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The China–Mongolia border is the international border between China and Mongolia. It runs from west to east between the two tripoints with Russia for 4,630 km (2,880 mi), with most of the boundary area lying in the Gobi Desert. [1] It is the world's fourth longest international border. [2]
Inner Mongolia is a provincial-level subdivision of North China, but its great stretch means that parts of it belong to Northeast China and Northwest China as well. It borders eight provincial-level divisions in all three of the aforementioned regions ( Heilongjiang , Jilin , Liaoning , Hebei , Shanxi , Shaanxi , Ningxia , and Gansu ), tying ...
The land borders, in counterclockwise order from northeast to southwest, include the China–North Korea border, the eastern segment of the China–Russia border, the China–Mongolia border, the western segment of the China–Russia border (the most contested of the Sino-Indian border dispute), the China–Kazakhstan border, the China ...
this map of China for inner China boundaries; GMT data; File:InnerMongoliaMap.png for inner Inner Mongolia boundaries; Author: Das steinerne Herz: Other versions: Derivative works of this file: China Inner Mongolia relief location map.png; Location of Baynnur Prefecture within Inner Mongolia (China).svg
Description: An SVG map of China with Inner Mongolia highlighted in orange and Hulunbuir city highlighted in red Legend: Date: 9 February 2010: Source
Description: An SVG map of China with the Inner Mongolia autonomous region highlighted Legend: Date: 14 May 2008: Source: self-made; based on CIA public domain maps:
name = Inner Mongolia Name used in the default map caption; image = China Inner Mongolia location map.svg The default map image, without "Image:" or "File:" image1 = China Inner Mongolia relief location map.png An alternative map image, usually a relief map, which can be displayed via the relief or AlternativeMap parameters; top = 53.5
Mongolia's largest lake by volume of water, Lake Khövsgöl, drains via the Selenge river to the Arctic Ocean. One of the most easterly lakes of Mongolia, Hoh Nuur, at an elevation of 557 metres, is the lowest point in the country. [7] In total, the lakes and rivers of Mongolia cover 10,560 square kilometres, or 0.67% of the country. [1]