It is in China about 3,900 miles from the Qinghai on the Tibetan Plateau to the Yellow Sea.
That would be called the Chang Jiang River, which is also called the Yangzi River.
A river is a large natural stream of water flowing in a channel to the sea, a lake, or another river. Tributaries are smaller streams or rivers that flow into a main river. Tributaries feed water into the main river, helping to increase its flow and volume.
The Lena River flows from south to north in eastern Siberia, Russia, before entering the Laptev Sea.
The highest point of a continent from which the direction of a river flow is determined is known as the continental divide. Water on one side of the divide flows toward one ocean or sea, while water on the other side flows toward a different ocean or sea.
The Indus River flows from the Himalayas in Tibet, through India and Pakistan, and empties into the Arabian Sea. It generally flows from north to south.
The Chang Jiang River, or the Yangtze River, empties into the East China sea. This sea is a part of the Indian Ocean near Asia.
The Yellow Sea
The distance from the mouth of the Xi River to the mouth of the Chang Jiang River is approximately 1,500 kilometers. The Xi River is a major river in southern China, while the Chang Jiang River, also known as the Yangtze River, is the longest river in Asia and the third-longest in the world. The two rivers meet near the city of Wuhan, where the Chang Jiang flows into the East China Sea.
The Chang Jiang River, also called the Yangtze River, flows through China and empties into the East China Sea. At 3,915 miles long, it is the longest river in Asia and the third longest in the world.
Chang Jiang River
Yangtze River ends in the east China Sea at Sanghai
Chang Jiang River
The Yangtze River is also known as the Chang Jiang River or the Yangzi. The source of the river is Qinghai and the mouth of the river is the East China Sea.
The Yangtze (Chang Jiang) River flows into the East China Sea at Shanghai.
Chang Jiang river, also called the Yangtze river, begins its course in the mountain glaciers of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. After travelling eastward across China it ends its journey in the East China Sea.
The Chang River, or to give it it's other names, the Chang Jiang or Yangtze River rises in Tibet and flows through China to empty into the East China Sea at Shanghai.
The Huang He (Yellow River) and the Chang Jiang (Yangtze) are both in central eastern China. The western parts of both rivers are at higher elevations, their tributaries join at an angle indicating the direction of flow, and they each have an eastern terminus (mouth) in an arm of the Pacific Ocean (Bohai/Yellow/East China Sea).