雅鲁藏布江英文介绍

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雅鲁藏布江英文介绍
寻求一篇关于雅鲁藏布江的英文介绍文章.

The Yarlung Zangbo River (Chinese:雅鲁藏布江; pinyin:Yǎlǔ Zàngbù Jiāng) or Yarlung Tsangpo (*:ཡར་ཀླུངས་གཙང་པོ་; Wylie:yar kLungs gTsang po) originates upstream from the South Tibet Valley and Yarlung Zangbo Grand Canyon,in Tibet.It then passes through the state of Arunachal Pradesh,India,where it is known as the Dihang.Downstream from Arunachal Pradesh the river becomes wider and at this point is called the Brahmaputra River.It eventually disgorges into the Bay of Bengal.Since the river crosses international boundaries,it has at least three different names in different languages.[1]
Description
The Yarlung Zangbo River is the highest major river in the world.Its longest tributary is the Nyang River.In Tibet the river flows through the South Tibet Valley,which is approximately 1200 kilometres long and 300 kilometres wide.The valley descends from 4500 metres above sea level to 3000 metres.[2][3] As it descends,the surrounding vegetation changes from cold desert to arid steppe to deciduous scrub vegetation.It ultimately transitions into a conifer and rhododendron forest.The tree line is approximately 3,200 metres.[4] Sedimentary sandstone rocks found near the * capital of Lhasa contain grains of magnetic minerals that record the Earth's alternating magnetic field current.[1]
The Yarlung Zangbo Grand Canyon,formed by a horse-shoe bend in the river where it flows around Namcha Barwa,is the deepest,and possibly longest canyon in the world.[5] The river has been a challenge to whitewater kayakers because of the extreme conditions of the river.[6]
The Yarlung Zangbo River has three major waterfalls.[7] The largest waterfall of the river,the "Hidden Falls",was not publicized in the West until 1998,when its sighting by Westerners was briefly hailed as a "discovery."[8] They were even portrayed as the discovery of the great falls which had been the topic of stories told to early Westerners by * hunters and Buddhist monks,but which had never been found by Western explorers at the time.[9] Chinese authorities protested,however,saying that Chinese geographers,who had explored the gorge since 1973,had already taken pictures from the falls in 1987 from a helicopter.[10]