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Topography
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Mt. Qomolangma, the world's highest peak and the main peak of
the Himalayas. |
China's topography is varied and complicated, with towering mountains,
basins of different sizes, undulating plateaus and hills, and flat
and fertile plains.
A bird's-eye view of China would indicate that China's terrain
descends in four steps from west to east.
The top of this four-step "staircase" is the Qinghai-Tibet
Plateau. Averaging more than 4,000 m above sea level, it is often
called the "roof of the world." Rising 8,848 m above sea
level is Mt. Qomolangma, the world's highest peak and the main peak
of the Himalayas.
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| Jiuzhaigou in Sichuan is famous for its natural scenery including
lakes, waterfalls, snow mountains and forestes and known as
the "World of Fairy Tale." |
The second step includes the Inner Mongolia, Loess and Yunnan-Guizhou
plateaus, and the Tarim, Junggar and Sichuan basins, with an average
elevation of between 1,000 m and 2,000 m. The third step, about
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. 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 Topographical Map of China |
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