Mount Paektu
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physiography of
- China
- In China: The Changbai Mountains
…is the volcanic cone of Mount Baitou (9,003 feet [2,744 meters]), which has a beautiful crater lake at its snow-covered summit. As one of the major forest areas of China, the region is the source of many valuable furs and famous medicinal herbs. Cultivation is generally limited to the valley…
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- In China: The Changbai Mountains
- North Korea
- In North Korea: Relief
Mount Paektu (9,022 feet [2,750 metres]), the highest mountain in North Korea and on the peninsula, rises at the northern edge of this plateau in the Changbaek (Changbai) Mountains along the Sino-Korean border; it is an extinct volcano topped by a large crater lake. The…
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- In North Korea: Relief
source of
- Tumen River
- In Tumen River
The Tumen originates on Mount Paektu (Chinese: Baitou; 9,022 feet [2,750 metres]), the highest peak of the Changbai (Korean: Chanbaek) Mountains along the China-Korea border. It then flows with its short tributaries through narrow gorges east-northeast to Hoeryŏng, north to Onsŏng, and southeast to the Sea of Japan (East…
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- In Tumen River
- Yalu River
- In Yalu River
…indeterminate depth on top of Mount Baitou (Mount Paektu), on the Chinese–North Korean border, at an elevation of about 9,000 feet (2,700 meters) above sea level. Winding southward as far as Hyesan, North Korea, and then meandering northwestward for some 80 miles (130 km), the river reaches Linjiang, Jilin province,…
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- In Yalu River