(Redirected from Lancang):''For the alcoholic beverage of the same name, see
Mekhong whiskey''
The 'Mekong' is one of the world's major
rivers. It is regarded as the 10th-longest river in the world, and the 10th-largest by volume (discharging 475 km³ of water annually). Its estimated length is 4880 kilometres, and it drains an area of 810,000 km².
[1] From the
Tibetan Plateau it runs through
China's
Yunnan province,
Myanmar,
Thailand,
Laos,
Cambodia and
Vietnam. All except China and Myanmar belong to the
Mekong River Commission. The extreme seasonal variations in flow and the presence of
rapids and
waterfalls have made
navigation extremely difficult.
Names
The river was originally named by the local
Tai peoples as Mae Nam Khong, Mae Khong for short, meaning Kong River or "Mother of all rivers". This was picked up and phoneticized in the
Chinese as ''Méigōng Hé'' (湄公河) for the external part, without realizing it became "River Kong River", the same redundancy as in English. In China for most of its length it is known as the "Lancang River" (澜沧江, ''Láncāng Jiāng''). In
Burmese, it is called the ''Mae Khaung'' (ແມ່ນ້ຳຂອງ) while in
Thai it is ''Mae Nam Khong'' (แม่น้ำโขง), in
Laotian (ແມ່ນ້ຳຂອງ) ''Mènam Khong'', in
Cambodian ''Mékôngk'' or ''Tonle Thom'' and in
Vietnamese ''Cửu Long Giang''.
In Thai, Kong () is a species of crocodile; some believe this is tone-shifted from () Kod, or () kong, both adjectives to describe curves or meanders of a river or road.
[2]
Course

The Mekong in southern Laos.

Mekong River Delta from space, February 1996 (south is at the top)
The river's source, and therefore its exact length, is uncertain, due to the existence of several
tributaries in an inaccessible environment. According to the China Science Exploration Association survey, the source is the Lasagongma spring, at an altitude of 5224 metres.
[3] This spring is located on Mt. Guozongmucha, and forms the Zayaqu, which has been identified by the Chinese Academy of Sciences as the headwaters of the Mekong, within northwestern China's
Qinghai Province. An earlier expedition by Michel Piessel had identified the Zanaqu as the headwaters, at the Rupsa-La pass (further west, at an altitude of 4975 m).
[4] As a consequence of the difficulty in determining the location of the headwaters, figures for the Mekong's total length vary from 4350 to 4909 km.
Approximately half the river's length is in China, where it is called the ''Dza Chu'' in Tibetan in its upper course in Tibet (), and more generally the ''Lancang'' in
Chinese (), meaning the "turbulent river". Much of this stretch consists of deep
gorges, and the river leaves China at an altitude of only 500 meters. The entire river is known as the ''Meigong'' in Chinese ().
The river next forms the border between Myanmar and Laos for 200 km, at the end of which it meets the
tributary Ruak River at the
Golden Triangle. This point also marks the division between the ''Upper'' and ''Lower Mekong''.

The Mekong near the Golden Triangle
The river then divides Laos and Thailand, before a stretch passing through Laos alone. It is known as ''Maè Nam Khong'' (Mother of all rivers) in both
Lao and
Thai (แม่น้ำโขง). The Lao stretch is characterised by gorges,
rapids and depths of as little as half a meter in the dry season. It widens south of
Luang Prabang, where it has been known to flood to 4 km in width and reach 100 metres in depth, although its course remains extremely inconsistent. The endangered
Giant Mekong Catfish was traditionally caught in this region once yearly, following auspicious rites officiated by the quondam royal family.
The river again marks the Lao-Thai border in the stretch which passes
Vientiane, followed by a short stretch through Laos alone. This includes the
Si Phan Don (four thousand islands) region above the
Khone Falls near the Cambodian border, where endangered dolphins can be viewed. The falls are all but impassable to river traffic.
In Cambodia, the river is called the ''Mékôngk'' or ''Tonle Thom'' (great river). The
Sambor rapids above
Kratie are the last to impede navigation. Just above
Phnom Penh is the confluence with the
Tonle Sap, the main Cambodian tributary. Below Phnom Penh, it divides into the
Bassac and the Mekong proper, which both flow into the
Mekong Delta in Vietnam.
In
Vietnamese, the river as a whole is known as ''Mê Kông''. The part flowing through Vietnam, known as ''Sông Cửu Long'' (river of nine dragons), divides into two major branches, the '' Tiền Giang'' (Front River) and ''Hậu Giang'' (Back River). These in turn enter the sea through nine estuaries, thus the Vietnamese name.
About 90 million people rely on the river. The area they live in, known as the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS), comprises Yunnan Province in China, Myanmar, Lao PDR, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam.
[5] The main livelihood of the people of the GMS is rice production. Approximately 140,000 km² of rice are grown in the GMS.
[6] A huge number of rice varieties are grown along the Mekong. Of approximately 100,000 rice accessions in the Rice Gene Bank of the International Rice Research Institute
(IRRI), about 40,000 come from the GMS.
[7]
History

A map of 1715, incorrectly showing the Chao Praya river as a branch of the Mekong

The members of the French Mekong Expedition of 1866
The difficulty of navigating the river has meant that it has divided, rather than united, the people who live near it. The earliest known settlements date to 2100 BCE, with
Ban Chiang being an excellent example of that early Iron Age culture. The earliest recorded civilisation was the 1st century Indianised-Khmer culture of
Funan, in the Mekong Delta. Excavations at
Oc Eo, near modern
An Giang, have found coins from as far away as the
Roman Empire. This was succeeded by the
Khmer culture
Chenla state by around the 5th century. The
Khmer empire of
Angkor was the last great Indianized state in the region. From around the time of the fall of the Khmer empire, the Mekong was the frontline between the emergent states of
Siam and Tonkin (North Vietnam), with Laos and Cambodia, then situated on the coast, torn between their influence.
The first
European to encounter the Mekong was the
Portuguese Antonio de Faria in 1540; a European map of 1563 depicts the river, although even by then little was known of the river upstream of the delta. European interest was sporadic: the
Spaniards and Portuguese mounted some missionary and trade expeditions, while the
Dutch Gerrit van Wuysthoff led an expedition up the river as far as Vientiane in 1641-42.
The
French took a serious interest in the region in the mid-19th century, capturing
Saigon, from Vietnamese invaders, in 1861, and establishing a protectorate over Cambodia in 1863.
The first systematic exploration began with the
French Mekong Expedition led by
Ernest Doudard de Lagrée and
Francis Garnier, which ascended the river from its mouth to
Yunnan between 1866 to 1868. Their chief finding was that the Mekong had too many falls and rapids to ever be useful for
navigation. The river's source was located by
Pyotr Kuzmich Kozlov in 1900.
From 1893, the French extended their control of the river into Laos, establishing
French Indochina by the first decade of the 20th century. This lasted until the
First and
Second Indochina Wars ended French and
American involvement in the region.
After the Vietnam War, the tensions between the U.S.-backed Thai government and the new
Communist governments in the other countries prevented cooperation on use of the river.
Bridges
The
Thai–Lao Friendship Bridge () connects
Nong Khai city with Vientiane in Laos. The 1170-metre-long bridge has two 3.5 m-wide lanes with an unfinished single railway line in the middle. On March 20, 2004 the Thai and Lao governments agreed to extend the railway to Tha Nalaeng in Laos
The
Second Thai–Lao Friendship Bridge connects
Mukdahan to
Savannakhet. The two-lane, 12-metre-wide, 1600-metre-long bridge opened to the general public on January 9, 2007.
There is also a third bridge, located in Champasak province, in Laos. Unlike the Friendship bridges, this bridge is not a border crossing. It is 1380 meters long, and was completed in 2000.
Cambodia has one two-lane bridge located near the city of Kompong Cham, on the road linking Phnom Penh with the remote provinces of Rattanakiri and Mondolkiri, and further away Laos.
The Upper Mekong has several bridges in China as well.
Environmental concerns
The two most controversial current issues are the building of
dams and the blasting of rapids.
A number of dams have already been built on the river's tributaries, notably the
Pak Mun dam in Thailand. This has been criticised on grounds of cost as well as damage to the environment and to the livelihoods of affected villagers, though none have been built on the main part itself.
China is engaged in an extensive program of dam-building on the river itself: it has already completed one at
Manwan, a second is under construction at
Dachaoshan, and another twelve are under consideration.
Poverty stricken and war torn
Cambodia is one nation that is completely dependent on the river for food and the vast majority of its fledgling economy. The annual floods provide much needed water for crops of the otherwise dry dusty land, and to refresh
Tonle Sap, yet its major cities are all vulnerable to flooding. The
Mekong River Commission, a panel of the region's nations, has accused China of blatant disregard for the nations downstream in its plans to dam the river in an effort to stop the dams, but to no avail. Since the building of the first Chinese dam, many species have become
endangered including the Mekong
dolphin and
manatee, water levels have dropped as ferries get stuck, fish caught are small and the catch is less than half of before the dam, the turnover at Chiang Rai port is less than 1/4 of previous years, and crossings from
Chiang Rai to isolated
Luang Prabang have lengthened from 8 hours to 2 days due to inadequate water levels.
Despite all these problems, new dams planned will have significantly worse impact if carried out as planned. All nations downstream and the environment will suffer from added
pollution (due to development and relatively lax
regulation and
enforcement in China compared to Thailand, poisoning the food supply from
pesticide runoff and
heavy industry, as well as promoting
algal blooms from
organophosphates from agriculture, as well as
water hyacinth infestation), river blockage problems as fish cannot swim upstream to spawn, and potentially devastating very low water flow.
Other environmental concerns arise from increased water flow in some parts as well as China clears rocks and sandbars, blasts gorges, and slows water as it dams and floods other sections, and relocates
indigenous peoples. Cambodia by far the most exposed, depending on a fine balance of water flow, fearing scenarios of mass
famine and devastating floods, the likes of which destroyed the
Angkor kingdom 700 years ago.
Laos' biggest cities all hug the Mekong as does
Vietnam's largest city and financial hub,
Ho Chi Minh City, which would be vulnerable mostly to low flow and pollution.
Trivia
Balls of light are observable from time to time rising from the water's surface in the stretch of the river near
Vientiane or
Nong Khai. These are sometimes referred to as
Naga fireballs. The locals attribute the phenomenon to
Phaya Naga, Mekong Dragons.
According to researchers the river houses more species of giant fish than any world river
[1], most notably the
Giant Mekong Catfish.
The low tide level of the river in Cambodia is lower than the high tide level out at sea, and the flow of the Mekong inverts with the tides throughout its stretch in Vietnam and up to Phnom Penh. The very flat
Mekong Delta area in Vietnam is thus prone to flooding, especially in the provinces of An Giang and Dong Thap (Đồng Tháp), near the Cambodian border.
Footnotes
1. http://www.shangri-la-river-expeditions.com/1stdes/mekong/mekongsource/IGSNRR2001.html
2. Thai folk : The knowledge of Thai life-style
3. http://www.jac.or.jp/english/jan/vol2/mekong.pdf
4. http://www.shangri-la-river-expeditions.com/1stdes/mekong/mekongsource/GJcorrespondence2002.html
5. http://www.un.org/Depts/Cartographic/map/profile/mekong.pdf
6. http://www.irri.org/mrc2004/default.htm
7. http://www.springerlink.com/index/U3730661374W8T02.pdf
References
★ Milton Osborne. 1976. ''River Road to China: The Mekong River Expedition 1866-1873''. George Allen & Unwin.
★ Milton Osborne. 2000. ''The Mekong, Turbulent Past, Uncertain Future'' Atlantic Monthly Press, New York. ISBN 0-87113-806-9
★ Edward A. Gargan. 2002. ''The River's Tale''. First published by Alfred A. Knopf.
★ Fredenburg, P. and B. Hill. 2006. Sharing Rice for Peace and Prosperity in the Greater Mekong Subregion. Sid Harta Publishers, Victoria. ISBN 1-921206-08-X. pp271.
External links
★
Bibliography on Water Resources and International Law See 'Mekong River'. Peace Palace Libray
★
Outline of the Mekong River
★
Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies, Singapore "China in the Mekong River Basin: The Regional Security Implications of Resource Development on the Lancang Jiang" by Evelyn Goh, Working Paper No. 69
★
Mouth to Source Follow The Mekong, in 360 degree panoramas (QTVR), from the mouth in Viet Nam to the border with China in Northern Laos. Click the butterfly to launch the QuickTime presentation - Requires 'flash enabled' in QuickTime advanced preferences if you are using QuickTime 7 +.
★
Multinational Team repeating the French Mekong Expedition of 1866
★
NYTimes: The Mysterious Mekong Starts to Reveal Itself
★
Musing on the Mekong