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Lhünzhub County

Lhünzhub County is a county in Lhasa towards the north-east of the main center of Chengguan, Tibet, China. It covers an area of 4,512 km2 (1,742 sq mi) and as of 2000 had a population of 50,895 people, almost all classified as rural. The southern portion, the Pengbo River Valley, contains fertile arable land, while the colder and more mountainous northern portion primarily supports grazing. The county has many monasteries, including the Reting Monastery.

Lhünzhub
林周县ལྷུན་གྲུབ་རྫོང་།
Lhundrub, Linzhou
Typical scenery of the Nyainqentanglha Mountains
Location of Lhünzhub County within the Tibet Autonomous Region
Lhünzhub
Location in Tibet Autonomous Region
Lhünzhub
Lhünzhub (China)
Coordinates (Lhünzhub government): 29°53′38″N 91°15′54″E / 29.894°N 91.265°E / 29.894; 91.265
CountryChina
Autonomous regionTibet
Prefecture-level cityLhasa
County seatGanden Chökhor (Lhünzhub)
Area
 • Total4,512 km2 (1,742 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)[1]
 • Total50,596
 • Density11/km2 (29/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)
Websitewww.linzhouxian.gov.cn
Lhünzhub County
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese林周县
Traditional Chinese林周縣
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinLínzhōu Xiàn
Tibetan name
Tibetanལྷུན་གྲུབ་རྫོང་།
Transcriptions
Wylielhun grub rdzong
Tibetan PinyinLhünzhub Zong

The county was established as Lhünzhub Dzong in 1857. In 1959, it merged with Pundo Dzong to form the modern Lhünzhub County.

Geography and climate edit

Lhünzhub County is located in central Tibet around 65 km (40 mi) northeast of metropolitan Lhasa. It includes the Pengbo River Valley and the upper reaches of the Lhasa River. It covers an area of 4,512 km2 (1,742 sq mi).[2] The county is geologically complex, with an average elevation of 4,000 metres (13,000 ft). Mineral resources include lead, zinc, copper, silver, gold and gypsum. A spur of the Nyainqêntanglha mountains crosses the whole territory, dividing it into a southern and northern part.[2]

In the south the Pengbo valley has an average elevation of 3,680 metres (12,070 ft) with a mild climate. The average temperature is 5.8 °C (42.4 °F).[2] The northern "three rivers" section, crossed by the Lhasa River and its tributary the Razheng River, is mountainous and has an average elevation of 4,200 metres (13,800 ft). It has average annual temperature of 2.9 °C (37.2 °F) and is mostly pastoral, with yak, sheep and goats. Wildlife includes roe deer, white-lipped deer, otter, black-necked crane, duck, Mongolian gazelle, ibex. Medicinal plants and fungi include Cordyceps, Fritillaria, Rhodiola, and Ganoderma lucidum.[2]

Administration divisions edit

Lhünzhub County has jurisdiction over one town and 9 townships.[3]

Name Tibetan Tibetan Pinyin Chinese Pinyin
Town
Ganden Chökhor Town
(Lhünzhub)
དགའ་ལྡན་ཆོས་འཁོར། Gadainqoikor Chongdai 甘丹曲果镇 Gāndānqūguǒ Zhèn
Townships
Codoi Township མཚོ་སྟོད་ཤང་། Codoi Xang 春堆乡 Chūnduī Xiāng
Sumchêng Township གསུམ་འཕྲེང་ཤང་། Sumchêng Xang 松盘乡 Sōngpán Xiāng
Qangka Township བྱང་ཁ་ཤང་། Qangga Xang 强嘎乡 Qiánggā Xiāng
Karze Township མཁར་རྩེ་ཤང་། Karzê Xang 卡孜乡 Kǎzī Xiāng
Banjorling Township དཔལ་འབྱོར་གླིང་ཤང་། Baijorling Xang 边交林乡 Biānjiāolín Xiāng
Jangraxa Township ལྕང་ར་ཤར་ཤང་། Jangraxar Xang 江热夏乡 Jiāngrèxià Xiāng
Ngarnang Township ངར་ནང་ཤང་། Ngarnang Xang 阿朗乡 Ālǎng Xiāng
Tanggo Township ཐང་མགོ་ཤང་། Tanggo Xang 唐古乡 Tánggǔ Xiāng
Pundo Township ཕུ་མདོ་ཤང་། Pudo Xang 旁多乡 Pángduō Xiāng

Other settlements edit

Economy edit

 
Landscape near Reting monastery

As of 2000 the county had a total population of 50,895, of which 8,111 lived in a community designated as urban. 2,254 had non-agricultural registration and 48,362 had agricultural registration.[4] The Pengbo valley is the main grain-producing region of Lhasa Municipality and Tibet, with a total of 11,931 hectares (29,480 acres) of arable land.[5] Crops include barley, winter wheat, spring wheat, canola and vegetables such as potato.[6] The total output in 1999 was 57,600 tons of grain.[5]

Livestock includes yak, sheep, goats and horses.[2] Yaks graze at altitudes of 4,300 metres (14,100 ft) or more - higher than is practical with cattle.[7] Crop residues are used for winter and spring feed. In 1996 more than 85% of winter and spring feed was straw, mostly barley straw.[8] Linzhou county has been a leading testing and manufacturing center for frozen yak semen, and a center for selective breeding of yaks.[9] Local enterprises prepare Tibetan medicinal plants and process wood products. Ethnic handicrafts are well developed, including weaving and mats. The Pengbo valley has a long history of pottery-making. Products include braziers, flower pots, vases, jugs and so on.[5]

In 2010 the county had a GDP of 839 million yuan, and government revenue was 26.9 million yuan. Investment in fixed assets was 450 million yuan, excluding water conservancy. The per capita income of farmers and herdsmen was 4,587 yuan.[a] Mining was an important source of income,[b] and the government had plans to more actively promote tourism.[12]

Infrastructure edit

 
Hydrology

Hutoushan Reservoir lies in Qangka Township. The reservoir is bordered by large swamps and wet meadows, and has abundant plants and shellfish.[13] The Hutuoshan Reservoir in the Pengbo valley is the largest in Tibet, with planned total storage of 12,000,000 cubic metres (420,000,000 cu ft).[14] Endangered Black-necked cranes migrate to the middle and southern part of Tibet every winter, and may be seen on the reservoir.[15]

There is a small hydropower station in Lhünzhub town.[16] The Pangduo Hydro Power Station became operational in 2014.It impounds the Lhasa River in Pondo Township, about 63 kilometres (39 mi) from Lhasa.[17] The reservoir holds 1,170,000,000 cubic metres (4.1×1010 cu ft) of water.[18] The power station has total installed capacity of 160 MW, with four generating units.[19] It has been called the "Tibetan Three Gorges".[20]

The county has three major highways with total length of 160 kilometres (99 mi) and twelve rural roads, bringing the total road length to over 260 kilometres (160 mi).[5] The county has a radio and television station. TV coverage is received by 72.1% of the population, and radio by 83.4% of the population. The county has 23 health care establishments, including a County People's Hospital with 30 beds. By the end of 2000 there were 122 medical personnel.[5]

Religion edit

 
Reting Monastery

The county is a center of Tibetan Buddhism. There are thirty-seven gompas including twenty-five lamaseries with 919 monks and twelve nunneries with 844 nuns as of 2011. The breakdown by sect is twenty-six Gelug, six Kagyu and five Sakya.[5]

Reting Monastery is located in Lhünzhub County and was built in 1056 by Dromtön (1005–1064), a student of Atiśa. It was the earliest monastery of the Gedain sect, and the patriarchal seat of that sect.[21] In 1240 a Mongol force sacked the monastery and killed 500 people. The gompa was rebuilt. [22] When the Gedain sect joined the Gelug sect in the 16th century the monastery adopted the reincarnation system.[21] The incarnations are named Reting Rimpoche.[23] Following an attempted rebellion against the Lhasa government in 1947 Reting was imprisoned in the Potala. After he died in May 1947 the monastery was looted and then razed.[24] In recent years a lot of reconstruction work has been done. About 160 monks reside in Reting.

References edit

  1. ^ A per capita income of 4,587 yuan converts to US$688 at an exchange rate of 0.15 dollars per yuan.[10]
  2. ^ Radio Free Asia reported in 2013 that a Tibetan source had said that since 2005 waste from a mine near Dun village in Kazi Township had been dumped in the local river and pollution of the air had stunted the growth of grass. The source said the miners were almost all Han Chinese.[11]
  1. ^ "关于发布拉萨市第七次全国人口普查主要数据公报" (in Chinese). Government of Lhasa. 2021-06-10.
  2. ^ a b c d e Linzhou County Profile, LSIIB.
  3. ^ 2022年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码 (in Chinese). National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China.
  4. ^ Yeh & Henderson 2008, pp. 21–25.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Linzhou, TibetOL.
  6. ^ Linzhou Industry News, LSIIB.
  7. ^ Suttie 2003, p. 10.
  8. ^ Suttie 2003, p. 169.
  9. ^ Bisht 2008, p. 216.
  10. ^ XE Currency Table: CNY - Chinese Yuan Renminbi.
  11. ^ More Than 80 Trapped in Tibet Gold Mine, RFA.
  12. ^ Government Work Report 2011.
  13. ^ Lhasa, Tibet Linzhou Hutoushan reservoir is a paradise...
  14. ^ Shen 1995, p. 153.
  15. ^ Lin 2013.
  16. ^ Daily Report: People's Republic of China. National Technical Information Service. 1994. p. 53. Retrieved 2024-03-14.
  17. ^ 'Tibet's Three Gorges Dam' starts operation.
  18. ^ Guan 2013.
  19. ^ Qin 2013.
  20. ^ a b Ling 2005, p. 73.
  21. ^ McCue 2010, p. 126.
  22. ^ Goldstein 1991, p. 187.
  23. ^ Kapstein 2013, p. 232.

Sources edit

  • Bisht, Ramesh Chandra (2008-01-01). International Encyclopaedia Of Himalayas (5 Vols. Set). Mittal Publications. ISBN 978-81-8324-265-3. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • Goldstein, Melvyn C. (1991-05-19). A History of Modern Tibet, 1913-1951: The Demise of the Lamaist State. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-91176-5. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • . Linzhou People's Government Office. 2011-03-21. Archived from the original on 2015-02-15. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • Guan, Steve (2013-12-12). "Tibet commences new hydropower plant". China Coal Resource. Retrieved 2015-02-06.
  • Kapstein, Matthew T. (2013-06-05). The Tibetans. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-72537-5. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • "Lhasa, Tibet Linzhou Hutoushan reservoir is a paradise for photographers". Tibet Travel Web (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved 2015-02-13.
  • Lin, Karen (2013-12-12). "Black-Necked Cranes Flocking Back to Tibet". China Tibet Online. Retrieved 2015-02-13.
  • Ling, Haicheng (2005). Buddhism in China. 五洲传播出版社. ISBN 978-7-5085-0840-5. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • . Lhasa Municipal Bureau of Industry and Information. 2011-06-22. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  • . Lhasa Municipal Bureau of Industry and Information. 2011-06-22. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • "Linzhou". TibetOL. China Intercontinental Communication Center. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • McCue, Gary (2010). Trekking in Tibet: A Traveler's Guide. The Mountaineers Books. ISBN 978-1-59485-411-8. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • "More Than 80 Trapped in Tibet Gold Mine Landslide". Radio Free Asia. 2013-03-29. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • Qin, Julia (2013-05-10). . China Tibet Online. Archived from the original on 2015-02-05. Retrieved 2015-02-05.
  • Shen, Dajun (July 1995). (PDF). Modelling and Management of Sustainable Basin-scale Water Resource Systems (Proceedings of a Boulder Symposium. IAHS. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-02-13. Retrieved 2015-02-13.
  • Suttie, J. M. (2003). Transhumant Grazing Systems in Temperate Asia. Food & Agriculture Org. ISBN 978-92-5-104977-8. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  • "Tibet's biggest water-related project launched". China Tibet Online. 2009-08-06. Retrieved 2015-02-05.
  • . China Daily. 2013-12-11. Archived from the original on 2015-02-06. Retrieved 2015-02-05.
  • "XE Currency Table: CNY - Chinese Yuan Renminbi". XE. Retrieved 2015-02-16.
  • Yeh, Emily T.; Henderson, Mark (December 2008). "Interpreting Urbanization in Tibet". Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies. 4. Retrieved 2015-02-12.

External links edit

  • Lhünzhub County Annals

lhünzhub, county, county, lhasa, towards, north, east, main, center, chengguan, tibet, china, covers, area, 2000, population, people, almost, classified, rural, southern, portion, pengbo, river, valley, contains, fertile, arable, land, while, colder, more, mou. Lhunzhub County is a county in Lhasa towards the north east of the main center of Chengguan Tibet China It covers an area of 4 512 km2 1 742 sq mi and as of 2000 had a population of 50 895 people almost all classified as rural The southern portion the Pengbo River Valley contains fertile arable land while the colder and more mountainous northern portion primarily supports grazing The county has many monasteries including the Reting Monastery Lhunzhub 林周县 ལ ན ག བ ར ང Lhundrub LinzhouCountyTypical scenery of the Nyainqentanglha MountainsLocation of Lhunzhub County within the Tibet Autonomous RegionLhunzhubLocation in Tibet Autonomous RegionShow map of TibetLhunzhubLhunzhub China Show map of ChinaCoordinates Lhunzhub government 29 53 38 N 91 15 54 E 29 894 N 91 265 E 29 894 91 265CountryChinaAutonomous regionTibetPrefecture level cityLhasaCounty seatGanden Chokhor Lhunzhub Area Total4 512 km2 1 742 sq mi Population 2020 1 Total50 596 Density11 km2 29 sq mi Time zoneUTC 8 China Standard Websitewww wbr linzhouxian wbr gov wbr cnLhunzhub CountyChinese nameSimplified Chinese林周县Traditional Chinese林周縣TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinLinzhōu XianTibetan nameTibetanལ ན ག བ ར ང TranscriptionsWylielhun grub rdzongTibetan PinyinLhunzhub ZongThe county was established as Lhunzhub Dzong in 1857 In 1959 it merged with Pundo Dzong to form the modern Lhunzhub County Contents 1 Geography and climate 2 Administration divisions 2 1 Other settlements 3 Economy 4 Infrastructure 5 Religion 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksGeography and climate editLhunzhub County is located in central Tibet around 65 km 40 mi northeast of metropolitan Lhasa It includes the Pengbo River Valley and the upper reaches of the Lhasa River It covers an area of 4 512 km2 1 742 sq mi 2 The county is geologically complex with an average elevation of 4 000 metres 13 000 ft Mineral resources include lead zinc copper silver gold and gypsum A spur of the Nyainqentanglha mountains crosses the whole territory dividing it into a southern and northern part 2 In the south the Pengbo valley has an average elevation of 3 680 metres 12 070 ft with a mild climate The average temperature is 5 8 C 42 4 F 2 The northern three rivers section crossed by the Lhasa River and its tributary the Razheng River is mountainous and has an average elevation of 4 200 metres 13 800 ft It has average annual temperature of 2 9 C 37 2 F and is mostly pastoral with yak sheep and goats Wildlife includes roe deer white lipped deer otter black necked crane duck Mongolian gazelle ibex Medicinal plants and fungi include Cordyceps Fritillaria Rhodiola and Ganoderma lucidum 2 Administration divisions editLhunzhub County has jurisdiction over one town and 9 townships 3 Name Tibetan Tibetan Pinyin Chinese PinyinTownGanden Chokhor Town Lhunzhub དགའ ལ ན ཆ ས འཁ ར Gadainqoikor Chongdai 甘丹曲果镇 Gandanquguǒ ZhenTownshipsCodoi Township མཚ ས ད ཤང Codoi Xang 春堆乡 Chundui XiangSumcheng Township གས མ འཕ ང ཤང Sumcheng Xang 松盘乡 Sōngpan XiangQangka Township བ ང ཁ ཤང Qangga Xang 强嘎乡 Qiangga XiangKarze Township མཁར ར ཤང Karze Xang 卡孜乡 Kǎzi XiangBanjorling Township དཔལ འབ ར ག ང ཤང Baijorling Xang 边交林乡 Bianjiaolin XiangJangraxa Township ལ ང ར ཤར ཤང Jangraxar Xang 江热夏乡 Jiangrexia XiangNgarnang Township ངར ནང ཤང Ngarnang Xang 阿朗乡 Alǎng XiangTanggo Township ཐང མག ཤང Tanggo Xang 唐古乡 Tanggǔ XiangPundo Township ཕ མད ཤང Pudo Xang 旁多乡 Pangduō XiangOther settlements edit Zhujia 朱加 Economy edit nbsp Landscape near Reting monasteryAs of 2000 the county had a total population of 50 895 of which 8 111 lived in a community designated as urban 2 254 had non agricultural registration and 48 362 had agricultural registration 4 The Pengbo valley is the main grain producing region of Lhasa Municipality and Tibet with a total of 11 931 hectares 29 480 acres of arable land 5 Crops include barley winter wheat spring wheat canola and vegetables such as potato 6 The total output in 1999 was 57 600 tons of grain 5 Livestock includes yak sheep goats and horses 2 Yaks graze at altitudes of 4 300 metres 14 100 ft or more higher than is practical with cattle 7 Crop residues are used for winter and spring feed In 1996 more than 85 of winter and spring feed was straw mostly barley straw 8 Linzhou county has been a leading testing and manufacturing center for frozen yak semen and a center for selective breeding of yaks 9 Local enterprises prepare Tibetan medicinal plants and process wood products Ethnic handicrafts are well developed including weaving and mats The Pengbo valley has a long history of pottery making Products include braziers flower pots vases jugs and so on 5 In 2010 the county had a GDP of 839 million yuan and government revenue was 26 9 million yuan Investment in fixed assets was 450 million yuan excluding water conservancy The per capita income of farmers and herdsmen was 4 587 yuan a Mining was an important source of income b and the government had plans to more actively promote tourism 12 Infrastructure edit nbsp HydrologyHutoushan Reservoir lies in Qangka Township The reservoir is bordered by large swamps and wet meadows and has abundant plants and shellfish 13 The Hutuoshan Reservoir in the Pengbo valley is the largest in Tibet with planned total storage of 12 000 000 cubic metres 420 000 000 cu ft 14 Endangered Black necked cranes migrate to the middle and southern part of Tibet every winter and may be seen on the reservoir 15 There is a small hydropower station in Lhunzhub town 16 The Pangduo Hydro Power Station became operational in 2014 It impounds the Lhasa River in Pondo Township about 63 kilometres 39 mi from Lhasa 17 The reservoir holds 1 170 000 000 cubic metres 4 1 1010 cu ft of water 18 The power station has total installed capacity of 160 MW with four generating units 19 It has been called the Tibetan Three Gorges 20 The county has three major highways with total length of 160 kilometres 99 mi and twelve rural roads bringing the total road length to over 260 kilometres 160 mi 5 The county has a radio and television station TV coverage is received by 72 1 of the population and radio by 83 4 of the population The county has 23 health care establishments including a County People s Hospital with 30 beds By the end of 2000 there were 122 medical personnel 5 Religion edit nbsp Reting MonasteryThe county is a center of Tibetan Buddhism There are thirty seven gompas including twenty five lamaseries with 919 monks and twelve nunneries with 844 nuns as of 2011 The breakdown by sect is twenty six Gelug six Kagyu and five Sakya 5 Reting Monastery is located in Lhunzhub County and was built in 1056 by Dromton 1005 1064 a student of Atisa It was the earliest monastery of the Gedain sect and the patriarchal seat of that sect 21 In 1240 a Mongol force sacked the monastery and killed 500 people The gompa was rebuilt 22 When the Gedain sect joined the Gelug sect in the 16th century the monastery adopted the reincarnation system 21 The incarnations are named Reting Rimpoche 23 Following an attempted rebellion against the Lhasa government in 1947 Reting was imprisoned in the Potala After he died in May 1947 the monastery was looted and then razed 24 In recent years a lot of reconstruction work has been done About 160 monks reside in Reting References edit A per capita income of 4 587 yuan converts to US 688 at an exchange rate of 0 15 dollars per yuan 10 Radio Free Asia reported in 2013 that a Tibetan source had said that since 2005 waste from a mine near Dun village in Kazi Township had been dumped in the local river and pollution of the air had stunted the growth of grass The source said the miners were almost all Han Chinese 11 关于发布拉萨市第七次全国人口普查主要数据公报 in Chinese Government of Lhasa 2021 06 10 a b c d e Linzhou County Profile LSIIB 2022年统计用区划代码和城乡划分代码 in Chinese National Bureau of Statistics of the People s Republic of China Yeh amp Henderson 2008 pp 21 25 a b c d e f Linzhou TibetOL Linzhou Industry News LSIIB Suttie 2003 p 10 Suttie 2003 p 169 Bisht 2008 p 216 XE Currency Table CNY Chinese Yuan Renminbi More Than 80 Trapped in Tibet Gold Mine RFA Government Work Report 2011 Lhasa Tibet Linzhou Hutoushan reservoir is a paradise Shen 1995 p 153 Lin 2013 Daily Report People s Republic of China National Technical Information Service 1994 p 53 Retrieved 2024 03 14 Tibet s Three Gorges Dam starts operation Tibet s biggest water related project launched Guan 2013 Qin 2013 a b Ling 2005 p 73 McCue 2010 p 126 Goldstein 1991 p 187 Kapstein 2013 p 232 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lhunzhub County Sources editBisht Ramesh Chandra 2008 01 01 International Encyclopaedia Of Himalayas 5 Vols Set Mittal Publications ISBN 978 81 8324 265 3 Retrieved 2015 02 15 Goldstein Melvyn C 1991 05 19 A History of Modern Tibet 1913 1951 The Demise of the Lamaist State University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 91176 5 Retrieved 2015 02 15 Government Work Report Linzhou People s Government Office 2011 03 21 Archived from the original on 2015 02 15 Retrieved 2015 02 15 Guan Steve 2013 12 12 Tibet commences new hydropower plant China Coal Resource Retrieved 2015 02 06 Kapstein Matthew T 2013 06 05 The Tibetans John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 72537 5 Retrieved 2015 02 15 Lhasa Tibet Linzhou Hutoushan reservoir is a paradise for photographers Tibet Travel Web in Simplified Chinese Retrieved 2015 02 13 Lin Karen 2013 12 12 Black Necked Cranes Flocking Back to Tibet China Tibet Online Retrieved 2015 02 13 Ling Haicheng 2005 Buddhism in China 五洲传播出版社 ISBN 978 7 5085 0840 5 Retrieved 2015 02 15 Linzhou County Profile Lhasa Municipal Bureau of Industry and Information 2011 06 22 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 02 15 Linzhou Industry News Lhasa Municipal Bureau of Industry and Information 2011 06 22 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2015 02 15 Linzhou TibetOL China Intercontinental Communication Center Retrieved 2015 02 15 McCue Gary 2010 Trekking in Tibet A Traveler s Guide The Mountaineers Books ISBN 978 1 59485 411 8 Retrieved 2015 02 15 More Than 80 Trapped in Tibet Gold Mine Landslide Radio Free Asia 2013 03 29 Retrieved 2015 02 15 Qin Julia 2013 05 10 Tibet key water control project to be completed China Tibet Online Archived from the original on 2015 02 05 Retrieved 2015 02 05 Shen Dajun July 1995 Research on the rational use of water resources on the Lhasa River Tibet PDF Modelling and Management of Sustainable Basin scale Water Resource Systems Proceedings of a Boulder Symposium IAHS Archived from the original PDF on 2015 02 13 Retrieved 2015 02 13 Suttie J M 2003 Transhumant Grazing Systems in Temperate Asia Food amp Agriculture Org ISBN 978 92 5 104977 8 Retrieved 2015 02 15 Tibet s biggest water related project launched China Tibet Online 2009 08 06 Retrieved 2015 02 05 Tibet s Three Gorges Dam starts operation China Daily 2013 12 11 Archived from the original on 2015 02 06 Retrieved 2015 02 05 XE Currency Table CNY Chinese Yuan Renminbi XE Retrieved 2015 02 16 Yeh Emily T Henderson Mark December 2008 Interpreting Urbanization in Tibet Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies 4 Retrieved 2015 02 12 External links editLhunzhub County Annals Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lhunzhub County amp oldid 1213757190, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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