About This Book
A systematic, observational account of the Yangtze River traces its course from Tibetan headwaters to the eastern estuary, cataloguing major tributaries, the provinces it waters, and regional productions. The narrative examines navigation and transport—steamers and traditional craft—detailing routes, seasonal hazards, river aids such as lights and buoys, and the difficulties of ascending into the upper reaches. It recounts European and Chinese attempts to push steam navigation upstream, contrasts conditions along lower, middle, and upper sections, and considers climatic effects, river infrastructure, and broader economic and cultural observations about the populations and districts linked to the waterway.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
A Description of Modern Birmingham / Whereunto Are Annexed Observations Made during an Excursion Round the Town, in the Summer of 1818, Including Warwick and Leamington
by Charles Pye
The Spell of the Rockies
by Enos A. Mills
China and the Chinese
by Herbert Allen Giles
Tocht naar de dalen van den kinaboom (Peru) / De Aarde en haar Volken, 1873
by Paul Marcoy
Onder de wilde stammen op de grenzen van Afghanistan / De Aarde en haar Volken, 1917
by T. L. Pennell
Pirates and Piracy
by Oscar Herrmann
