✨ Visual Editor

close

Thread Truncated

Only the first 20 tweets are shown to ensure high-quality rendering and prevent image size issues.

palette Canvas & Background

Gradient:arrow_forward
Text Color:
135°

style Card Style

40px
16px

text_fields Typography

16px
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
We discussed India's 1.4B people earlier this week, but China also has 1.4B ppl

Why?
Is it a coincidence these 2 population giants are neighbors?
Why do most of its 1.4B ppl live east of the red line?

It's also due to an accident:
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
Let's zoom in
94% of Chinese live east of the Hu Line!
• In the North China Plain, the red area in the northeast
• The Sichuan Basin, that red circle in the middle
• Small dots along the coast
• The regions between these 3

Why?
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
Let's look at China's topography. Does something pop out?

Ppl are where it's flat
Flat➡️+ppl
Mountains➡️-ppl
Why?

Because of food.
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
Fertile soil = 🌱=🧑‍🤝‍🧑
The more fertile, the more food, the more ppl.

So why are these areas so fertile?
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
Plants grow with 3 ingredients:
1. Water
2. Heat
3. Fertile soil

To have so many ppl, you need all 3 to be perfect. So how does China have these perfect conditions?
1st, water:
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
These are the main rivers of China.
The Yangtze and Yellow rivers are the longest in Asia, and Yangtze's discharge is only 2nd to the Ganges'

Both of them reach the sea through the North China Plain.
The Yangtze also serves the Sichuan Basin.

That makes them hyper fertile!
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
Such huge rivers on flat plains frequently flooded, bringing their sediments (=fertile soils) to the region.
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
Another benefit of flat plains: ppl can +easily build canals for trade & irrigation. The Chinese have been building them for thousands of years!

The Chinese Grand Canal connects the Yellow & Yangtze rivers and was started over 2500y ago!
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
The result is that the North China Plain and the Sichuan basin have flat, well irrigated, well fertilized land—and wherever it's slightly hilly, it has been terraced
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
The Pearl River delta serves Hong Kong, Macao, Shenzhen and Ghuangzhou, which together have a bigger population than Germany
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
And where do these 3 rivers start? In Tibet and the other mountain ranges caused by the collision between the Indo-Australian and Eurasian plates!
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
As we saw in the thread about India, these mountain ranges catch all the rains coming from the monsoon, which become rivers like the Ganges, but also like the Yellow, Yangtze, and Pearl rivers!

Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
But most of the water they catch is not from the Indian monsoon... It's from the Chinese monsoon!

This map shows rains in China. You can see the Hu Line ~between green and yellow!

Why is this the extent that rains reach?
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
Because the moist wind comes from the Pacific & South China Sea, and travels towards Eurasia until it's stopped by mountains.
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
This is the same process as in India. In summer:
• The hot ocean air fills with moisture
• But land air heats faster, so it goes up
• The vacuum is filled with sea air
• Which empties its water on the land
• And mountains condense all remaining water from the wind
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
But the South China Sea and Pacific are farther north than the Indian ocean. How come that air is still warm enough for a monsoon? Because warm sea water comes from the warmer south!
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
And why is that? Because of the rotation of the Earth, causing the winds and ocean gyres
Thread image
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
OK so now we know why China is:
🌡️Hot: It's reasonably south + bathed by warm waters thanks to the Earth's rotation
🌧️Humid: Monsoons come from the warm sea, rain on the east until they reach the mountains, and drop the rest of water, which becomes rivers
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
🌱Fertile soil: The rivers bring sediments and water, good for irrigation
➖Flat, which helps for dropping sediments, easier irrigation, and easier farming

But why is it so flat?
Tomas Pueyo
@tomaspueyo
Part of it is rains and rivers carving the soil and dropping sediments for millions of years.

But part of it is... Tectonic plates!

The Pacific Plate is going below the Eurasian Plate, and as it does, it flattens the surface!
Thread image
Generated by Thread Navigator
100%
view_carousel Carousel Studio NEW
Press + S to quick-export