-
Parlung Tsangpo or
Parlung Zangbo (Tibetan: ཕར་ལུང་གཙང་པོ, Wylie: phar lung
gtsang po; Chinese: 帕隆藏布; pinyin: Pàlóng Zàngbù), also
known as Palongzangbu...
-
Pagnag (Pana)
Pagri Painbo Nongchang Paingar Par
Parco Parding Parling Parlung Zangbo Pana
Parta Paryang Pazhug Pêlung Pêxung
Poindo Poinsog Pompain Pongda...
- Basin features
River system Ganges Tributaries • left
Lhasa River,
Nyang River,
Parlung Zangbo, Lohit, Nao Dihing, Buri Dihing, Dangori, Disang, Dikhow, Jhanji...
-
south on its
course towards India. Two
major rivers Yi'ong
Tsangpo and
Parlung Tsangpo flow into the Pome
County from
opposite directions to join near...
- of 3,850
metres (12,630 feet). The lake was
created by a
landslide dam.
Parlung River flows out of the lake. The lake is
within the
historical region of...
-
Yarlung Tsangpo include Nyangchu River,
Lhasa River,
Nyang River, and
Parlung Tsangpo. In
Tibet the
river flows through the
South Tibet Valley, which...
-
Tsangpo River ( ཡར་ཀླུངས་གཙང་པོ་, 雅鲁藏布江)
Subansiri River (西巴霞曲)
Lhasa River Parlung Tsangpo (帕隆藏布)
Yigong Tsangpo (易贡藏布)
Zayuqu (察隅曲) /
Lohit River Nyang River...
- Chinese: 易贡藏布; pinyin: Yìgòng Zàngbù) is a right-bank
tributary of the
Parlung Tsangpo in
eastern Tibet Autonomous Region of China. It
starts in the Nyenchen...
- Tso. The lake's
length is 3.9 km,
maximum width 2.1 km,
average width 1.6 km. It
covers an area of 6.1 km2.
Parlung River flows out of the lake. v t e...
- north, Ling Chu
flows north and east
draning into Salween. To the south,
Parlung Tsangpo flows south and west to
drain into the
Tsangpo River (the Tibetan...