| Chinese name | |
|---|---|
| Simplified Chinese: | |
| Traditional Chinese: | |
| Hanyu Pinyin: | Yālùjiāng |
| Wade-Giles: | Ya-lu Chiang |
| Korean name | |
| Chosŏn'gŭl: | |
| Hanja: | |
| McCune-Reischauer: | Amrokkang S: Amnokkang |
| Revised Romanization: | Amrokgang S: Amnokgang |
The Yalu River, or the Amrok River, is a river on the border between China and North Korea.
The bordering Chinese provinces are Jilin and Liaoning.
The river is 790 km (491 mi) long and receives the water from over 30,000 km² of land. The Yalu's most significant tributaries are the Changjin, Herchun, and Tokro rivers. The river is not easily navigable for most of its length: although at its widest it is around 5 km, the depth is no greater than 3 m and much of the river is heavily silted.
Because of its strategic location between China and Korea, the river has been the site of several battles, including:
The Korean side of the river was heavily industrialized during the Japanese Colonial Period (1910–1945), and by 1945 almost 20% of Japan's total industrial output originated in Korea. During the Korean War the movement of UN troops approaching the river provoked massive Chinese intervention from around Dandong. In the course of the conflict every bridge across the river except one was destroyed. The one remaining bridge being the Sino-Korea Friendship Bridge connecting Sinŭiju, North Korea to Dandong, China.
Since the early 1990s, the river has frequently been crossed by undocumented migrants from North Korea to China.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Yalu River".
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