the east asian realm

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The East Asian Realm. Mongolia. Sea of Japan. N. Korea. China. S. Korea. Hunan Plateau. Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau. Japan. Coastal Plains. Guangdong Plains. Taiwan. Pacific Ocean. Hong Kong. South China Sea. B. China. Geography A factor of unity as well as diversity. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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0 500 1,000250 Miles

The East Asian Realm

Pacific Ocean

SouthChina Sea

Sea of

Japa

n

China

Japan

Taiwan

Hong Kong

Mongolia

Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau

CoastalPlains

GuangdongPlains

HunanPlateau

S. Korea

N. Korea

China

• Geography– A factor of unity as well as

diversity.– 3rd largest country in the world.– Comparable surface with Europe

and the United States:• U.S.: 3.6 million square miles.• China: 3.7 million square miles.

– It is a lot but not enough.– 65% of the country mountainous.– Arable land represents 12% of the

national territory as opposed to 25% for the United States.

– Per capita (0.086 hectare) is well below the world average.

0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000250Miles

China

United States

BB

China• 1- Huang He (Yellow River).

– Can carry up to 40% sediment weight (highest in the world).

– Subject to flooding, especially in its delta.

– Changed course many times.• 2- Chang Jiang (Yangtze).

– Longest river, China’s main street (6,300 km).

– Flood of 1998 left 14 million homeless.

• 3- Pearl River delta system– Most productive and

sustainable ecosystem in the world.

– Rice paddies and fish ponds.• 4- Heilong Jiang (Amur).

– China's border with Russia.

1

2

3

4

China

• Agricultural diversity– North: continental

climate growing wheat, sorghum and corn.

– South: subtropical climate growing rice.

– A China of the West with pastoralism and oasis agriculture.

Rice Dominant

Wheat DominantPasture andoasis

Double-crop rice

Japan

– Small-sized country; the size of California.– Average-sized population (127 millions).– Very limited array of resources:

• Favored the development of trade.• What Japan does not have on its national territory is obtained

through trade.• Its industrial corporations and its banks are controlling a

significant array of resources.– Domination of the Pacific Asian economy:

• Vast national market.• Productive labor force.• Financial power.• Technological innovator.

Japan• Physical constraints

– Physical geography increases the territorial exiguity.

– 16% of the land is habitable.– Fight against the scarcity of space:

• Long narrow valleys.• Concentration of agricultural

productivity.• Efficient management of existing

agricultural land.– Kanto plain:

• 30.5% of the population.• 8.3% of the surface of Japan.• 50% of the flat territory.

– Most of the Japanese population lives on an area the size of Indiana.

Yamato Plain

Kanto Plain

Nobi Plain

Hokkaido

Honshu

Kyushu

Shikoku

South Korea• Geography

– “The shrimp between the whales”.

– About the size of Indiana.

– Population of 48 million.

– Highly homogenous ethnicity and linguistically (100% Korean).

– Religiously divided between Christianity (49%) and Buddhism (47%).

– 75% urban with 27% of the population living in Seoul (13 million).

– 5 million Koreans live oversea:

• 1 million in the United States.

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Seoul

Taegu

Pusan

Chonju

Taejon

Kwangju

Inch`on

P'yongyang

0 100 200 30050Miles

China

Japan

North Korea

South Korea

Sea of Japan

Demilitarized zone

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Taipei

Fuzhou

Kaoshsiung

T'ainan

T'aichung

0 100 20050 Miles

Formos

a Stra

itC

hung

yang

Ran

ge

TaiwanChina

Taiwan• Geographical Context

– About 150 km (100 miles) from the coast of southeast China.

– About the size of Idaho.– Similar constraints than

neighboring countries:• 60% of the territory is

composed of mountains.• Chungyang Range covers

about 50% the total land area.• 25% usable for agriculture.

– Bulk of the population lives in the western coastal plain.

– Quemoy and Matsu islands:• Used for defensive purposes.

Quemoy

Matsu

Agriculture and GDP Composition by Sector

CHINA:Agriculture: rice, potatoes, sorghum, peanuts, tea, millet, barley, cotton, other fibers, oilseed; pork and other livestock products; fish

GDP composition by sector :l agriculture: 19%l industry: 48%l services: 33% (1994 est.)

JAPAN:Agriculture: rice, sugar, beets, vegetables, fruit; pork, poultry, dairy products, eggs; world's largestfish catch of 10 million metric tons in 1991

GDP composition by sector :l agriculture: 2.1%l industry: 40.2%l services: 57.7% (1994)

NORTH KOREA:Agriculture: rice, corn, potatoes, soybeans, pulses; cattle, pigs, pork, eggs

GDP composition by sector :l agriculture: 25%l industry: 60%l services: 15% (1995 est.)

SOUTH KOREA:Agriculture: rice, root crops, barley, vegetables, fruit; cattle, pigs, chickens, milk, eggs; fish catch of 2.9 million metric tons, seventh largest in world

GDP composition by sector :l agriculture: 8%l industry: 45%l services: 47% (1991 est.)

TAIWAN:Agriculture: rice, wheat, corn, soybeans, vegetables, fruit, tea; pigs, poultry, beef, milk; fish catch increasing, reached 1.4 million metric tons in 1988

GDP composition by sector :l agriculture: 3.6%l industry: 37.3%l services: 59.1% (1994 est.)

North

South

RICE

Terrace Making North and South

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