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VIETNAM GEOGRAPHY |
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Location:
Southeastern Asia, bordering the Gulf of Thailand, Gulf of
Tonkin, and South China Sea, alongside China, Laos, and
Cambodia |
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Geographic coordinates:
16 00 N, 106 00 E |
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Map references:
Southeast Asia |
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Area:
total: 329,560 sq km
land: 325,360 sq km
water: 4,200 sq km |
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Area - comparative:
slightly larger than New Mexico |
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Land boundaries:
total: 4,639 km
border countries: Cambodia 1,228 km, China 1,281 km,
Laos 2,130 km |
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Coastline:
3,444 km (excludes islands) |
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Maritime claims - as described in UNCLOS 1982
(see Notes and Definitions):
territorial sea: 12 NM
continental shelf: 200 NM or to the edge of the
continental margin
contiguous zone: 12 NM
exclusive economic zone: 200 NM |
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Climate:
tropical in south; monsoonal in north with hot, rainy season
(mid-May to mid-September) and warm, dry season (mid-October
to mid-March) |
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Terrain:
low, flat delta in south and north; central highlands;
hilly, mountainous in far north and northwest
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Elevation extremes:
lowest point: South China Sea 0 m
highest point: Fan Si Pan 3,144 m |
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Natural resources:
phosphates, coal, manganese, bauxite, chromate, offshore oil
and gas deposits, forests, hydropower |
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Land use:
arable land: 17.41%
permanent crops: 4.71%
other: 77.88% (1998 est.) |
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Irrigated land:
30,000 sq km (1998 est.) |
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Natural hazards:
occasional typhoons (May to January) with extensive
flooding, especially in the Mekong River delta
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Environment - current issues:
logging and slash-and-burn agricultural practices contribute
to deforestation and soil degradation; water pollution and
overfishing threaten marine life populations; groundwater
contamination limits potable water supply; growing urban
industrialization and population migration are rapidly
degrading environment in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City
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Environment -
international agreements:
party to: Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate
Change-Kyoto Protocol, Desertification, Endangered Species,
Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the
Sea, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Wetlands
signed, but not ratified: none of the selected
agreements |
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Geography - note:
extending 1,650 km north to south, the country is only 50 km
across at its narrowest point
Vietnam is located in
the southeastern extremity of the Indochinese peninsula and
occupies about 331,688 square kilometers, of which about 25
percent was under cultivation in 1987. The S-shaped country
has a north-to-south distance of 1,650 kilometers and is
about 50 kilometers wide at the narrowest point. With a
coastline of 3,260 kilometers, excluding islands, Vietnam
claims 12 nautical miles as the limit of its territorial
waters, an additional 12 nautical miles as a contiguous
customs and security zone, and 200 nautical miles as an
exclusive economic zone. |
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The
boundary with Laos, settled, on an ethnic basis, between the
rulers of Vietnam and Laos in the mid-seventeenth century,
was formally defined by a delimitation treaty signed in 1977
and ratified in 1986. The frontier with Cambodia, defined at
the time of French annexation of the western part of the
Mekong River Delta in 1867, remained essentially unchanged,
according to Hanoi, until some unresolved border issues were
finally settled in the 1982-85 period. The land and sea
boundary with China, delineated under the France-China
treaties of 1887 and 1895, is "the frontier line" accepted
by Hanoi that China agreed in 1957- 58 to respect. However,
in February 1979, following China's limited invasion of
Vietnam, Hanoi complained that from 1957 onward China had
provoked numerous border incidents as part of its
anti-Vietnam policy and expansionist designs in Southeast
Asia. Among the territorial infringements cited was the
Chinese occupation in January 1974 of the Paracel Islands,
claimed by both countries in a dispute left unresolved in
the 1980s (see
Foreign Relations , ch. 4). |
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Vietnam
is a country of tropical lowlands, hills, and densely
forested highlands, with level land covering no more than 20
percent of the area. The country is divided into the
highlands and the Red River Delta in the north; and the Giai
Truong Son (Central mountains, or the Chaîne Annamitique,
sometimes referred to simply as the Chaine), the coastal
lowlands, and the Mekong River Delta in the south.
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The Red River Delta,
a flat, triangular region of 3,000 square kilometers, is
smaller but more intensely developed and more densely
populated than the Mekong River Delta. Once an inlet of the
Gulf of Tonkin, it has been filled in by the enormous
alluvial deposits of the rivers, over a period of millennia,
and it advances one hundred meters into the gulf annually.
The ancestral home of the ethnic Vietnamese, the delta
accounted for almost 70 percent of the agriculture and 80
percent of the industry of North Vietnam before 1975.
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The Red
River (Song Hong in Vietnamese), rising in China's Yunnan
Province, is about 1,200 kilometers long. Its two main
tributaries, the Song Lo (also called the Lo River, the
Riviere Claire, or the Clear River) and the Song Da (also
called the Black River or Riviere Noire), contribute to its
high water volume, which averages 500 million cubic meters
per second, but may increase by more than 60 times at the
peak of the rainy season. The entire delta region, backed by
the steep rises of the forested highlands, is no more than
three meters above sea level, and much of it is one meter or
less. The area is subject to frequent flooding; at some
places the high-water mark of floods is fourteen meters
above the surrounding countryside. For centuries flood
control has been an integral part of the delta's culture and
economy. An extensive system of dikes and canals has been
built to contain the Red River and to irrigate the rich
rice-growing delta. Modeled on that of China, this ancient
system has sustained a highly concentrated population and
has made double-cropping wet-rice cultivation possible
throughout about half the region (see
Agriculture , ch. 3;
fig. 10). |
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The
highlands and mountain plateaus in the north and northwest
are inhabited mainly by tribal minority groups. The Giai
Truong Son originates in the Xizang (Tibet) and Yunnan
regions of southwest China and forms Vietnam's border with
Laos and Cambodia. It terminates in the Mekong River Delta
north of Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon). |
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These
central mountains, which have several high plateaus, are
irregular in elevation and form. The northern section is
narrow and very rugged; the country's highest peak, Fan Si
Pan, rises to 3,142 meters in the extreme northwest. The
southern portion has numerous spurs that divide the narrow
coastal strip into a series of compartments. For centuries
these topographical features not only rendered north-south
communication difficult but also formed an effective natural
barrier for the containment of the people living in the
Mekong basin. |
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Within
the southern portion of Vietnam is a plateau known as the
Central Highlands (Tay Nguyen), approximately 51,800 square
kilometers of rugged mountain peaks, extensive forests, and
rich soil. Comprising 5 relatively flat plateaus of basalt
soil spread over the provinces of Dac Lac and Gia Lai-Kon
Tom, the highlands accounts for 16 percent of the country's
arable land and 22 percent of its total forested land (see
fig. 1).
Before 1975 North Vietnam had maintained that the Central
Highlands and the Giai Truong Son were strategic areas of
paramount importance, essential to the domination not only
of South Vietnam but also of the southern part of Indochina.
Since 1975 the highlands have provided an area in which to
relocate people from the densely populated lowlands.
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The
narrow, flat coastal lowlands extend from south of the Red
River Delta to the Mekong River basin. On the landward side,
the Giai Truong Son rises precipitously above the coast, its
spurs jutting into the sea at several places. Generally the
coastal strip is fertile and rice is cultivated intensively.
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The
Mekong, which is 4,220 kilometers long, is one of the 12
great rivers of the world. From its source in the Xizang
plateau, it flows through the Xizang and Yunnan regions of
China, forms the boundary between Laos and Burma as well as
between Laos and Thailand, divides into two branches--the
Song Han Giang and Song Tien Giang--below Phnom Penh, and
continues through Cambodia and the Mekong basin before
draining into the South China Sea through nine mouths or
cuu long (nine dragons). The river is heavily
silted and is navigable by seagoing craft of shallow draft
as far as Kompong Cham in Cambodia. A tributary entering the
river at Phnom Penh drains the Tonle Sap, a shallow fresh-
water lake that acts as a natural reservoir to stabilize the
flow of water through the lower Mekong. When the river is in
flood stage, its silted delta outlets are unable to carry
off the high volume of water. Floodwaters back up into the
Tonle Sap, causing the lake to inundate as much as 10,000
square kilometers. As the flood subsides, the flow of water
reverses and proceeds from the lake to the sea. The effect
is to reduce significantly the danger of devastating floods
in the Mekong delta, where the river floods the surrounding
fields each year to a level of one to two meters.
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The
Mekong delta, covering about 40,000 square kilometers, is a
low-level plain not more than three meters above sea level
at any point and criss-crossed by a maze of canals and
rivers. So much sediment is carried by the Mekong's various
branches and tributaries that the delta advances sixty to
eighty meters into the sea every year. An official
Vietnamese source estimates the amount of sediment deposited
annually to be about 1 billion cubic meters, or nearly 13
times the amount deposited by the Red River. About 10,000
square kilometers of the delta are under rice cultivation,
making the area one of the major rice-growing regions of the
world. The southern tip, known as the Ca Mau Peninsula (Mui
Bai Bung), is covered by dense jungle and mangrove swamps.
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Vietnam
has a tropical monsoon climate, with humidity averaging 84
percent throughout the year. However, because of differences
in latitude and the marked variety of topographical relief,
the climate tends to vary considerably from place to place.
During the winter or dry season, extending roughly from
November to April, the monsoon winds usually blow from the
northeast along the China coast and across the Gulf of
Tonkin, picking up considerable moisture; consequently the
winter season in most parts of the country is dry only by
comparison with the rainy or summer season. During the
southwesterly summer monsoon, occurring from May to October,
the heated air of the Gobi Desert rises, far to the north,
inducing moist air to flow inland from the sea and deposit
heavy rainfall. |
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Annual
rainfall is substantial in all regions and torrential in
some, ranging from 120 centimeters to 300 centimeters.
Nearly 90 percent of the precipitation occurs during the
summer. The average annual temperature is generally higher
in the plains than in the mountains and plateaus.
Temperatures range from a low of 5°C in December and
January, the coolest months, to more than 37°C in April, the
hottest month. Seasonal divisions are more clearly marked in
the northern half than in the southern half of the country,
where, except in some of the highlands, seasonal
temperatures vary only a few degrees, usually in the
21°C-28°C range. |
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