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Mekong |
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Mekong (mā`kŏng, mē`–), Chinese Lancang, one of the great rivers of SE Asia, c.2,600 mi (4,180 km) long. From its marshy source (definitively identified in 1994) on the Rup-sa Pass in the highlands of Tibet, it rises as the Za Qu (Dza Chu) and flows generally S through Yunnan prov. in deep gorges and over rapids. Leaving Yunnan, the Mekong forms the Myanmar-Laos border, then curves E and S through NW Laos before marking part of the Laos-Thailand border.
From SW Laos the river descends onto the Cambodian plain, where it receives water from Tônlé Sap Tônlé Sap (tŏn`lā säp) [great lake], lake, central Cambodia; largest lake of SE Asia. The Mekong River is navigable for large vessels c.340 mi (550 km) upstream; Phnom Penh Phnom Penh (nŏm pĕn, pənŏm`) or Phnum Penh Mekong a river in SE Asia, rising in SW China in Qinghai province: flows southeast forming the border between Laos and Myanmar, and part of the border between Laos and Thailand, then continues south across Cambodia and Vietnam to the South China Sea by an extensive delta, one of the greatest rice-growing areas in Asia. Length: about 4025 km (2500 miles) How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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To him, the ideal-typical Vietnamese village embodies an adaptation to the natural and social environments in both parts of Vietnam, in the Red River and the Mekong delta. My father had moved us out of Saigon and into hiding in the Mekong countryside soon after he was released from re-education camp. And some of the world's mightiest rivers--including the Niger and Zambezi in Africa and Indus and Mekong in Asia--have nearly dried up in part because of water-intensive sugar production. |
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