  • The Mekong system is extremely complex and
    effects the lives of some 60 million people, many
    of whom are amongst the poorest in the world. 
  • There are many demands made on the river - to
    provide water for industrial and agricultural
    development, to sustain subsistence fishing, for
    transport, to maintain delicate ecological and
    hydrological balances. 
  • Inevitably there are conflicting demands made on
    the resource and very different views as to how
    the water should (or should not) be used. 

Rice paddies along the MeKong River in China
Mekong River Valley, Laos, 1968
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Yangtze (Change Jiang) River
  • The Yangtze River is the longest river in China
    and Asia, and the third-longest in the world.
    Only the Amazon and Nile are longer
  • Waters of the Yangtze are often used for rice and
    wheat irrigation. It also has enormous and
    inexhaustible hydroelectric resources.

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Three Gorges Dam-Advantages
  • The Three Gorges Dam is a hydroelectric river dam
    that spans the Yangtze River. It is the world's
    largest electricity-generating plant of any kind.
  • Supporters say the benefits of the project far
    outweigh the costs. The principal advantage of
    the project is to generate power to keep pace
    with China's economic growth.
  • Chinese officials note that the dam will relieve
    the danger of flooding.
  • Another advantage of the dam is to reduce
    emissions of sulfur dioxide and carbon dioxide
    generating electricity equal to about 40 million
    tons of coal.

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Disadvantages of Dam
  • More than 1.1 million people had to be resettled.
  • The project increased the risk of earthquakes and
    landslides.
  • It threatens the river wildlife. In addition to
    massive fish species, it also affects endangered
    species, including the Yangtze dolphin, the
    Chinese Sturgeon, the Chinese Tiger, the Chinese
    Alligator, the Siberian Crane, and the Giant
    Panda.
  • Silt trapped behind the dam has caused problems
    with electrical generation and has deprived
    farmers of the fertile silt downstream.
  • Construction of the dam required extensive
    logging in the area.
  • Finally, the dam and the reservoir destroyed some
    of Chinas finest scenery which is an important
    source of tourism revenue.

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Bay of Bengal
  • The Bay of Bengal is bordered by India,
    Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Indonesia, Sri
    Lanka.
  • Strategically important to India because of the
    outlying islands.

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South China Sea
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South China Sea
  • States and territories with borders on the sea
    (clockwise from north) include
  • China, Taiwan, the Philippines, Malaysia,
    Brunei, Indonesia, Singapore, and Vietnam.
  • The South China Sea was the starting point of the
    "Silk Road on the Ocean" during the last
    millennium.

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Yellow Sea
  • Pollution Threatens Olympic Sailing In Yellow Sea

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Yellow Sea
  • Found between mainland China and the Korean
    Pennisula.
  • Its name comes from the sand particles from Gobi
    Desert sand storms that turn the surface of the
    water golden yellow during sunset
  • The intertidal mudflats of the Yellow Sea are of
    great importance for migratory shorebirds.
    Surveys show that the area is the single most
    important site for migratory birds on northward
    migration in the entire East Asian - Australasian
    Flyway.
  • A minimum number of two million birds passing
    through at the time, with about half that number
    using it on southward migration

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Gobi Desert
  • The Gobi desert, one of the world's great
    deserts, covers much of the southern part of
    Mongolia. Unlike the Sahara there are few sand
    dunes in the Gobi rather you'll find large
    barren expenses of gravel plains and rocky
    outcrops.
  • The climate here is extreme. Temperatures reach
    40 C. in summer, and -40 in winter.
  • Great Gobi National Park is one of the largest
    World Biospheres, with an area larger than
    Switzerland. It contains the last remaining wild
    Bacterian (two-humped) camels, and a small
    population of Gobi bears, the only
    desert-inhabiting bear.

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Gobi Desert
  •  
  • Khongoryn Els (Singing Dunes) Omngobi Aimag
  • This is one of the few areas of sand dune
    formations. Up to 200m tall and many km long, the
    Khongoryn Els are a popular tourist destination.
  • The Gobi is most notable in history as part of
    the great Mongol Empire, and as the location of
    several important cities along the Silk Road.

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Taklimakan Desert
  • The Taklamakan Desert, also called The Desert of
    Death, is located in China.
  • One of the largest sandy deserts in the world,
    ranking 15th in size in a ranking of the world's
    largest non-polar deserts.
  • Scientists consider it to be the most dangerous
    desert in the world.
  • Taklamakan is a cold desert climate. Because it
    is close to the Siberian winds, extreme lows are
    recorded in wintertime, sometimes well below -20
    C (-4 F).
  • It if famous for being a part of the Silk Road.

2008 Winter Snow in Taklamakan.
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Taklimakan Desert
  • There is very little water in the desert and it
    is hazardous to cross. Merchant caravans on the
    Silk Road would stop for relief at the thriving
    oasis towns.

Kashgar is one of the oasis towns located in the
Taklimakan Desert that was important along the
Silk Road.
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Himalaya Mountains
  • Himalayas for short, is a mountain range in Asia,
    separating the Indian subcontinent from the
    Tibetan Plateau.
  • Together, the Himalayan mountain system is the
    planet's highest and home to the world's highest
    peaks, which includes Mount Everest and K2.
  • The Himalayas and their combined drainage basin
    is home to some 3 billion people, almost half of
    earth population.

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Himalayas
  • http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/everest/earth/shock.h
    tml
  • According to the modern theory of plate
    tectonics, their formation is a result of a
    continental collision along the convergent
    boundary between the Indo-Australian Plate and
    the Eurasian Plate. This is referred to as a fold
    mountain.

26
Korean Peninsula
  • The peninsula is surrounded by the Sea of Japan,
    the East China Sea, and the Yellow Sea, the Korea
    Strait connecting the first two bodies of water.
  • Until the end of World War II, Korea was a single
    political entity whose territory roughly
    coincided with the Korean Peninsula. Since the
    end of the Korean War in 1953, the northern half
    has been occupied by North Korea, while the
    southern half has been occupied by South Korea.

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Korean Peninsula
South Korea is a semi- presidential government in
which a president and a prime minister are both
active participants in the day-to-day
administration of the state. It differs from a
parliamentary republic in that it has a popularly
elected head of state who is more than a purely
ceremonial figurehead, and from the presidential
system in that the cabinet, although named by the
president, is responsible to the legislature,
which may force the cabinet to resign through a
motion of no confidence.
  • North Korea is a single-party state under a
    united front led by the Korean Workers' Party.
  • The country's government follows the Juche
    ideology of self-reliance.
  • Command Economy

Kim Jong-il
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China
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India
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Indonesia
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Japan
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North Korea
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South Korea
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Vietnam
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