Lanzhou
Lanzhou (Traditional Chinese: 蘭州, Simplified Chinese: 兰州, Hanyu Pinyin: LÃÂánzhōu, Wade-Giles: Lan-chou, sometimes seen transliterated as Lanchow) is the capital of the Gansu province in China.
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2 Geography 3 Demographics 4 Economy 5 Transportation 6 Places of interest 7 Culture 8 Colleges and Universities 9 External links |
History
Early settlement in this region could be dated to Han Dynasty, when it was a major stop on the ancient Silk Road. To protect the city, the Great Wall was extended as far as Yumen.
After the fall of the Han Dynasty, Lanzhou became the capital of a succession of tribal states. Mixed with different cultural heritages, the area at present-day Gansu province, from the 5th to the 11th century, became a center for Buddhist study.
Contemporary Lanzhou was founded in 1656 (Qin Dynasty).
Lanzhou is famously one of the most polluted cities in China. The air quality is so poor that at times one cannot see Lanshan, the mountain rising straight up along the south side of the city. The city is located in a river valley with an unfortunate curve causing it to be hemmed in with no free air flow. Lanzhou also is the home of far too many factories including petroleum processing, and suffers from storms of dust kicked up from the Gobi Desert, especially in the winter and spring.
Geography
Climate
The semi-dry climate is in the temperate zone.
The GDP per capita was ÃÂÃÂ¥15051 (ca. US$1820) in 2003, ranked no. 134 among 659 Chinese cities.
Demographics
Economy
Natural resources
Industry
Gansu has one of the largest oil refineries in the country and is the center of China's atomic energy] industry.
Agriculture
Transportation
Lanzhou is a rail, highway, and air hub and the junction point to remote Xinjiang in extreme NW China.
- Airways: The airplane here can take you to more than 20 cities all over the country.
- Railroad: Lanzhou is linked by rail to Beijing and to the Republic of Mongolia and Russia
- Highways: on the highway to Tibet.
- Lan-Xin railway: only railway leading into Xinjiang
[National]
Places of interest
(under construction)
Culture
Colleges and Universities
[Public]
Note: Institutions without full-time bachelor programs are not listed.