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Qianliyan Island: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 36°16′5.17″N 121°23′7.76″E / 36.2681028°N 121.3854889°E / 36.2681028; 121.3854889
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Undid revision 1203314209 by LlywelynII (talk) The subject of an article existing isn't sufficient for notability. Notability needs to be established by RS, and the article doesn't have enough of those. if you think a different tag is appropriate, change the tag, don't erase the previous one.
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{{More citations needed|date=February 2024}}
{{Short description|Chinese island in the Yellow Sea}}
{{Short description|Chinese island in the Yellow Sea}}
{{Infobox islands
{{Infobox islands

Revision as of 17:19, 4 February 2024

Qianliyan Island
Native name:
千里岩
Map
Geography
LocationYellow Sea
Coordinates36°16′5.17″N 121°23′7.76″E / 36.2681028°N 121.3854889°E / 36.2681028; 121.3854889
Area1 km2 (0.39 sq mi)
Highest elevation100 m (300 ft)
Administration
Demographics
Population3
Qianliyan Island
Chinese千里岩
Literal meaningThousand-Li Cliff
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinQiānlǐyán
Wade–GilesCh'ien-li-yen

Qianliyan Island is an island in the Yellow Sea about 80 kilometers (50 mi) east of Qingdao, Shandong, China. The area around the island is nationally protected by the Chinese government as an important spawning ground for local seafood.

Name

Qianliyan is the pinyin romanization of the Chinese name, meaning "thousands of miles of rocks".[1]

Geography

Qianliyan is an isolated island in the Yellow Sea about 80 kilometers (50 mi) east of Qingdao. It is about 1 km2 (0.39 sq mi) in size with a maximum elevation below 100 meters (330 ft). It has few plants and little fresh water.[1] The surrounding waters are protected by the Chinese government as an important spawning ground for local seafood.[2]

Structures

A scientific monitoring station was established in 1960. It is staffed by eight researchers working in rotation in teams of three, even through Chinese holidays. The sea's temperature, salinity, and wave activity is reported to China's State Oceanic Administration on an hourly basis. It is unable to be permanently manned, as after the initial excitement of the posting the researchers find "the overwhelming monotonousness is just suffocating."[1]

Qianliyan Island is also the site of the Qianliyan Lighthouse, constructed in 1979.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Xie (2019).
  2. ^ Shan & al. (2020), Tables 2 & 3.

Bibliography

  • Shan Xiujuan; et al. (2020), Survey Report with Overlays to Analyze Gaps and Conservation Needs of Critical Nursery and Spawning Grounds of Priority Fish Species in the Yellow Sea... (PDF), Incheon: Yellow Sea Large Marine Ecosystem Project.
  • Xie Chuanjiao (1 February 2019), "At Lonely Island Outpost in Yellow Sea, Teams of Experts Monitor Water, Weather", China Daily, Beijing: China Daily Information Company.