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Panjin
Panjin () is a coastal prefecture-level city in central Liaoning province, People's Republic of China, situated on the northern shore of the Liaodong Bay. It borders Anshan to the east, Yingkou to the southeast, and Jinzhou to the west and north. It is the smallest city in both Liaoning and the entire Northeast China with an administrative area of , and Liaoning's least populous city with a population of 1,389,691 people as of the 2020 census, all in the built-up (or metro) area made of the 2 urban districts and Dawa and Panshan counties now largely being conurbated. Administration Panjin has administrative jurisdiction over 3 districts and 1 county. Panjin was established as a prefecture-level city with its current boundaries by the State Council on June 5, 1984. Geography Panjin is located between 40°40'−41°27' N and 121°31'−122°28' E, with its urban section mainly on the historical Liao River Delta. The Shuangtaizi River (which gives name to the city's Sh ...
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Xinglongtai District
Xinglongtai District () is a district under the administration of the city of Panjin, Liaoning province, People's Republic of China. It has a total area of with many small exclaves in other districts, and a population of approximately 370,000 people. The district's postal code is 124010, and the district government is located on Shiyou Street. Administrative divisions Xinglongtai District administers 18 subdistricts: * Zhenxing Subdistrict (), Xinglong Subdistrict (), Bohai Subdistrict (), Xingong Subdistrict Xingong may refer to: * Xin Gong station (新宫), Beijing Subway, China * Xingong Subdistrict (新工), in Xinglongtai District, Panjin Panjin () is a coastal prefecture-level city in central Liaoning province, People's Republic of China, si ... (), Yulou Subdistrict (), Gaosheng Subdistrict (), Shuguang Subdistrict (), Youyi Subdistrict (), Hongcun Subdistrict (), Ping'an Subdistrict (), Xinsheng Subdistrict (), Huanxi Subdistrict (), Shencai Subdistric ...
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Shuangtaizi District
Shuangtaizi District () is an urban district under the administration of the prefectural city of Panjin in Liaoning province, People's Republic of China. The district's name came from the Shuangtaizi River, the old name (until 2011) of the modern-day lower Liao River, which flows through the southern edge of the district. It has a total area of , and a population of approximately 200,000 people. The district's postal code is 124000, and the district government is located at 32 Shengli Street. Administrative divisions Shuangtaizi District administers nine subdistricts: * Dongfeng Subdistrict (), Shengli Subdistrict The Shengli Oil Field () is the second-largest oil field in the People's Republic of China, with daily production of approximately . It is located in the Yellow River delta, in the north of Shandong province bordering Bohai Sea. Its main workin ... (), Liaohe Subdistrict (), Hongqi Subdistrict (), Jianshe Subdistrict (), Shiyou Subdistrict (), Huagong Sub ...
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Liaoning
Liaoning () is a coastal province in Northeast China that is the smallest, southernmost, and most populous province in the region. With its capital at Shenyang, it is located on the northern shore of the Yellow Sea, and is the northernmost coastal province of the People's Republic of China. Historically a gateway between China proper and Manchuria, the modern Liaoning province was established in 1907 as Fengtian or Fengtien province and was renamed Liaoning in 1929. It was also known at that time as Mukden Province for the Manchu name of ''Shengjing'', the former name of Shenyang. Under the Japanese-puppet Manchukuo regime, the province reverted to its 1907 name, but the name Liaoning was restored for a brief time in 1945 and then again in 1954. Liaoning borders the Yellow Sea (Korea Bay) and Bohai Sea in the south, North Korea's North Pyongan and Chagang provinces in the southeast, Jilin to the northeast, Hebei to the southwest, and Inner Mongolia to the northw ...
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Liaoning Province
Liaoning () is a coastal province in Northeast China that is the smallest, southernmost, and most populous province in the region. With its capital at Shenyang, it is located on the northern shore of the Yellow Sea, and is the northernmost coastal province of the People's Republic of China. Historically a gateway between China proper and Manchuria, the modern Liaoning province was established in 1907 as Fengtian or Fengtien province and was renamed Liaoning in 1929. It was also known at that time as Mukden Province for the Manchu name of ''Shengjing'', the former name of Shenyang. Under the Japanese-puppet Manchukuo regime, the province reverted to its 1907 name, but the name Liaoning was restored for a brief time in 1945 and then again in 1954. Liaoning borders the Yellow Sea ( Korea Bay) and Bohai Sea in the south, North Korea's North Pyongan and Chagang provinces in the southeast, Jilin to the northeast, Hebei to the southwest, and Inner Mongolia to the northwest. The ...
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Dawa District
Dawa District () is a district of the city of Panjin, in central Liaoning province of Northeast China. The district has a land area of and a population of 390,000. The postal code is 124200. The district seat is located in Zhanqian Community in Dawa Town. The district was known as Dawa County () until 2016, when it was converted to a district. Administrative divisions Dawa consists of six subdistricts and 10 towns. *Subdistricts: Rongbin Subdistrict (), Erjiegou Subdistrict (), Rongxing Subdistrict (), Dawa Subdistrict (), Tianjia Subdistrict (), Yushu Subdistrict (), Xianghai Subdistrict (), Qianjin Subdistrict () *Towns: Tianzhuangtai (Tienchwangtai) (), Dongfeng (), Xinkai (), Qingshui (), Xinxing (), Xi'an (), Xinli (), Tangjia (), Ping'an Township Ping'an ( zh, c=, l=peace, tranquility) may refer to: Places *Ping'an Avenue (), major through route in Beijing, China *Ping'an County (), in Qinghai Province, China *Ping'an Township (), name of several towns in Chin ...
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Panshan County
Panshan County () is a county in the central part of Liaoning province, China. It is under the administration of the prefecture-level city of Panjin and occupies its northern third. The county has a total area of , and a population of approximately people. The county's postal code is 124000, and the county government is located in Shuangtaizi District. Administrative divisions Panshan County administers nine towns and five rural townships. Towns: *Taiping (), Hujia (), Gaosheng (), Guchengzi (), Shaling (), Baqiangzi (), Yangjuanzi (), Dongguo (), Shixin (), Wujia () Townships: * Lujia Township (), Tianshui Township (), Dahuang Township (), Chenjia Township Chenjia ( Chinese:  t , s , p ''Chénjiā'',  "ome ofthe Chen family") may refer to the following places in China: Towns The following towns may also be known as Chenjiazhen ( t , s , p ''Chénjiā Zhèn ... () Climate References External links County-level d ...
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Daliao River
The Daliao River ( zh, s=大辽河, t=大遼河, p=Dàliáohé, "Great Liao River") is a major river system in eastern Liaoning province of Northeast China, and formerly the main distributary of the lower Liao River until 1958. The Daliao River ''proper'' is formed from the confluence of three rivers at the border between Anshan's Haicheng city and Panjin's Panshan County, after where it runs a length of covering a catchment area of , before coursing meandrously southwest and draining into the Liaodong Bay just west of Yingkou. The principal river of southern Northeast China, the Liao River, historically bifurcates into two distributaries near the Liujianfang Hydrological Station (六间房水文站) at Xinkaihe Town (新开河镇) of Anshan's Tai'an County, forming the Liao River Delta. The eastern distributary, called the Wailiao River, was originally the larger one and the main body of lower Liao River. It travelled southwards to pick up two large tributaries the H ...
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Liao River
The Liao River () is the principal river in southern Northeast China, and one of the seven main river systems in China. Its name derived from the Liao region, a historical name for southern Manchuria, from which the Liaoning province, Liaodong Peninsula and Liao dynasty also all have derived their names. The river is also popularly known as the "mother river" in Northeast China. Coursing long, the Liao River system drains a catchment basin of over , but its mean discharge is quite small at only about , about one-twentieth that of the Pearl River. The Liao River has an exceedingly high sediment load because many parts of it flow through powdery loess. The Liao River is also an important geographical landmark, as it divides the modern Liaoning province into two broad regions — Liaodong ("east of Liao River") and Liaoxi ("west of Liao River"). Course The Liao River is formed from the confluence of its two main tributaries, the Xiliao River from the west, and Dongliao Ri ...
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Liaohe Oil Field
The Liaohe oil field is an oil field located in Liaoning Province (Bohai Bohai may refer to: * Bohai Sea, or Bo Hai, the innermost gulf of the Yellow Sea * Balhae, known as Bohai in Chinese, a former mixed Mohe-Goguryeo empire which existed from 698 to 926 in Manchuria Locations or areas in China * Bohai Bay, one of t ... Basin), China. It was discovered in 1958 and developed by China National Petroleum Corporation. It began production in 1970 and produces oil. The total proven reserves of the Liaohe oil field are around 6.87 billion barrels (968×106 tonnes), and production is centered on . Production peaked in 1995. References Oil fields in China Geology of Liaoning Geography of Liaoning {{PRChina-geo-stub ...
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Yingkou
Yingkou () is a coastal prefecture-level city of central southern Liaoning province, People's Republic of China, on the northeastern shore of Liaodong Bay. It is the third-smallest city in Liaoning with a total area of , and the ninth most populous with a population of 2,328,582 as of the 2020 census, of whom 1,228,198 lived in the built-up (or metro) area made of three urban districts ( Zhanqian, Xishi and Laobian) and one county-level city (Dashiqiao). It borders the sub-provincial city of Dalian to the south, the prefectural cities of Anshan to the north and east and Panjin to the northwest, and also shares maritime boundaries with Jinzhou and Huludao across the Liaodong Bay to its west. Located on the east bank of the Daliao River mouth, Yingkou is an important port city, with the Port of Yingkou being the second-largest container port in the Bohai Sea (after the Port of Tianjin) and Northeast China (after the Port of Dalian), the tenth-largest nationwide, and the ...
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District (China)
The term ''district'', in the context of China, is used to refer to several unrelated political divisions in both ancient and modern China. In the modern context, district (), formally city-governed district, city-controlled district, or municipal district (), are subdivisions of a municipality or a prefecture-level city. The rank of a district derives from the rank of its city. Districts of a municipality are prefecture-level; districts of a sub-provincial city are sub-prefecture-level; and districts of a prefecture-level city are county-level. The term was also formerly used to refer to obsolete county-controlled districts (also known as district public office). However, if the word ''district'' is encountered in the context of ancient Chinese history, then it is a translation for '' xian'', another type of administrative division in China. Before the 1980s, cities in China were administrative divisions containing mostly urban, built-up areas, with very little farmla ...
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Jinzhou
Jinzhou (, ), formerly Chinchow, is a coastal prefecture-level city in central-west Liaoning province, China. It is a geographically strategic city located in the Liaoxi Corridor, which connects most of the land transports between North China and Northeast China, and is the economic center of western Liaoning. Located on the northern shore of Liaodong Bay, Jinzhou encompasses a coastline of , with the Port of Jinzhou being China's northernmost seaport. It is the fifth-most populous city in Liaoning, with a population of 2,703,853 (2020 census), of whom 1,524,362 reside in the built-up (or metro) area encompassing the 3 urban urban districts and Linghai City largely being conurbated. The total area under the jurisdiction of Jinzhou is , most of which is rural. History Jinzhou is an ancient city with over a thousand years of history. Originally known as Tuhe (), it was part of Yan in the Warring States period. Under the Qin dynasty, the majority of what is now Jinzhou b ...
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