Changja-gang | |
---|---|
Location | |
Location | P'yŏngan-pukto (Nordkorea) |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | am Sobaek-san |
Mouth | |
• location | in den Yalu |
• coordinates | 40°57′56″N 126°03′47″E / 40.965421°N 126.063108°E |
Length | 239 km |
Basin features | |
Progression | Yalu → Gelbes Meer |
River system | Yalu |
The Changja-gang is a river in North Korea. Until 1976, the river was called Tongno-gang 子江)|werk=North Korean Human geography|access=2018-11-28|language=ko}}</ref> He will also Sŏlsŏng-gang (설성강, 雪城江) and Tongrae-gang (동래강, 東來江), rises at Sobaek-san (소백산, 小白山) in the southwest of the Rangrim-san Mountains (랑림산, 狼林山) in the province of P'yŏngan-pukto, is 239 km long, has a catchment area of 207 km² and flows into the Yalu.
The area was the scene of fierce fighting during both the guerrilla war against the Japanese occupation and the Korean War. These events were later processed in numerous books and films, for example “On the Banks of Tongro-gang” (독로강 기슭에서 Tongro-gang kisŭlgesŏ) by Kim Hak-yŏn from the Year 1951.
During the first five-year plan (1957–1961), a hydroelectric power station with a capacity of 90 megawatts was built on Tongro-gang. Construction had already begun in 1937, but the systems were dismantled again in 1943.
In the northern interior of the country there is hardly any land that can be used for agriculture. The Tongro-gang valley is the region's most important growing area. Mainly corn is harvested here.
40°57′56″N 126°03′47″E / 40.96556°N 126.06306°E