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Mekong Delta

The Mekong Delta (Vietnamese: Đồng bằng Sông Cửu Long, lit.'Nine Dragon River Delta' or simply Đồng Bằng Sông Mê Kông, 'Mekong River Delta'), also known as the Western Region (Vietnamese: Miền Tây) or South-western region (Vietnamese: Tây Nam Bộ), is the region in southwestern Vietnam where the Mekong River approaches and empties into the sea through a network of distributaries. The Mekong delta region encompasses a large portion of south-western Vietnam of over 40,500 km2 (15,600 sq mi).[2] The size of the area covered by water depends on the season. Its wet coastal geography makes it an important source of agriculture and aquaculture for the country.

Mekong Delta
Đồng bằng Sông Cửu Long
Đồng Bằng Sông Mê Kông
Rice paddy in the Mekong River Delta.
Nickname(s): 
"Nine Dragon river delta", "The West"
Provincial map
Coordinates: 10°02′N 105°48′E / 10.04°N 105.80°E / 10.04; 105.80
Country Vietnam
Area
 • Total40,576.6 km2 (15,666.7 sq mi)
Elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2019)
 • Total21,492,987
 • Density530/km2 (1,400/sq mi)
GDP
 • TotalVND 823 trillion
US$ 36.151 billion (2021)
Time zoneUTC+07:00 (ICT)

The delta has been occupied as early as the 4th century BC. As a product of Khmer, Vietnamese, Chinese, and French settlement in the region, the delta and its waterways have numerous names, including the Khmer term Bassac to refer to the lower basin and the largest river branch flowing through it.[3] After the 1954 Geneva Conference, Vietnam was split into two[4] with South Vietnam inheriting the southern half of Vietnam becoming the State of Vietnam and eventually the Republic of Vietnam, also known as South Vietnam, with their own administrative states (see Category:Provinces of South Vietnam). After 1975, the Mekong Delta ceased being a part of the Republic of Vietnam, succeeded by the current Vietnamese nation. Today, the region comprises 12 provinces: Long An, Đồng Tháp, Tiền Giang, An Giang, Bến Tre, Vĩnh Long, Trà Vinh, Hậu Giang, Kiên Giang, Sóc Trăng, Bạc Liêu, and Cà Mau, along with the province-level municipality of Cần Thơ.

The Mekong Delta has been dubbed a 'biological treasure trove'. Over 1,000 animal species were recorded between 1997 and 2007 and new species of plants, fish, lizards, and mammals have been discovered in previously unexplored areas, including the Laotian rock rat, thought to be extinct.[5] The low-lying coastal geography of the region makes it vulnerable to climate change caused sea level rise, alongside related issues such as coastal erosion and saltwater intrusion.

History edit

Funan and Chenla period edit

 
A statue of the Hindu god Vishnu found at Óc Eo (6–7th century AD).

The Mekong Delta was likely inhabited long since prehistory with the civilizations of Funan and Chenla maintaining a presence in the Mekong Delta for centuries.[6] Archaeological discoveries at Óc Eo and other Funanese sites show that the area was an important part of the Funan civilization, bustling with trading ports and canals as early as in the first century AD and extensive human settlement in the region may have gone back as far as the 4th century BC. While there is no clear consensus on the ethnic makeup of those living in the region during the Funan, archaeologists suggest that they may have had connections to Austroasiatic people. Khmer inscriptions appear during the Chenla period.

Angkor Borei is a site in the Mekong Delta that existed between 400 BC-500 AD. This site had extensive maritime trade networks throughout Southeast Asia and with India, and is believed to have possibly been the ancient capital to the civilization of Funan.[7]

Cambodian and Champa incursions edit

In the early 15th century, Champa began mounting several incursions in the Mekong Delta. The declining Kingdom of Cambodia asked the Chinese Ming Empire for intervention in 1408 and 1414. Despite that, in 1421 Indravarman VI of Champa seized and annexed the eastern part of the Mekong Delta, including the marketplace town of Bien Hoa. He installed a statue of Tribhuvanākrānta (Visnu) there to mark the southern most extent of Champa.[8][9] In 1757, Vietnamese lords had acquired control of Cà Mau. By the 1860s, French colonists had established control over the Mekong Delta and established the colony of French Cochinchina.

Vietnamese period edit

 
Scene of a Mekong Delta town in 18th century. Watercolour lithograph by Jean-François Daumont, circa 1760.

The Vietnamese acquisition of the Mekong Delta can be divided into two phases:

Marriage agreement and interventions, 1620–1698 edit

In 1621, Lord Nguyễn Phúc Nguyên arranged a contract marriage between his daughter Nguyễn Phúc Ngọc Vạn and Cambodian king Chey Chettha II in exchange to the establishment of a Vietnamese trade port in town of Prei Nokor (now Ho Chi Minh City) and tax exemptions for Vietnamese settlers moving into the area. Vice versa, the Nguyễn will help Cambodia politically and militarily to counter against Ayutthaya Kingdom (Siamese) pressures. Earliest Vietnamese settlements in the Mekong Delta appeared and centered around Đồng Nai and Mỗi Xoài (today Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu).[10]

In 1658, without any excuses, the Nguyễn invaded Cambodia and deposed the only Khmer Muslim king Ramathipadi I (Sultan Ibrahim). 16 years later, the Nguyễn again militarily interfered Cambodian internal royal affairs, putting Prince Ang Nan into power. The Nguyễn invited fleeing Chinese refugees to settle in Mekong River entrance towns of Mỹ Tho and Biên Hoà In 1688, the Chinese revolted against Nguyễn lords. King Ang Nan died in 1691, and the revolt was soon resolved.[11]

After fully subjugating Champa in 1697, the Nguyễn lords sent marquis Nguyễn Hữu Cảnh and a small expedition to annex Prei Nokor, renamed it to Gia Định, establishing Vietnamese administrative structures, and explore deep into the lower Mekong Delta from Mỹ Tho to An Giang.[11] King Chey Chettha IV of Cambodia tried to stop the Vietnamese but was defeated by Nguyễn Hữu Cảnh in 1700. In February 1700, he invaded Cambodia from An Giang. In March, the Vietnamese expedition under Cảnh and a Chinese general Trần Thượng Xuyên (Chen Shangchuan) defeated the main Cambodian army at Bích Đôi citadel, king Chey Chettha IV took flight while his nephew Ang Em surrendered to the invaders as the Vietnamese captured Phnom Penh. As a result, Saigon and Long An were officially obtained by the Nguyễn, more Vietnamese settlers moved into the new conquered lands. In 1708, Mạc Cửu of Hà Tiên also pledged loyalty to the Nguyễn lords.[11]

Conquest of the Mekong Delta, 1754–1757 edit

In the 18th century, the edges of the Mekong Delta bordering with Cambodia had been mainly inhabited by isolated communities of Shafi'i Chams and Islamic Cham–Malays collectively known as the Cham Barw or Côn Man (Kunlun) by Vietnamese sources, while most of the Delta remained under Cambodian control. Under the reign of king Chey Chettha V, in 1750 he began subduing and persecuting the Cham–Malay Muslims, who at the time were close allies of the Nguyễn lords. Using that pretext, Lord Nguyễn Phúc Khoát launched an full-scale invasion of Cambodia in 1754, with the army under the command of general Nguyễn Cư Trinh. 10,000 Vietnamese troops divided into two groups, rolled into Cambodia and completely flattened Cambodian resistance and easily captured its capital Phnom Penh in summer of 1754. King Chey Chettha V fled to Longvek.[12]

The Muslims rose up and joined the Vietnamese chasing the Cambodians. Due to heavy spring rain, the Muslim segment lost contact with the main army of Nguyễn Cư Trinh, and were surrounded by 10,000 Cambodians at Vô Tà Ân in early 1755. Muslim troops piled carts and wagons into a defensive perimeter and stood their ground against Cambodian attacks until being relieved by Nguyễn Cư Trinh. With the help of mediation by Mạc Thiên Tứ of Hà Tiên, a ceasefire agreement was reached between King Chey Chettha V and Lord Nguyễn Phúc Khoát in 1756: Cambodia ceded Gò Công and Tân An to the Vietnamese, Chey Chettha V was deposed, while Ang Tong was restored as King of Cambodia. Ang Tong offered the Nguyễn two districts of Trà Vinh (Preah Trapeang) and Ba Thắc (Bassac) as tributes.[13]

In 1757, Ang Tong died and was succeeded Outey II. With the help of the Nguyễn Lords and Pricipality of Hà Tiên, Outey II regained the throne from usurpers. He gave all remaining Mekong Delta lands to Mạc Thiên Tứ, and Mạc Thiên Tứ swapped all these areas to the Nguyễn in exchange for the Mạc clan's total autonomy in Hà Tiên. The new lands were divided into two districts: Rạch Giá and Cà Mau.[13] By 1757, all of today's Mekong Delta including the Cape Cà Mau firmly came under Vietnamese control.[13]

Nguyễn dynasty, French and modern period edit

In 1802 Nguyễn Ánh crowned himself emperor Gia Long and unified all the territories comprising modern Vietnam, including the Mekong Delta.

Upon the conclusion of the Cochinchina Campaign in the 1860s, the area became part of Cochinchina, France's first colony in Vietnam, and later, part of French Indochina.[14] Beginning during the French colonial period, the French patrolled and fought on the waterways of the Mekong Delta region with their Divisions navales d'assaut (Dinassaut), a tactic which lasted throughout the First Indochina War, and was later employed by the US Navy Mobile Riverine Force.[15] During the Vietnam War—also referred to as the Second Indochina War—the Delta region saw savage fighting between Viet Cong (NLF) guerrillas and the US 9th Infantry Division and units of the United States Navy's swift boats and hovercraft (PACVs) plus the Army of the Republic of Vietnam 7th, 9th, and 21st Infantry Divisions. As a military region the Mekong Delta was encompassed by the IV Corps Tactical Zone (IV CTZ).

In 1975, North Vietnamese soldiers and Viet Cong soldiers launched a massive invasion in many parts of South Vietnam. While I, II, and III Corps collapsed significantly, IV Corps was still highly intact due to under Major General Nguyen Khoa Nam overseeing strong military operations to prevent VC taking over any important regional districts. Brigadier General Le Van Hung, the head of 21st Division commander, stayed office in Can Tho to continue defending successfully against VC. On 29 April 1975, the last U.S. Consul General Terry McNamara and his diplomats evacuated by marine boat from Can Tho to the South China Sea.[16] When the South Vietnamese President Duong Van Minh ordered unconditional surrender, both ARVN generals in Can Tho, General Le Van Hung and Nguyen Khoa Nam, committed suicide. At Binh Thuy Air Base some ARVN soldiers and air base personnel who defended the air base were evacuated by helicopters and several jet fighters to Thailand shortly after hearing Minh's surrender. Within hours, VC soldiers occupied the base and captured those ARVN and air base personnel who didn't escape.[17] In My Tho, Brigadier General Tran Van Hai, who was in charged protecting National Highway 4 (now NH1A) from Saigon to Can Tho, committed suicide. Tran was one of the three ARVN generals who refused to be evacuated by American when the North Vietnamese soldiers invaded Saigon.[18] Several ARVN soldiers continued to fight against the VC but later either surrendered or disbanded when faced with VC counterattacks.[19]

In the late 1970s, the Khmer Rouge regime attacked Vietnam in an attempt to reconquer the Delta region. This campaign precipitated the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia and subsequent downfall of the Khmer Rouge.

Geography edit

 
Mekong River Delta from space, February 1996.

The Mekong Delta, as a region, lies immediately to the west of Ho Chi Minh City (also called Saigon by locals), roughly forming a triangle stretching from Mỹ Tho in the east to Châu Đốc and Hà Tiên in the northwest, down to Cà Mau at the southernmost tip of Vietnam, and including the island of Phú Quốc.[20]

The Mekong Delta region of Vietnam displays a variety of physical landscapes, but is dominated by flat flood plains in the south, with a few hills in the north and west. This diversity of terrain was largely the product of tectonic uplift and folding brought about by the collision of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates about 50 million years ago. The soil of the lower Delta consists mainly of sediment from the Mekong and its tributaries, deposited over thousands of years as the river changed its course due to the flatness of the low-lying terrain.[21]

The present Mekong Delta system has two major distributary channels, both discharging directly into the East Sea. The river carries over 160 million tons of sediment, including 6.5 million tons of sand, each year.[22][23] Historic sediment loads are estimated to be higher, but have been reduced due to damming for hydropower in the upper reaches of the Mekong River Basin, and sand mining in the riverbed.[24] Sediment is the driving factor in building the delta seaward (progradation), and upward (aggradation) from seasonal flooding, and is counteracted by coastal erosion and sea level rise.

The Holocene history of the Mekong Delta shows delta progradation of about 200 km during the last 6 kyr. During the Middle Holocene the Mekong River was discharging waters into both the East Sea and the Gulf of Thailand.[25] The water entering the Gulf of Thailand was flowing via a palaeochannel located within the western part of the delta; north of the Camau Peninsula.[26] Upper Pleistocene prodeltaic and delta front sediments interpreted as the deposits of the palaeo-Mekong River were reported from central basin of the Gulf of Thailand.[27][28]

The Mekong Delta is the region with the smallest forest area in Vietnam. 300,000 ha (740,000 acres) or 7.7% of the total area are forested as of 2011. The only provinces with large forests are Cà Mau Province and Kiên Giang Province, together accounting for two-thirds of the region's forest area, while forests cover less than 5% of the area of all of the other eight provinces and cities.[29]

Coastal erosion edit

Shoreline change (m/yr)
Zones 1973–1979 1973–1979 1987–1995 1987–1995 1987–1995 43-yr average
Zone-1 8.66 8.07 12.07 9.68 4.52 8.87
Zone-2 −10.32 −8.00 −12.22 −13.15 −20.9 −12.79
Zone-3 28.15 23.33 27.55 19.48 11.83 21.53
Zone-4 8.43 2.48 3.57 -10.03 −4.53 −1.66
All areas 7.77 6.11 7.84 2.75 −1.42 4.36
Area change (km2/yr)
Zones 1973–1979 1973–1979 1987–1995 1987–1995 1987–1995 43-yr average
Zone-1 1.94 2.01 2.96 2.25 1.15 2.12
Zone-2 −1.39 −1.87 −2.23 −1.75 −1.71 −1.71
Zone-3 2.82 2.16 1.71 1.09 1.64 1.99
Zone-4 0.95 0.35 −0.53 −0.56 −1.13 −0.18
All areas 4.32 2.64 1.91 1.03 −0.05 2.23

From 1973 to 2005, the Mekong Delta's seaward shoreline growth decreased gradually from a mean of 7.8 m/yr to 2.8 m/yr, becoming negative after 2005, with a retreat rate of −1.4 m/yr. The net deltaic land area gain has also been slowing, with the mean rate decreasing from 4.3 km2/yr (1973–1979) to 1.0 km2 yr (1995–2005), and then to −0.05 km2/yr (2005–2015). Thus, in about 2005, the subaerial Mekong Delta transitioned from a constructive mode to an erosional (or destructive) mode.[30][31]

Climate change concerns edit

Being a low-lying coastal region, the Mekong Delta is particularly susceptible to floods resulting from rises in sea level due to climate change.[32] The Climate Change Research Institute at Cần Thơ University, in studying the possible consequences of climate change, has predicted that, besides suffering from drought brought on by seasonal decrease in rainfall, many provinces in the Mekong Delta will be flooded by the year 2030. The most serious cases are predicted to be the provinces of Bến Tre and Long An, of which 51% and 49%, respectively, are expected to be flooded if the sea level rises by 1 m (3 ft 3 in).[33] Plans are currently being made to breach dykes in the upper Mekong delta, as a sedimentation enhancing strategy. This will not only increase the water retention capacity of the upper delta region, alleviating pressure on the lower delta, but also reintroduce sediment-rich water which may result in land elevation.[34] Another problem caused by climate change is the increasing soil salinity near the coasts. Bến Tre Province is planning to reforest coastal regions to counter this trend.[35]

The duration of inundations at an important road in the city of Can Tho is expected to continue to rise from the current total of 72 inundated days per year to 270 days by 2030 and 365 days by 2050. This is attributed to the combined influence of sea-level rise and land subsidence,[36] which occurs at about 1.1 cm (0.43 in) annually.[37] Several projects and initiatives on local, regional and state levels work to counter this trend and save the Mekong Delta. For example, there exists a programme for integrated coastal management that is supported by Germany and Australia.[38]

In August 2019, a Nature Communications study using an improved measure of elevation estimation, found that the delta was much lower than previous estimates, only a mean 0.82 m (2 ft 8 in) above sea level, with 75% of the delta—an area where 12 million people currently live—falling below 1 m (3 ft 3 in).[37] It is expected that a majority of the delta will be below sea level by 2050.[39]

Demographics edit

 
Mekong Delta

The inhabitants of the Mekong Delta region are predominantly ethnic Vietnamese. It is home to the largest population of Khmer outside of Cambodia. The Khmer minority population live primarily in the Trà Vinh, Sóc Trăng, and Muslim Chăm in Tân Châu, An Giang provinces. There are also sizeable Hoa (ethnic Chinese) populations in the Kiên Giang, and Trà Vinh provinces. The region had a population of 17.33 million people in 2011.[29]

The population of the Mekong Delta has been growing relatively slowly in recent years, mainly due to out-migration. The region's population only increased by 471,600 people between 2005 and 2011, while 166,400 people migrated out in 2011 alone. Together with the central coast regions, it has one of the slowest growing populations in the country. Population growth rates have been between 0.3% and 0.5% between 2008 and 2011, while they have been over 2% in the neighbouring southeastern region.[29] Net migration has been negative in all of these years. The region also has a relatively low fertility rate, at 1.8 children per woman in 2010 and 2011, down from 2.0 in 2005.[29]

Provinces edit

Province-
Level
Division
Capital Area Population
(May 2023)
Population
density
(km2) (mile²) (persons/km2) (persons/mile²)
An Giang Long Xuyên 3,536.8 1,365.6 2,068,251 625.0 1,619
Bạc Liêu Bạc Liêu 2,584.1 997.7 1,109,425 317.4 822
Bến Tre Bến Tre 2,360.2 911.3 1,337,704 573.4 1,485
Cà Mau Cà Mau 5,331.7 2,058.6 1,375,612 231.1 599
Đồng Tháp Cao Lãnh 3,376.4 1,303.6 1,844,768 494.0 1,279
Hậu Giang Vị Thanh 1,601.1 618.2 859,053 497.7 1,289
Kiên Giang Rạch Giá 6,348.3 2,451.1 1,800,451 265.4 687
Long An Tân An 4,493.8 1,735.1 1,737,963 316.7 820
Sóc Trăng Sóc Trăng 3,312.3 1,278.9 1,261,334 385.3 998
Tiền Giang Mỹ Tho 2,484.2 959.2 1,908,352 691.3 1,790
Trà Vinh Trà Vinh 2,295.1 886.1 1,072,720 451.7 1,170
Vĩnh Long Vĩnh Long 1,479.1 571.1 1,101,251 714.6 1,851
Cần Thơ (municipality) 1,401.6 541.2 1,462,605 813.3 2,106

Economy edit

 
Floating market of Cần Thơ

The Mekong Delta is by far Vietnam's most productive region in agriculture and aquaculture, while its role in industry and foreign direct investment (FDI) is much smaller.

Agriculture edit

2.6 million ha in the Mekong Delta are used for agriculture, which is one fourth of Vietnam's total.[29] Due to its mostly flat terrain and few forested areas (except for Cà Mau Province), almost two-thirds (64.5%) of the region's land can be used for agriculture. The share of agricultural land exceeds 80% in Cần Thơ and neighbouring Hậu Giang Province and is below 50% only in Cà Mau Province (32%) and Bạc Liêu Province (42%).[29] The region's land used for growing cereals makes up 47% of the national total, more than northern and central Vietnam combined. Most of this is used for rice cultivation.

Rice output in 2011 was 23,186,000t, 54.8% of Vietnam's total output. The strongest producers are Kiên Giang Province, An Giang Province, and Đồng Tháp Province, producing over 3 million tonnes each and almost 11 million tonnes together. Any two of these provinces produce more than the entire Red River Delta.[29] Only three provinces produce less than 1 million tonnes of rice (Bạc Liêu Province, Cà Mau Province, Bến Tre Province).[29]

Fishery edit

The Mekong Delta is also Vietnam's most important fishing region. It has almost half of Vietnam's capacity of offshore fishing vessels (mostly in Kien Gian with almost 1/4, Bến Tre, Cà Mau, Tiền Giang, Bạc Liêu). Fishery output was at 3.168 million tons (58.3% of Vietnam) and has experienced rapid growth from 1.84mt in 2005.[29] All of Vietnam's largest fishery producers with over 300kt of output are in the Mekong Delta: Kiên Giang, Cà Mau, Đồng Tháp, An Giang, and Bến Tre.[29]

Despite the region's large offshore fishing fleet, 2/3 (2.13 million tonnes out of Vietnam's total of 2.93) of fishery output actually comes from aquaculture.[29]

December 2015, aquaculture production was estimated at 357 thousand tons, up 11% compared to the same period last year, bringing the total aquaculture production 3516 thousand tons in 2015, up 3.0% compared to the same period. Although aquaculture production has increased overall, aquaculture still faces many difficulties coming from export markets.

Industry and FDI edit

The Mekong Delta is not strongly industrialized, but is still the third out of seven regions in terms of industrial gross output. The region's industry accounts for 10% of Vietnam's total as of 2011.[29] Almost half of the region's industrial production is concentrated in Cần Thơ, Long An Province and Cà Mau Province. Cần Thơ is the economic center of the region and more industrialized than the other provinces. Long An has been the only province of the region to attract part of the manufacturing booming around Ho Chi Minh City and is seen by other provinces as an example of successful FDI attraction.[40] Cà Mau Province is home to a large industrial zone including power plants and a fertiliser factory.[41]

Accumulated foreign direct investment in the Mekong Delta until 2011 was $10.257bn.[29] It has been highly concentrated in a few provinces, led by Long An and Kiên Giang with over $3bn each, Tiền Giang and Cần Thơ (around 850m), Cà Mau (780m) and Hậu Giang (673m), while the other provinces have received less than 200m each.[29] In general, the performance of the region in attracting FDI is evaluated as unsatisfactory by local analysts and policymakers.[40] Companies from Ho Chi Minh City have also invested heavily in the region. Their investment from 2000 to June 2011 accounted for 199 trillion VND (almost $10bn).[42]

Infrastructure edit

The construction of the Cần Thơ Bridge, a cable-stayed bridge over the largest distributary of the Mekong River, was completed on April 12, 2010, three years after a collapse that killed 54 and injured nearly 100 workers. The bridge replaces the ferry system that currently runs along National Route 1, and links Vĩnh Long Province and Cần Thơ city. The cost of construction is estimated to be 4.842 trillion Vietnamese đồng (approximately 342.6 million United States dollars), making it the most expensive bridge in Vietnam.[43]

Culture edit

Life in the Mekong Delta revolves much around the river, and many of the villages are often accessible by rivers and canals rather than by road.

The region is home to cải lương, a form of Kinh/Vietnamese folk opera. Cai Luong Singing appeared in Mekong Delta in the early 20th century. Cai Luong Singing is often performed in the soundtrack of guitar and zither. Cai Luong is a kind of play telling a story. A sort of play often includes two main parts: the dialogue part and the singing part to express their thoughts and emotions.[44]

Cuisine edit

The Mekong Delta cuisine relies heavily on fresh products which is abundant in the new land with heavy use of seafoods and unique ingredients of the region such as palm sugar, basa fish and wild herbs and flowers such as điên điển, so đũa, kèo nèo. The history of the region being a newly settled area reflects on its cuisine, with Ẩm thực khẩn hoang or Settlers cuisine means dishes are prepared fresh from wild and newly-caught ingredients. The cuisine is also influenced by Khmer, Cham and Chinese settlers. This differs itself from the cuisine of other regions of Vietnam.

Literature and movies edit

Nguyễn Ngọc Tư, an author from Cà Mau province, has written many popular books about life in the Mekong Delta such as:

  • Ngọn đèn không tắt (The Inextinguishable Light, 2000)
  • Ông ngoại (Grandpa, 2001)
  • Biển người mênh mông (The Ocean of People, 2003)
  • Giao thừa (New Year's Eve, 2003)
  • Nước chảy mây trôi (Flowing Waters, Flying Clouds, 2004)
  • Cánh đồng bất tận (The Endless Field, 2005)

The 2004 film The Buffalo Boy is set in Cà Mau province.

Some Vietnamese films on the topic of life in the Mekong Delta attract the attention of a large audience: Tình Mẫu Tử (Mother and child love, 2019), Phận làm dâu (Bride's fate, 2018), etc.

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ Statistical Handbook of Vietnam 2014 July 6, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, General Statistics Office of Vietnam
  2. ^ Mekong Delta September 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine on ARCBC (ASEAN Regional Centre for Biodiversity Conservation) site
  3. ^ Brocheux, Pierre (1995). The Mekong Delta: Ecology, Economy, and Revolution, 1860-1960. Center for Southeast Asian Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison. p. 1.
  4. ^ Turner, Robert F. (1975). Vietnamese Communism: Its Origin and Development. Hoover Institution Press.
  5. ^ Ashley Fantz, "Mekong a 'treasure trove' of 1,000 newly discovered species November 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine", CNN. December 16, 2008.
  6. ^ Robert M. Salkin; Trudy Ring (1996). Paul E. Schellinger; Robert M. Salkin (eds.). Asia and Oceania. International Dictionary of Historic Places. Vol. 5. Taylor & Francis. p. 353. ISBN 1-884964-04-4.
  7. ^ Stark, M.; Sovath, B. (2001). "Recent research on emergent complexity in Cambodia's Mekong". Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association. 21 (5): 85–98.
  8. ^ Golzio, Karl-Heinz (2004), Inscriptions of Campā based on the editions and translations of Abel Bergaigne, Étienne Aymonier, Louis Finot, Édouard Huber and other French scholars and of the work of R. C. Majumdar. Newly presented, with minor corrections of texts and translations, together with calculations of given dates, Shaker Verlag, pp. 199–200
  9. ^ Griffiths, Arlo; Lepoutre, Amandine; Southworth, William A.; Phần, Thành (2012), The inscriptions of Campā at the Museum of Cham sculpture in Đà Nẵng / Văn khắc Chămpa tại bảo tàng điêu khắc Chăm – Đà Nẵng, Vietnam National University in Ho Chi Minh City Publishing House (published in collaboration with EFEO and the Center for Vietnamese and Southeast Asian Studies, Hồ Chí Minh City)
  10. ^ Song, Jeong Nam, Sự mở rộng lãnh thổ Đại Việt dưới thời Hậu Lê và tính chất, Korean University of Foreign Studies, Seoul, 2010, p.22
  11. ^ a b c Song, Jeong Nam, Sự mở rộng lãnh thổ Đại Việt dưới thời Hậu Lê và tính chất, Korean University of Foreign Studies, Seoul, 2010, p.23
  12. ^ Song, Jeong Nam, Sự mở rộng lãnh thổ Đại Việt dưới thời Hậu Lê và tính chất, Korean University of Foreign Studies, Seoul, 2010, p.24
  13. ^ a b c Song, Jeong Nam, Sự mở rộng lãnh thổ Đại Việt dưới thời Hậu Lê và tính chất, Korean University of Foreign Studies, Seoul, 2010, p.25
  14. ^ Robert M. Salkin; Trudy Ring (1996). Paul E. Schellinger; Robert M. Salkin (eds.). Asia and Oceania. International Dictionary of Historic Places. Vol. 5. Taylor & Francis. p. 354. ISBN 1-884964-04-4.
  15. ^ Leulliot, Nowfel. "Dinassaut : Riverine warfare in Indochina, 1945–1954".
  16. ^ "Apocalypse Not – The Evacuation from Can Tho, Vietnam — April 1975". Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training.
  17. ^ "'Day of Anguish' Still Grips Those Who Fled : Surrender: Fifteen years ago today, the fall of Saigon irrevocably changed a multitude of lives forever". Los Angeles Times. April 30, 1990.
  18. ^ Elliott, David (2003). The Vietnamese War: Revolution and Social Change in the Mekong ..., Volume 1. New York. pp. 1376–1377. ISBN 9781315698809.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. ^ "Holdouts". War Never Dies. Retrieved April 1, 2019.
  20. ^ "viajes a Vietnam". rutasvietnam.viajes - ES (in European Spanish).
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  24. ^ Jordan, Christian; Tiede, Jan; Lojek, Oliver; Visscher, Jan; Apel, Heiko; Nguyen, Hong Quan; Quang, Chau Nguyen Xuan; Schlurmann, Torsten (November 28, 2019). "Sand mining in the Mekong Delta revisited - current scales of local sediment deficits". Scientific Reports. 9 (1): 17823. Bibcode:2019NatSR...917823J. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-53804-z. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 6882805. PMID 31780684.
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Further reading edit

  • Renaud, F. G. and C. Kuenzer (2012): The Mekong Delta System. Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta (=Springer Environmental Science and Engineering). Dordrecht: Springer. ISBN 978-94-007-3961-1.
  • Kuenzer, C. and F. G. Renaud (2012): Climate Change and Environmental Change in River Deltas Globally. In: Renaud, F. G. and C. Kuenzer (eds.): The Mekong Delta System. Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta (=Springer Environmental Science and Engineering). Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 7–48.
  • Renaud F. G. and C. Kuenzer (2012): Introduction. In: Renaud, F. G. and C. Kuenzer (eds.): The Mekong Delta System. Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta (=Springer Environmental Science and Engineering). Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 3–6.
  • Moder, F., C. Kuenzer, Z. Xu, P. Leinenkugel and Q. Bui Van (2012): IWRM for the Mekong Basin. In: Renaud, F. G. and C. Kuenzer (eds.): The Mekong Delta System. Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta (=Springer Environmental Science and Engineering). Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 133–166.
  • Klinger, V., G. Wehrmann, G. Gebhardt and C. Kuenzer (2012): A Water related Web-based Information System for the Sustainable Development of the Mekong Delta. In: Renaud, F. G. and C. Kuenzer (eds.): The Mekong Delta System. Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta (=Springer Environmental Science and Engineering). Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 423–444.
  • Gebhardt, S., L. D. Nguyen and C. Kuenzer (2012): Mangrove Ecosystems in the Mekong Delta. Overcoming Uncertainties in Inventory Mapping Using Satellite Remote Sensing Data. In: Renaud, F. G. and C. Kuenzer (eds.): The Mekong Delta System. Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta (=Springer Environmental Science and Engineering). Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 315–330.
  • Kuenzer, C., H. Guo, J. Huth, P. Leinenkugel, X. Li and S. Dech (2013): Flood Mapping and Flood Dynamics of the Mekong Delta. ENVISAT-ASAR-WSM Based Time-Series Analyses. In: Remote Sensing 5, pp. 687–715. DOI: 10.3390/rs5020687.
  • Gebhardt, S., J. Huth, N. Lam Dao, A. Roth and C. Kuenzer (2012): A comparison of TerraSAR-X Quadpol backscattering with RapidEye multispectral vegetation indices over rice fields in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam. In: International Journal of Remote Sensing 33 (24), pp. 7644–7661.
  • Leinenkugel, P., T. Esch and C. Kuenzer (2011): Settlement detection and impervious surface estimation in the Mekong Delta using optical and SAR remote sensing data. In: Remote Sensing of Environment 115 (12), pp. 3007–3019.
  • Kuenzer, C., I. Klein, T. Ullmann, E. Foufoula-Georgiou, R. Baumhauer and S. Dech (2015): Remote Sensing of River Delta Inundation: Exploiting the Potential of Coarse Spatial Resolution, Temporally-Dense MODIS Time Series. In: Remote Sensing 7, pp. 8516-8542. DOI: 10.3390/rs70708516.
  • Kuenzer, C., H. Guo, I. Schlegel, V. Tuan, X. Li and S. Dech (2013): Varying scale and capability of envisat ASAR-WSM, TerraSAR-X scansar and TerraSAR-X Stripmap data to assess urban flood situations: A case study of the mekong delta in Can Tho province. In: Remote Sensing 5 (10), pp. 5122-5142. DOI: 10.3390/rs5105122.

External links edit

  • The WISDOM Project, a Water related Information System for the Mekong Delta
  • Image Google map of the Mekong Delta.
  • Fruits found at Mekong Delta July 23, 2019, at the Wayback Machine

Climate change edit

  • . International Centre for Environmental Management.
  • Release of arsenic to deep groundwater in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam, linked to pumping-induced land subsidence.

mekong, delta, this, article, about, geographical, region, german, heavy, metal, band, band, vietnamese, Đồng, bằng, sông, cửu, long, nine, dragon, river, delta, simply, Đồng, bằng, sông, kông, mekong, river, delta, also, known, western, region, vietnamese, mi. This article is about the geographical region For the German heavy metal band see Mekong Delta band The Mekong Delta Vietnamese Đồng bằng Song Cửu Long lit Nine Dragon River Delta or simply Đồng Bằng Song Me Kong Mekong River Delta also known as the Western Region Vietnamese Miền Tay or South western region Vietnamese Tay Nam Bộ is the region in southwestern Vietnam where the Mekong River approaches and empties into the sea through a network of distributaries The Mekong delta region encompasses a large portion of south western Vietnam of over 40 500 km2 15 600 sq mi 2 The size of the area covered by water depends on the season Its wet coastal geography makes it an important source of agriculture and aquaculture for the country Mekong Delta Đồng bằng Song Cửu LongĐồng Bằng Song Me KongRegionRice paddy in the Mekong River Delta Nickname s Nine Dragon river delta The West Provincial mapCoordinates 10 02 N 105 48 E 10 04 N 105 80 E 10 04 105 80Country VietnamArea 1 Total40 576 6 km2 15 666 7 sq mi Elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2019 Total21 492 987 Density530 km2 1 400 sq mi GDP TotalVND 823 trillionUS 36 151 billion 2021 Time zoneUTC 07 00 ICT The delta has been occupied as early as the 4th century BC As a product of Khmer Vietnamese Chinese and French settlement in the region the delta and its waterways have numerous names including the Khmer term Bassac to refer to the lower basin and the largest river branch flowing through it 3 After the 1954 Geneva Conference Vietnam was split into two 4 with South Vietnam inheriting the southern half of Vietnam becoming the State of Vietnam and eventually the Republic of Vietnam also known as South Vietnam with their own administrative states see Category Provinces of South Vietnam After 1975 the Mekong Delta ceased being a part of the Republic of Vietnam succeeded by the current Vietnamese nation Today the region comprises 12 provinces Long An Đồng Thap Tiền Giang An Giang Bến Tre Vĩnh Long Tra Vinh Hậu Giang Kien Giang Soc Trăng Bạc Lieu and Ca Mau along with the province level municipality of Cần Thơ The Mekong Delta has been dubbed a biological treasure trove Over 1 000 animal species were recorded between 1997 and 2007 and new species of plants fish lizards and mammals have been discovered in previously unexplored areas including the Laotian rock rat thought to be extinct 5 The low lying coastal geography of the region makes it vulnerable to climate change caused sea level rise alongside related issues such as coastal erosion and saltwater intrusion Contents 1 History 1 1 Funan and Chenla period 1 2 Cambodian and Champa incursions 1 3 Vietnamese period 1 3 1 Marriage agreement and interventions 1620 1698 1 3 2 Conquest of the Mekong Delta 1754 1757 1 3 3 Nguyễn dynasty French and modern period 2 Geography 2 1 Coastal erosion 2 2 Climate change concerns 3 Demographics 3 1 Provinces 4 Economy 4 1 Agriculture 4 2 Fishery 4 3 Industry and FDI 5 Infrastructure 6 Culture 6 1 Cuisine 6 2 Literature and movies 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 Climate changeHistory editFunan and Chenla period edit nbsp A statue of the Hindu god Vishnu found at oc Eo 6 7th century AD The Mekong Delta was likely inhabited long since prehistory with the civilizations of Funan and Chenla maintaining a presence in the Mekong Delta for centuries 6 Archaeological discoveries at oc Eo and other Funanese sites show that the area was an important part of the Funan civilization bustling with trading ports and canals as early as in the first century AD and extensive human settlement in the region may have gone back as far as the 4th century BC While there is no clear consensus on the ethnic makeup of those living in the region during the Funan archaeologists suggest that they may have had connections to Austroasiatic people Khmer inscriptions appear during the Chenla period Angkor Borei is a site in the Mekong Delta that existed between 400 BC 500 AD This site had extensive maritime trade networks throughout Southeast Asia and with India and is believed to have possibly been the ancient capital to the civilization of Funan 7 Cambodian and Champa incursions edit In the early 15th century Champa began mounting several incursions in the Mekong Delta The declining Kingdom of Cambodia asked the Chinese Ming Empire for intervention in 1408 and 1414 Despite that in 1421 Indravarman VI of Champa seized and annexed the eastern part of the Mekong Delta including the marketplace town of Bien Hoa He installed a statue of Tribhuvanakranta Visnu there to mark the southern most extent of Champa 8 9 In 1757 Vietnamese lords had acquired control of Ca Mau By the 1860s French colonists had established control over the Mekong Delta and established the colony of French Cochinchina Vietnamese period edit See also Nguyễn lords Nam tiến Mạc Cửu and Cambodian Vietnamese War nbsp Scene of a Mekong Delta town in 18th century Watercolour lithograph by Jean Francois Daumont circa 1760 The Vietnamese acquisition of the Mekong Delta can be divided into two phases Marriage agreement and interventions 1620 1698 edit In 1621 Lord Nguyễn Phuc Nguyen arranged a contract marriage between his daughter Nguyễn Phuc Ngọc Vạn and Cambodian king Chey Chettha II in exchange to the establishment of a Vietnamese trade port in town of Prei Nokor now Ho Chi Minh City and tax exemptions for Vietnamese settlers moving into the area Vice versa the Nguyễn will help Cambodia politically and militarily to counter against Ayutthaya Kingdom Siamese pressures Earliest Vietnamese settlements in the Mekong Delta appeared and centered around Đồng Nai and Mỗi Xoai today Ba Rịa Vũng Tau 10 In 1658 without any excuses the Nguyễn invaded Cambodia and deposed the only Khmer Muslim king Ramathipadi I Sultan Ibrahim 16 years later the Nguyễn again militarily interfered Cambodian internal royal affairs putting Prince Ang Nan into power The Nguyễn invited fleeing Chinese refugees to settle in Mekong River entrance towns of Mỹ Tho and Bien Hoa In 1688 the Chinese revolted against Nguyễn lords King Ang Nan died in 1691 and the revolt was soon resolved 11 After fully subjugating Champa in 1697 the Nguyễn lords sent marquis Nguyễn Hữu Cảnh and a small expedition to annex Prei Nokor renamed it to Gia Định establishing Vietnamese administrative structures and explore deep into the lower Mekong Delta from Mỹ Tho to An Giang 11 King Chey Chettha IV of Cambodia tried to stop the Vietnamese but was defeated by Nguyễn Hữu Cảnh in 1700 In February 1700 he invaded Cambodia from An Giang In March the Vietnamese expedition under Cảnh and a Chinese general Trần Thượng Xuyen Chen Shangchuan defeated the main Cambodian army at Bich Đoi citadel king Chey Chettha IV took flight while his nephew Ang Em surrendered to the invaders as the Vietnamese captured Phnom Penh As a result Saigon and Long An were officially obtained by the Nguyễn more Vietnamese settlers moved into the new conquered lands In 1708 Mạc Cửu of Ha Tien also pledged loyalty to the Nguyễn lords 11 Conquest of the Mekong Delta 1754 1757 edit In the 18th century the edges of the Mekong Delta bordering with Cambodia had been mainly inhabited by isolated communities of Shafi i Chams and Islamic Cham Malays collectively known as the Cham Barw or Con Man Kunlun by Vietnamese sources while most of the Delta remained under Cambodian control Under the reign of king Chey Chettha V in 1750 he began subduing and persecuting the Cham Malay Muslims who at the time were close allies of the Nguyễn lords Using that pretext Lord Nguyễn Phuc Khoat launched an full scale invasion of Cambodia in 1754 with the army under the command of general Nguyễn Cư Trinh 10 000 Vietnamese troops divided into two groups rolled into Cambodia and completely flattened Cambodian resistance and easily captured its capital Phnom Penh in summer of 1754 King Chey Chettha V fled to Longvek 12 The Muslims rose up and joined the Vietnamese chasing the Cambodians Due to heavy spring rain the Muslim segment lost contact with the main army of Nguyễn Cư Trinh and were surrounded by 10 000 Cambodians at Vo Ta An in early 1755 Muslim troops piled carts and wagons into a defensive perimeter and stood their ground against Cambodian attacks until being relieved by Nguyễn Cư Trinh With the help of mediation by Mạc Thien Tứ of Ha Tien a ceasefire agreement was reached between King Chey Chettha V and Lord Nguyễn Phuc Khoat in 1756 Cambodia ceded Go Cong and Tan An to the Vietnamese Chey Chettha V was deposed while Ang Tong was restored as King of Cambodia Ang Tong offered the Nguyễn two districts of Tra Vinh Preah Trapeang and Ba Thắc Bassac as tributes 13 In 1757 Ang Tong died and was succeeded Outey II With the help of the Nguyễn Lords and Pricipality of Ha Tien Outey II regained the throne from usurpers He gave all remaining Mekong Delta lands to Mạc Thien Tứ and Mạc Thien Tứ swapped all these areas to the Nguyễn in exchange for the Mạc clan s total autonomy in Ha Tien The new lands were divided into two districts Rạch Gia and Ca Mau 13 By 1757 all of today s Mekong Delta including the Cape Ca Mau firmly came under Vietnamese control 13 Nguyễn dynasty French and modern period edit In 1802 Nguyễn Anh crowned himself emperor Gia Long and unified all the territories comprising modern Vietnam including the Mekong Delta Upon the conclusion of the Cochinchina Campaign in the 1860s the area became part of Cochinchina France s first colony in Vietnam and later part of French Indochina 14 Beginning during the French colonial period the French patrolled and fought on the waterways of the Mekong Delta region with their Divisions navales d assaut Dinassaut a tactic which lasted throughout the First Indochina War and was later employed by the US Navy Mobile Riverine Force 15 During the Vietnam War also referred to as the Second Indochina War the Delta region saw savage fighting between Viet Cong NLF guerrillas and the US 9th Infantry Division and units of the United States Navy s swift boats and hovercraft PACVs plus the Army of the Republic of Vietnam 7th 9th and 21st Infantry Divisions As a military region the Mekong Delta was encompassed by the IV Corps Tactical Zone IV CTZ In 1975 North Vietnamese soldiers and Viet Cong soldiers launched a massive invasion in many parts of South Vietnam While I II and III Corps collapsed significantly IV Corps was still highly intact due to under Major General Nguyen Khoa Nam overseeing strong military operations to prevent VC taking over any important regional districts Brigadier General Le Van Hung the head of 21st Division commander stayed office in Can Tho to continue defending successfully against VC On 29 April 1975 the last U S Consul General Terry McNamara and his diplomats evacuated by marine boat from Can Tho to the South China Sea 16 When the South Vietnamese President Duong Van Minh ordered unconditional surrender both ARVN generals in Can Tho General Le Van Hung and Nguyen Khoa Nam committed suicide At Binh Thuy Air Base some ARVN soldiers and air base personnel who defended the air base were evacuated by helicopters and several jet fighters to Thailand shortly after hearing Minh s surrender Within hours VC soldiers occupied the base and captured those ARVN and air base personnel who didn t escape 17 In My Tho Brigadier General Tran Van Hai who was in charged protecting National Highway 4 now NH1A from Saigon to Can Tho committed suicide Tran was one of the three ARVN generals who refused to be evacuated by American when the North Vietnamese soldiers invaded Saigon 18 Several ARVN soldiers continued to fight against the VC but later either surrendered or disbanded when faced with VC counterattacks 19 In the late 1970s the Khmer Rouge regime attacked Vietnam in an attempt to reconquer the Delta region This campaign precipitated the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia and subsequent downfall of the Khmer Rouge Geography edit nbsp Mekong River Delta from space February 1996 The Mekong Delta as a region lies immediately to the west of Ho Chi Minh City also called Saigon by locals roughly forming a triangle stretching from Mỹ Tho in the east to Chau Đốc and Ha Tien in the northwest down to Ca Mau at the southernmost tip of Vietnam and including the island of Phu Quốc 20 The Mekong Delta region of Vietnam displays a variety of physical landscapes but is dominated by flat flood plains in the south with a few hills in the north and west This diversity of terrain was largely the product of tectonic uplift and folding brought about by the collision of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates about 50 million years ago The soil of the lower Delta consists mainly of sediment from the Mekong and its tributaries deposited over thousands of years as the river changed its course due to the flatness of the low lying terrain 21 The present Mekong Delta system has two major distributary channels both discharging directly into the East Sea The river carries over 160 million tons of sediment including 6 5 million tons of sand each year 22 23 Historic sediment loads are estimated to be higher but have been reduced due to damming for hydropower in the upper reaches of the Mekong River Basin and sand mining in the riverbed 24 Sediment is the driving factor in building the delta seaward progradation and upward aggradation from seasonal flooding and is counteracted by coastal erosion and sea level rise The Holocene history of the Mekong Delta shows delta progradation of about 200 km during the last 6 kyr During the Middle Holocene the Mekong River was discharging waters into both the East Sea and the Gulf of Thailand 25 The water entering the Gulf of Thailand was flowing via a palaeochannel located within the western part of the delta north of the Camau Peninsula 26 Upper Pleistocene prodeltaic and delta front sediments interpreted as the deposits of the palaeo Mekong River were reported from central basin of the Gulf of Thailand 27 28 The Mekong Delta is the region with the smallest forest area in Vietnam 300 000 ha 740 000 acres or 7 7 of the total area are forested as of 2011 The only provinces with large forests are Ca Mau Province and Kien Giang Province together accounting for two thirds of the region s forest area while forests cover less than 5 of the area of all of the other eight provinces and cities 29 Coastal erosion edit Shoreline change m yr Zones 1973 1979 1973 1979 1987 1995 1987 1995 1987 1995 43 yr averageZone 1 8 66 8 07 12 07 9 68 4 52 8 87Zone 2 10 32 8 00 12 22 13 15 20 9 12 79Zone 3 28 15 23 33 27 55 19 48 11 83 21 53Zone 4 8 43 2 48 3 57 10 03 4 53 1 66All areas 7 77 6 11 7 84 2 75 1 42 4 36Area change km2 yr Zones 1973 1979 1973 1979 1987 1995 1987 1995 1987 1995 43 yr averageZone 1 1 94 2 01 2 96 2 25 1 15 2 12Zone 2 1 39 1 87 2 23 1 75 1 71 1 71Zone 3 2 82 2 16 1 71 1 09 1 64 1 99Zone 4 0 95 0 35 0 53 0 56 1 13 0 18All areas 4 32 2 64 1 91 1 03 0 05 2 23From 1973 to 2005 the Mekong Delta s seaward shoreline growth decreased gradually from a mean of 7 8 m yr to 2 8 m yr becoming negative after 2005 with a retreat rate of 1 4 m yr The net deltaic land area gain has also been slowing with the mean rate decreasing from 4 3 km2 yr 1973 1979 to 1 0 km2 yr 1995 2005 and then to 0 05 km2 yr 2005 2015 Thus in about 2005 the subaerial Mekong Delta transitioned from a constructive mode to an erosional or destructive mode 30 31 Climate change concerns edit Being a low lying coastal region the Mekong Delta is particularly susceptible to floods resulting from rises in sea level due to climate change 32 The Climate Change Research Institute at Cần Thơ University in studying the possible consequences of climate change has predicted that besides suffering from drought brought on by seasonal decrease in rainfall many provinces in the Mekong Delta will be flooded by the year 2030 The most serious cases are predicted to be the provinces of Bến Tre and Long An of which 51 and 49 respectively are expected to be flooded if the sea level rises by 1 m 3 ft 3 in 33 Plans are currently being made to breach dykes in the upper Mekong delta as a sedimentation enhancing strategy This will not only increase the water retention capacity of the upper delta region alleviating pressure on the lower delta but also reintroduce sediment rich water which may result in land elevation 34 Another problem caused by climate change is the increasing soil salinity near the coasts Bến Tre Province is planning to reforest coastal regions to counter this trend 35 The duration of inundations at an important road in the city of Can Tho is expected to continue to rise from the current total of 72 inundated days per year to 270 days by 2030 and 365 days by 2050 This is attributed to the combined influence of sea level rise and land subsidence 36 which occurs at about 1 1 cm 0 43 in annually 37 Several projects and initiatives on local regional and state levels work to counter this trend and save the Mekong Delta For example there exists a programme for integrated coastal management that is supported by Germany and Australia 38 In August 2019 a Nature Communications study using an improved measure of elevation estimation found that the delta was much lower than previous estimates only a mean 0 82 m 2 ft 8 in above sea level with 75 of the delta an area where 12 million people currently live falling below 1 m 3 ft 3 in 37 It is expected that a majority of the delta will be below sea level by 2050 39 Demographics edit nbsp Mekong DeltaThe inhabitants of the Mekong Delta region are predominantly ethnic Vietnamese It is home to the largest population of Khmer outside of Cambodia The Khmer minority population live primarily in the Tra Vinh Soc Trăng and Muslim Chăm in Tan Chau An Giang provinces There are also sizeable Hoa ethnic Chinese populations in the Kien Giang and Tra Vinh provinces The region had a population of 17 33 million people in 2011 29 The population of the Mekong Delta has been growing relatively slowly in recent years mainly due to out migration The region s population only increased by 471 600 people between 2005 and 2011 while 166 400 people migrated out in 2011 alone Together with the central coast regions it has one of the slowest growing populations in the country Population growth rates have been between 0 3 and 0 5 between 2008 and 2011 while they have been over 2 in the neighbouring southeastern region 29 Net migration has been negative in all of these years The region also has a relatively low fertility rate at 1 8 children per woman in 2010 and 2011 down from 2 0 in 2005 29 Provinces edit Province LevelDivision Capital Area Population May 2023 Populationdensity km2 mile persons km2 persons mile An Giang Long Xuyen 3 536 8 1 365 6 2 068 251 625 0 1 619Bạc Lieu Bạc Lieu 2 584 1 997 7 1 109 425 317 4 822Bến Tre Bến Tre 2 360 2 911 3 1 337 704 573 4 1 485Ca Mau Ca Mau 5 331 7 2 058 6 1 375 612 231 1 599Đồng Thap Cao Lanh 3 376 4 1 303 6 1 844 768 494 0 1 279Hậu Giang Vị Thanh 1 601 1 618 2 859 053 497 7 1 289Kien Giang Rạch Gia 6 348 3 2 451 1 1 800 451 265 4 687Long An Tan An 4 493 8 1 735 1 1 737 963 316 7 820Soc Trăng Soc Trăng 3 312 3 1 278 9 1 261 334 385 3 998Tiền Giang Mỹ Tho 2 484 2 959 2 1 908 352 691 3 1 790Tra Vinh Tra Vinh 2 295 1 886 1 1 072 720 451 7 1 170Vĩnh Long Vĩnh Long 1 479 1 571 1 1 101 251 714 6 1 851Cần Thơ municipality 1 401 6 541 2 1 462 605 813 3 2 106Economy edit nbsp Floating market of Cần ThơThe Mekong Delta is by far Vietnam s most productive region in agriculture and aquaculture while its role in industry and foreign direct investment FDI is much smaller Agriculture edit 2 6 million ha in the Mekong Delta are used for agriculture which is one fourth of Vietnam s total 29 Due to its mostly flat terrain and few forested areas except for Ca Mau Province almost two thirds 64 5 of the region s land can be used for agriculture The share of agricultural land exceeds 80 in Cần Thơ and neighbouring Hậu Giang Province and is below 50 only in Ca Mau Province 32 and Bạc Lieu Province 42 29 The region s land used for growing cereals makes up 47 of the national total more than northern and central Vietnam combined Most of this is used for rice cultivation Rice output in 2011 was 23 186 000t 54 8 of Vietnam s total output The strongest producers are Kien Giang Province An Giang Province and Đồng Thap Province producing over 3 million tonnes each and almost 11 million tonnes together Any two of these provinces produce more than the entire Red River Delta 29 Only three provinces produce less than 1 million tonnes of rice Bạc Lieu Province Ca Mau Province Bến Tre Province 29 Fishery edit The Mekong Delta is also Vietnam s most important fishing region It has almost half of Vietnam s capacity of offshore fishing vessels mostly in Kien Gian with almost 1 4 Bến Tre Ca Mau Tiền Giang Bạc Lieu Fishery output was at 3 168 million tons 58 3 of Vietnam and has experienced rapid growth from 1 84mt in 2005 29 All of Vietnam s largest fishery producers with over 300kt of output are in the Mekong Delta Kien Giang Ca Mau Đồng Thap An Giang and Bến Tre 29 Despite the region s large offshore fishing fleet 2 3 2 13 million tonnes out of Vietnam s total of 2 93 of fishery output actually comes from aquaculture 29 December 2015 aquaculture production was estimated at 357 thousand tons up 11 compared to the same period last year bringing the total aquaculture production 3516 thousand tons in 2015 up 3 0 compared to the same period Although aquaculture production has increased overall aquaculture still faces many difficulties coming from export markets Industry and FDI edit The Mekong Delta is not strongly industrialized but is still the third out of seven regions in terms of industrial gross output The region s industry accounts for 10 of Vietnam s total as of 2011 29 Almost half of the region s industrial production is concentrated in Cần Thơ Long An Province and Ca Mau Province Cần Thơ is the economic center of the region and more industrialized than the other provinces Long An has been the only province of the region to attract part of the manufacturing booming around Ho Chi Minh City and is seen by other provinces as an example of successful FDI attraction 40 Ca Mau Province is home to a large industrial zone including power plants and a fertiliser factory 41 Accumulated foreign direct investment in the Mekong Delta until 2011 was 10 257bn 29 It has been highly concentrated in a few provinces led by Long An and Kien Giang with over 3bn each Tiền Giang and Cần Thơ around 850m Ca Mau 780m and Hậu Giang 673m while the other provinces have received less than 200m each 29 In general the performance of the region in attracting FDI is evaluated as unsatisfactory by local analysts and policymakers 40 Companies from Ho Chi Minh City have also invested heavily in the region Their investment from 2000 to June 2011 accounted for 199 trillion VND almost 10bn 42 Infrastructure editThe construction of the Cần Thơ Bridge a cable stayed bridge over the largest distributary of the Mekong River was completed on April 12 2010 three years after a collapse that killed 54 and injured nearly 100 workers The bridge replaces the ferry system that currently runs along National Route 1 and links Vĩnh Long Province and Cần Thơ city The cost of construction is estimated to be 4 842 trillion Vietnamese đồng approximately 342 6 million United States dollars making it the most expensive bridge in Vietnam 43 Culture editLife in the Mekong Delta revolves much around the river and many of the villages are often accessible by rivers and canals rather than by road The region is home to cải lương a form of Kinh Vietnamese folk opera Cai Luong Singing appeared in Mekong Delta in the early 20th century Cai Luong Singing is often performed in the soundtrack of guitar and zither Cai Luong is a kind of play telling a story A sort of play often includes two main parts the dialogue part and the singing part to express their thoughts and emotions 44 Cuisine edit The Mekong Delta cuisine relies heavily on fresh products which is abundant in the new land with heavy use of seafoods and unique ingredients of the region such as palm sugar basa fish and wild herbs and flowers such as đien điển so đũa keo neo The history of the region being a newly settled area reflects on its cuisine with Ẩm thực khẩn hoang or Settlers cuisine means dishes are prepared fresh from wild and newly caught ingredients The cuisine is also influenced by Khmer Cham and Chinese settlers This differs itself from the cuisine of other regions of Vietnam Literature and movies edit Nguyễn Ngọc Tư an author from Ca Mau province has written many popular books about life in the Mekong Delta such as Ngọn đen khong tắt The Inextinguishable Light 2000 Ong ngoại Grandpa 2001 Biển người menh mong The Ocean of People 2003 Giao thừa New Year s Eve 2003 Nước chảy may troi Flowing Waters Flying Clouds 2004 Canh đồng bất tận The Endless Field 2005 The 2004 film The Buffalo Boy is set in Ca Mau province Some Vietnamese films on the topic of life in the Mekong Delta attract the attention of a large audience Tinh Mẫu Tử Mother and child love 2019 Phận lam dau Bride s fate 2018 etc See also editGMS Environment Operations Center Greater Mekong Sub region Academic and Research Network Mekong Basin Disease SurveillanceNotes editReferences edit Statistical Handbook of Vietnam 2014 Archived July 6 2015 at the Wayback Machine General Statistics Office of Vietnam Mekong Delta Archived September 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine on ARCBC ASEAN Regional Centre for Biodiversity Conservation site Brocheux Pierre 1995 The Mekong Delta Ecology Economy and Revolution 1860 1960 Center for Southeast Asian Studies University of Wisconsin Madison p 1 Turner Robert F 1975 Vietnamese Communism Its Origin and Development Hoover Institution Press Ashley Fantz Mekong a treasure trove of 1 000 newly discovered species Archived November 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine CNN December 16 2008 Robert M Salkin Trudy Ring 1996 Paul E Schellinger Robert M Salkin eds Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Vol 5 Taylor amp Francis p 353 ISBN 1 884964 04 4 Stark M Sovath B 2001 Recent research on emergent complexity in Cambodia s Mekong Bulletin of the Indo Pacific Prehistory Association 21 5 85 98 Golzio Karl Heinz 2004 Inscriptions of Campa based on the editions and translations of Abel Bergaigne Etienne Aymonier Louis Finot Edouard Huber and other French scholars and of the work of R C Majumdar Newly presented with minor corrections of texts and translations together with calculations of given dates Shaker Verlag pp 199 200 Griffiths Arlo Lepoutre Amandine Southworth William A Phần Thanh 2012 The inscriptions of Campa at the Museum of Cham sculpture in Đa Nẵng Văn khắc Chămpa tại bảo tang đieu khắc Chăm Đa Nẵng Vietnam National University in Ho Chi Minh City Publishing House published in collaboration with EFEO and the Center for Vietnamese and Southeast Asian Studies Hồ Chi Minh City Song Jeong Nam Sự mở rộng lanh thổ Đại Việt dưới thời Hậu Le va tinh chất Korean University of Foreign Studies Seoul 2010 p 22 a b c Song Jeong Nam Sự mở rộng lanh thổ Đại Việt dưới thời Hậu Le va tinh chất Korean University of Foreign Studies Seoul 2010 p 23 Song Jeong Nam Sự mở rộng lanh thổ Đại Việt dưới thời Hậu Le va tinh chất Korean University of Foreign Studies Seoul 2010 p 24 a b c Song Jeong Nam Sự mở rộng lanh thổ Đại Việt dưới thời Hậu Le va tinh chất Korean University of Foreign Studies Seoul 2010 p 25 Robert M Salkin Trudy Ring 1996 Paul E Schellinger Robert M Salkin eds Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Vol 5 Taylor amp Francis p 354 ISBN 1 884964 04 4 Leulliot Nowfel Dinassaut Riverine warfare in Indochina 1945 1954 Apocalypse Not The Evacuation from Can Tho Vietnam April 1975 Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Day of Anguish Still Grips Those Who Fled Surrender Fifteen years ago today the fall of Saigon irrevocably changed a multitude of lives forever Los Angeles Times April 30 1990 Elliott David 2003 The Vietnamese War Revolution and Social Change in the Mekong Volume 1 New York pp 1376 1377 ISBN 9781315698809 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Holdouts War Never Dies Retrieved April 1 2019 viajes a Vietnam rutasvietnam viajes ES in European Spanish Physical and Geographical Features Mekong River Awareness Kit Convention on Biological Diversity Archived from the original on August 8 2009 Retrieved June 18 2010 Milliman John D Farnsworth Katherine L March 28 2013 River Discharge to the Coastal Ocean A Global Synthesis Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 49350 5 Stephens J D Allison M A Di Leonardo D R Weathers H D Ogston A S McLachlan R L Xing F Meselhe E A September 1 2017 Sand dynamics in the Mekong River channel and export to the coastal ocean Continental Shelf Research Sediment and hydro dynamics of the Mekong Delta from tidal river to continental shelf 147 38 50 Bibcode 2017CSR 147 38S doi 10 1016 j csr 2017 08 004 ISSN 0278 4343 Jordan Christian Tiede Jan Lojek Oliver Visscher Jan Apel Heiko Nguyen Hong Quan Quang Chau Nguyen Xuan Schlurmann Torsten November 28 2019 Sand mining in the Mekong Delta revisited current scales of local sediment deficits Scientific Reports 9 1 17823 Bibcode 2019NatSR 917823J doi 10 1038 s41598 019 53804 z ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 6882805 PMID 31780684 Liu J P DeMaster D J Nittrouer C A Eidam E F Nguyen T T 2017 A seismic study of the Mekong subaqueous delta Proximal versus distal sediment accumulation Cont Shelf Res 147 197 212 Bibcode 2017CSR 147 197L doi 10 1016 j csr 2017 07 009 Ta T K O Nguyen V L Tateishi M Kobayashi I Tanabe S Saito Y 2002 Holocene delta evolution and sediment discharge of the Mekong River southern Vietnam Quaternary Science Reviews 21 16 17 1807 1819 Bibcode 2002QSRv 21 1807T doi 10 1016 S0277 3791 02 00007 0 Puchala R 2014 Morphology and origin of modern seabed features in the central basin of the Gulf of Thailand PhD thesis doi 10 13140 RG 2 1 3891 0808 Xue Zuo Liu J Paul Demaster Dave Van Nguyen Lap Ta Thi Kim Oanh 2010 Late Holocene Evolution of the Mekong Subaqueous Delta Southern Vietnam Marine Geology 269 1 2 46 60 Bibcode 2010MGeol 269 46X doi 10 1016 J Margeo 2009 12 005 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n General Statistics Office 2012 Statistical Yearbook of Vietnam 2011 Statistical Publishing House Hanoi Liu J P DeMaster D J Nguyen T T Saito Y Nguyen V L Ta T K O Li X 2017 Stratigraphic formation of the Mekong River Delta and its recent shoreline changes Oceanography 30 3 72 83 doi 10 5670 oceanog 2017 316 Li X Liu J P Saito Y Nguyen V L 2017 Recent evolution of the Mekong Delta and the impact of dams Earth Science Reviews 175 1 17 Bibcode 2017ESRv 175 1L doi 10 1016 j earscirev 2017 10 008 Report Flooded Future Global vulnerability to sea level rise worse than previously understood climatecentral org October 29 2019 Archived from the original on November 2 2019 Retrieved November 4 2019 Mekong Delta more flood and drought Archived November 2 2022 at the Wayback Machine VietnamNet Bridge March 19 2009 van Halsema G 2019 Breaching dykes in the Mekong Delta Wageningen World 1 34 39 Xay dựng rừng phong hộ để thich ứng với biến đổi khi hậu Saigon Times June 6 2011 Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved January 5 2013 Takagi Hiroshi Thao Nguyen Anh Le September 21 2016 Sea Level Rise and Land Subsidence Impacts on Flood Projections for the Mekong Delta s Largest City Sustainability MDPI 8 9 959 doi 10 3390 su8090959 a b Minderhoud P S J Coumou L Erkens G Middelkoop H Stouthamer E 2019 Mekong delta much lower than previously assumed in sea level rise impact assessments Nature Communications 10 1 3847 Bibcode 2019NatCo 10 3847M doi 10 1038 s41467 019 11602 1 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 6713785 PMID 31462638 Severin Peters Christian Henckes March 18 2017 Saving the Mekong Delta D C development and cooperation Retrieved April 19 2017 Lu Denise Flavelle Christopher October 29 2019 Rising Seas Will Erase More Cities by 2050 New Research Shows The New York Times Retrieved September 12 2020 a b Nang nội lực hut vốn FDI vao ĐBSCL Saigon Times December 7 2012 Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved January 5 2013 Gas fertiliser industrial zone opens in Ca Mau Viet Nam News October 27 2012 Retrieved January 5 2013 TPHCM đa đầu tư vao ĐBSCL gần 199 000 tỉ đồng Saigon Times July 25 2011 Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved January 5 2013 SE Asia s longest cable stayed bridge underway in Can Tho September 28 2004 Archived from the original on September 1 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 Cai Luong The Traditional Music Of The Mekong Delta Retrieved October 2 2019 Further reading editRenaud F G and C Kuenzer 2012 The Mekong Delta System Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta Springer Environmental Science and Engineering Dordrecht Springer ISBN 978 94 007 3961 1 Kuenzer C and F G Renaud 2012 Climate Change and Environmental Change in River Deltas Globally In Renaud F G and C Kuenzer eds The Mekong Delta System Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta Springer Environmental Science and Engineering Dordrecht Springer pp 7 48 Renaud F G and C Kuenzer 2012 Introduction In Renaud F G and C Kuenzer eds The Mekong Delta System Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta Springer Environmental Science and Engineering Dordrecht Springer pp 3 6 Moder F C Kuenzer Z Xu P Leinenkugel and Q Bui Van 2012 IWRM for the Mekong Basin In Renaud F G and C Kuenzer eds The Mekong Delta System Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta Springer Environmental Science and Engineering Dordrecht Springer pp 133 166 Klinger V G Wehrmann G Gebhardt and C Kuenzer 2012 A Water related Web based Information System for the Sustainable Development of the Mekong Delta In Renaud F G and C Kuenzer eds The Mekong Delta System Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta Springer Environmental Science and Engineering Dordrecht Springer pp 423 444 Gebhardt S L D Nguyen and C Kuenzer 2012 Mangrove Ecosystems in the Mekong Delta Overcoming Uncertainties in Inventory Mapping Using Satellite Remote Sensing Data In Renaud F G and C Kuenzer eds The Mekong Delta System Interdisciplinary Analyses of a River Delta Springer Environmental Science and Engineering Dordrecht Springer pp 315 330 Kuenzer C H Guo J Huth P Leinenkugel X Li and S Dech 2013 Flood Mapping and Flood Dynamics of the Mekong Delta ENVISAT ASAR WSM Based Time Series Analyses In Remote Sensing 5 pp 687 715 DOI 10 3390 rs5020687 Gebhardt S J Huth N Lam Dao A Roth and C Kuenzer 2012 A comparison of TerraSAR X Quadpol backscattering with RapidEye multispectral vegetation indices over rice fields in the Mekong Delta Vietnam In International Journal of Remote Sensing 33 24 pp 7644 7661 Leinenkugel P T Esch and C Kuenzer 2011 Settlement detection and impervious surface estimation in the Mekong Delta using optical and SAR remote sensing data In Remote Sensing of Environment 115 12 pp 3007 3019 Kuenzer C I Klein T Ullmann E Foufoula Georgiou R Baumhauer and S Dech 2015 Remote Sensing of River Delta Inundation Exploiting the Potential of Coarse Spatial Resolution Temporally Dense MODIS Time Series In Remote Sensing 7 pp 8516 8542 DOI 10 3390 rs70708516 Kuenzer C H Guo I Schlegel V Tuan X Li and S Dech 2013 Varying scale and capability of envisat ASAR WSM TerraSAR X scansar and TerraSAR X Stripmap data to assess urban flood situations A case study of the mekong delta in Can Tho province In Remote Sensing 5 10 pp 5122 5142 DOI 10 3390 rs5105122 External links editThe WISDOM Project a Water related Information System for the Mekong Delta Image Google map of the Mekong Delta Fruits found at Mekong Delta Archived July 23 2019 at the Wayback MachineClimate change edit Mekong Delta Climate Change Forum 2009 Documents International Centre for Environmental Management Release of arsenic to deep groundwater in the Mekong Delta Vietnam linked to pumping induced land subsidence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mekong Delta amp oldid 1193682791, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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