Citations:Amur
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English citations of Amur
1830 | 1910s 1975 | 2010s 2020 2021 | |||||
ME « | 15th c. | 16th c. | 17th c. | 18th c. | 19th c. | 20th c. | 21st c. |
- 1830, Amelia Shipley Heber, editor, The Life of Reginald Heber, D.D.[1], volume 1, London: John Murray, →OCLC, →OL, page 568:
- If, then, the southern districts of European Russia be exposed to a winter more severe than those of France or Germany, they may boast in their turn a more genial climate than the banks of the Ural and the Amur; while all are subject to a dispensation of nature which extends too far, and acts too uniformly, to be ascribed to any local or temporary causes.
- 1915 August 24, Charles K. Moser, “Harbin”, in Supplement to Commerce Reports[2], number 52h, →OCLC, page 1:
- Foreign trade goes not to Aigun, but to the Chinese town of Taheiho, which is situated about 30 miles distant from Aigun and is directly opposite the Siberian city of Blagovestchensk, on the other side of the Amur River.
- 1975 June 22, L. Chen, “Defiant intellectual disobedience”, in Free China Weekly[4], volume XVI, number 24, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 3:
- Just a few days before he was to be sent to the “Great Northern Wilderness” near the Amur, an 18-year-old middle school graduate named Liu Fu-yuan went up to the third floor of the “Hundred Goods Building” (department store) at Peiping’s Wanfunching and asked that a made-in-Red-China watch be brought out of the glass case.
- 2012 September 28, Ksenia Bolchakova, “Is Siberia becoming Chinese?”, in France 24[5], archived from the original on 4 October 2012[6]:
- The Siberian city of Blagoveshchensk is located over 8,000 kilometres from Moscow, but barely 800 metres from China. The two countries are only separated by the Amur river. In winter, when it freezes over, the Amur can be crossed on foot.
- 2018 April 9, “China blows up ice on Amur River”, in EFE[7], archived from the original on 27 June 2022:
- China used dynamite on a 5-kilometer (3.1-mile) section of the Amur River, bordering Russia, to break up the ice sheets covering it and avoid accidents when it melts, state broadcaster CCTV reported Monday. […]
The Amur River, called Heilongjiang by the Chinese, is one of the most important rivers in Asia, and significant parts of it usually freeze during winter.
- 2020 August 15, Anton Troianovski, “'The Fish Rots From the Head': How a Salmon Crisis Stoked Russian Protests”, in The New York Times[8], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2020-08-15[9]:
- Along the Amur, one of Asia’s great waterways, Russians feel cheated, lied to and ignored. The wild salmon fishery that they once took for granted is gone, they say, because Moscow granted large concessions to enterprises that strung enormous nets across the river’s mouth.
People’s anger over their depleted fish stock is so widespread that it has been a driving force behind the anti-Kremlin protests that have been shaking the Far Eastern city of Khabarovsk, on the Amur, since early July.
- 2021 March, “Setting Rivers Free”, in National Geographic[10], pages 30–31:
- Bordered by small farming towns without large dams, the Amur—the least obstructed of these 10 rivers—is an example of the effects of minimal human influence.