- Poyang, Lake
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largest freshwater lake in China, located in northern Jiangxi (Kiangsi) province, in the southeastern part of the country. It lies in a structural depression south of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) and is fed by various rivers from Jiangxi, the most important being the Gan River, which drains almost the whole of the province. Lake Poyang itself drains into the Yangtze at Hukou. The size of the lake is difficult to define, as the lake is actually composed of a system of lakes and marshes that are subject to considerable seasonal variation. At its greatest extent it is about 95 miles (150 km) in length from north to south and has a breadth of some 19 miles (31 km) from east to west. In winter the whole area becomes a huge marsh, intersected by waterways and dotted with hills surmounted by villages. In summer the region is flooded, and the hills become islands. The water level depends on various factors, including the level of the Yangtze and that of its tributaries. The Poyang has always been an important retention lake that receives some of the excess of the Yangtze in flood time; consequently, the surrounding farmland is often extensively flooded.The lake has been silting up in recent centuries. Even in summer there is a wide margin of reedbeds and swamp around the lake itself, and over the centuries large areas of farmland have been reclaimed from the lacustrine deposits. Nanchang, capital of Jiangxi, was once on the lakeshore but is now some 15 miles (24 km) from it. The lake is divided into two sections by a narrow neck of land called Yingzikou. The northern section is sometimes known as Lake Luoxing. The much larger southern section is sometimes known as Lake Zuting, or Lake Guanting.The total area of the lake is about 1,385 square miles (3,585 square km), but precise measurement is impossible because the difference between flood level and low-water level is sometimes as much as 25 feet (8 metres). Unlike Dongting Lake in Hunan province, Lake Poyang has no artificial retention basin to increase its capacity to receive the Yangtze's floodwaters.
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Universalium. 2010.