Beipan River
| Beipan River | |
|---|---|
Beipan River canyon near Liupanshui | |
The Pearl River system with the Beipan River in the top left | |
| Location | |
| Country | China |
Beipan River (Chinese: 北盘江; pinyin: Běipán Jiāng) is a river in Guizhou and Yunnan provinces, China, and part of the great Pearl River basin.
Other names
The upper reaches in Yunnan and Guizhou were once known as the Zangke River.
Course
The Beipan River passes through the modern Chinese provinces of Yunnan and Guizhou. When reaching the border of Guangxi, the Beipan River (literally, the Northern Pan River) merges with the Nanpan River (the Southern Pan River), forming the Hongshui River, which continues to the southeast.
History
The river was significant in history as a communications pathway between the Yelang and Nanyue kingdoms.[1]
Bridges
The river is crossed by the world's highest bridge, the Huajiang Canyon Bridge,[2] as well as the world's second highest bridge, the Duge Bridge.[3] It is also crossed by the Qinglong Railway Bridge, the Guanxing Highway via the Beipan River Guanxing Highway Bridge, the Liupanshui-Baiguo Railway via the Beipan River Shuibai Railway Bridge, and the G60 Hukun Expressway via the Beipan River Hukun Expressway Bridge. All of these bridges are among the highest in the world.
There are other bridges under construction over the river that are also extremely high:
- Beipan River Shuipan Expressway Bridge
- Beipan River Wang'an Highway Bridge
Dams
There are a number of dams along the river including the Guangzhao Dam.
See also
References
- ^ Yang, Bin. "3". Between Winds and Clouds: The Making of Yunnan, Second Century BCE to Twentieth Century CE (Project Gutenberg Online ed.).
- ^ "World's tallest bridge: Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge takes title". BBC Newsround. 2025-07-12.
- ^
Chris Buckley (2017-06-10). "China's New Bridges: Rising High, but Buried in Debt China has built hundreds of dazzling new bridges, including the longest and highest, but many have fostered debt and corruption". The New York Times. p. A6. Archived from the original on 2017-06-10.
The vertiginous Duge Beipan River Bridge, the world's highest, vaults a 1,853-foot-deep chasm in southwest China.
24°57′22″N 106°08′28″E / 24.956°N 106.141°E