(1) Geology and climate
China is situated in eastern Asia on the west coast of the Pacific Ocean. China has a varied topography, with highlands in the west and plains in the east. Sprawling over an area of approximately 9.6 million square kilometers, it comprises 6.5 percent of the earth's landmass, making it the largest country in Asia and the third largest in the world. Of its territory, mountainous areas account for about 33 percent, plateaus 26 percent, rolling land 10 percent, basins 19 percent, and plains 12 percent. Its land borders extend to about 200,000 kilometers and it shares frontiers with the following neighbors-the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Russia, Mongolia, Kazakstan, Tadzhikistan, Kirghizstan, Afghnistan, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, Myanmar, Laos and Viet Nam. Its coastline is as long as 180,000 kilometers from the outlet of the Yalu River in the north to the outlet of the Beilun River in the south. The long coast it lashed by the salty waters of Bohai Bay (inland sea), the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea and the South China Sea. China's maritime neighbors are the Republic of Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, and Indonesia. Off the coast are no fewer than 5,000 islands, the biggest being Taiwan Island and the second largest Hainan Island.
With a total length of 6,300 kilometers, the Yangtze is China's longest river and the third longest in the world. The Yellow River, with a total length of 5,464 kilometers, is the country's second longest river. Other major rivers are the Heilongjiang River, the Haihe River, the Huaihe River, the Qiantangjiang River and the Pearl River, etc.. Lakes in China cover a total area of 80,000 square kilometers. The major fresh-water lakes are the Poyang Lake, the Dongting Lake, the Taihu Lake and the Hongzehu Lake. Major salt-water lakes include the Qinghai Lake, the Namu Lake, the Qilin Lake and the Luobupo Lake.
The Himalayan is the biggest and highest mountain range in the world, on the eastern section of which looms the 8,848.13-meter high Mount Qomolangma (Everest), the world's loftiest peak rising between China and Nepal. Other major mountainous ranges in China include: the Tianshan, the Kunlun, the Karakorum, the Hengduan, the Qilian, the Gangdise, the Yinshan, the Qinling, the Greater Xing'anling, the Changbai, the Nanling and the Taiwan. The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, the Yuanan-Guizhou Plateau, the Loess Plateau and the Inner Mongolia Plateau are the four major plateaus in China. The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau with an altitude of over 4,000 meters which is known as the 'Roof of the World', is the highest plateau in the world. The Northeast China Plain, the North China Plain and the Yangtze River Plain are China's three major plains.
Because of the immense size of the country, the climate varies very much in different parts of China, ranging from tropical, subtropical, warm-temperate, temperate to cool- temperate in character. A great part of China, however, lies within subtropical and temperate climatic zones and has a monsoon climate. The northern part of the northern Heilongjiang Province, for instance, has no summer while inhabitants in southern Hainan Island never experience winter condition. Every winter from October to March, frigid winds sweep across China. As a result, winters in China are cold and dry. Between April and September, rainfall, high temperature and winds dominate. The rainfall in different parts of China also varies a great deal. The rainfall in different parts of China also varies a great deal. The annual precipitation on the southeastern seaboard is 1,500 millimeters. And it is below 500kmillimeters in northwestern China.
(2) Administrative division system
China's administrative units are currently based on a three level system dividing the nation into provinces, counties and townships as follows:
The country is divided into provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government;
A province or an autonomous region is divided into autonomous prefectures, autonomous counties, and/or cities;
A county or an autonomous county is divided into townships, national minority townships, and/or towns.
Municipalities directly under the Central Government and other large cities are divided into districts and counties. Autonomous prefectures are dividing into counties, autonomous regions, autonomous prefectures, and autonomous counties are national autonomous areas.
The Constitution of the People's Republic of China specifically empowers the State to establish special administrative regions when necessary. A special administrative region is a local administrative area directly under the Central Government.
At the end of 1999, China was divided into 23 provinces, 5 autonomous regions, 4 municipalities directly under the Central Government, and 2 special administrative regions (see the following table).
China's Provinces, Autonomous Regions, Centrally Administered Municipalities and Special Administrative Regions
Name Capital Area (10,000 sq. km.)
Name
Capital
Area(10,000 sq. km)
Beijing Municipality
Beijing
1.68
Tianjin Municipality
Tianjin
1.13
Hebei Province
Shijiazhuang
19.00
Shanxi Province
Taiyuan
15.6
Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region
Hohhot
118.30
Liaoning Province
Shenyang
14.57
Jilin Province
Changchun
18.70
Heilongjiang Province
Harbin
46.90
Shanghai Municipality
Shanghai
0.62
Jiangsu Province
Nanjing
10.26
Zhejiang Province
Hangzhou
10.18
Anhui Province
Hefei
13.90
Fujian Province
Fuzhou
12.00
Jiangxi Province
Nanchang
16.66
Shandong Province
Ji'nan
15.30
Henan Province
Zhengzhou
16.70
Hubei Province
Wuhan
18.74
Hunan Province
Changsha
21.00
Guangdong Province
Guangzhou
18.60
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region
Nanning
23.63
Hainan Province
Haikou
3.40
Chongqing Municipality
Chongqing
8.20
Sichuan Province
Chengdu
48.80
Guizhou Province
Guiyang
17.00
Yunnan Province
Kunming
39.40
Tibet Autonomous Region
Lhasa
122.00
Shaanxi Province
Xi'an
20.50
Gansu Province
Lanzhou
45.00
Qinghai Province
Xi'ning
72.00
Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region
Yinchuan
6.64
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
Urunqi
160.00
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
Hong Kong
0.1092
Macao Special Administrative Region
Macao
0.00236
Taiwan Province
Taipei
3.60
(3) Chinese timetable
Starting from March 1.1994, Chinese, began to work 40 hours or five days a week. To make the best use of electrical power applies, which are running short in many cities, employees of
many enterprises have to work on Saturdays and Sundays while having weekdays off in lieu.
Office hours are usually between 8:00-12:00 in the morning and 2:00-6:00 in the afternoon. In Beijing, the working hours are 1:00-5:00 in the afternoon. There may also be local changes for winter and summer seasons elsewhere.
(4) Chinese traditional festivals, public holidays and vacations
China is a country with many nationalities. Each nationality has its own customs and traditional festivals and each festival usually has fascinating legends associated with it.
Chun Jie (The Spring Festival)
The Spring Festival, or Chinese New Year, is the most important festival in China, and its celebration dates back to some two thousand years ago. It marks the beginning of the lunar year, and is the time when families get together and are reunited if they have been separated. The date of the festival varies each year, but is usually in late January or early February according to the Gregorian calendar. On Lunar New Year’s eve, the sound of firecrackers can be heard throughout the night, signifying “doing away with the old and making way for the new”. The practice of letting off firecrackers, however, is on the decline because many cities have banned their use to prevent fires and accidents caused by the paper bombs. It is an old custom for people to stay up late or all night on New Year’s Eve. In cities, most people stay up late watching TV, playing cards, dancing or preparing food for the next day.
Yuan Xiao Jie (The Lantern Festival)
The lantern Festival falls 15days after the Lunar New Year. It is a tradition to hang decorative lanterns in public places and eat “Yuan Xiao”, a kind of glutinous rice flour ball with a sweet or savory filling.”
Qing Ming jie (The pure Brightness Festival)
The pure Brightness Festival, is the fifth of the 24 solar terms according to the traditional Chinese calendar, which are defined according to the position of the sun in the zodiac. The festival takes place on the fourth or fifth day of the fourth month of the Gregorian calendar, and on this day people usually go to tidy or “sweep” the graves of their departed friends and relatives, and of revolutionary martyrs.
Duan Wu Jie (the Dragon Boat festival)
The Dragon Boat Festival falls on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month. It originates as a means to propitiate the river dragon gods into a popular festival commemorating the suicide of Qu Yuan, a poet of the Warring States Period (475-221BC) who could no longer bear the moral degeneration of his state. On the fifth day of the fifth month in the Lunar calendar dragon boat races are held in commemoration of those who tried to save the poet and as an offering to the river gods. Dragon boat racing has now become a popular sport in China.
Zhong Qiu jie (the Mid-Autumn Festival)
The Mid-Autumn Festival is held on the 15th day of the eighth Lunar month, the middle of autumn in the traditional Chinese calendar. It takes place at harvest time on the night of the full moon, which symbolized unity. Moon cakes are eaten on this auspicious day. These are round cakes filed with dried fruits, and are symbolic of the perfect roundness of the moon at the time of the festival.
Chong Yang Jie (Double Nine Festival)
Double Nine Festival is a traditional Chinese festival on the 9th day of the 9th month of the Chinese Lunar calendar. In the “Books of Changes”, nine (9) is defined as a positive figure (“Yang”), and
“Chong” in Chinese means “double”, so it is called “Double-Nine Day”. On the day people go outing, climbing, kite-flying, drink wine (chrysanthemum wine) and eat cakes. The day has been appointed as “longevity” in Chinese, so on the day when they celebrate the festival people do things to show respect and wishes of longevity to their elderly.
Other festivals
Water Splashing Festival is New Year’s Day of the Dai and some other minority nationalities residing on Hainan Island, which falls on the 15th day of the 6th month of the Dai calendar usually on a mid-April day. Early in the morning during the festival, female villagers would gather to pour water over Buddhist sculptures “to wash the dust off”. After that, villagers, especially boys and girls, would sprinkle water on each other, believing that diseases and germs can thus be eliminated.
Christmas and Easter for Chinese Christians, and Corban and Ramadan for Muslims are also observed among some people in some places.
Public holidays
New Year’s Day (one day off);
Spring Festival (three days off);
Labor Day (May 1, three days off);
The National Day (October 1, three days off)
Foreign experts are entitled to the above holidays and many activities are arranged both locally and nationally to which experts will be invited. In addition, experts are entitled to holidays on occasions of important festivals in their own countries, such as Christmas, water-splashing festival, Corban, etc… Work schedules must be arranged to fit in with such holidays, as the Chinese do not normally celebrate them.
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