Gan River

The Gan River (Chinese: 赣江; pinyin: Gàn Jiāng, Gan: Kōm-kong) runs north through the western part of Jiangxi before flowing into Lake Poyang and thus the Yangtze River. The Xiang-Gan uplands separate it from the Xiang River of neighboring eastern Hunan.

Gan River
Gan River and Yuhong Pagoda in Ganzhou
Native name赣江 (Chinese)
Location
CountryPeople's Republic of China
ProvinceJiangxi
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
  location
Lake Poyang
Length599 km (372 mi)
Basin size103,074 km2 (39,797 sq mi)
Discharge 
  average2,865 m3/s (101,200 cu ft/s)
Basin features
Tributaries 
  leftGong River, Zhang River
  rightMei River

Two similarly sized rivers, the Gong River which is the southern tributary and the Mei River from the north combine in Yudu County, Jiangxi, to form the Gan. The Gan River flows 527 km (327 mi) before splitting into distributaries just north of Nanchang. The longest of these, the North Branch, is several times longer than the other distributaries at 72 km (45 mi). The Gan River is the major geographical feature of Jiangxi, and gives its name to the Gan variety of Chinese as well as the province's one-character abbreviation.

The river feeds into Lake Poyang, which in turns connects with the Yangtze.

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