Xi River

Xi Jiang

The Xi Jiang at Zhaoqing with Gaoyao opposite

The Pearl River system including the Xi River
Origin Gui Jiang and Xun Jiang in Wuzhou
Mouth The Pearl River Delta on the South China Sea
Basin countries China and Vietnam
Avg. discharge 7,410 cubic metres per second (262,000 cu ft/s)[1]
Left tributaries He Jiang

The Xi River (Chinese: 西江,; pinyin: Xī Jiāng; literally "West River"; Postal map spelling: Si Kiang) is the western tributary of the Pearl River in China. It is formed by the confluence of the Gui and Xun Rivers in Wuzhou, Guangxi. It then flows east through Guangdong, and enters the Pearl River Delta just east of the Lingyang Gorge in Zhaoqing. The main branch of the Xi flows southeast through the delta entering the South China Sea at Modao Men, just west of Macau. The major cities along the Xi include Wuzhou, Zhaoqing, and Jiangmen. The other two main tributaries of Pearl River are the Dongjiang River and Beijiang River. The Xi River is navigable for its entire length. The Xi River is a commercial waterway of southern China, and links the delta cities to the interior. The entire Xi River system is the largest of the Pearl's tributaries, being 2,197 km, and its volume of flow is second in China only to that of the Yangtze River. Other transliterations include Hsi River and Hsi Chiang. It supplies water to many places in Guangxi, Guangdong and Macau.

Another Xi is a minor tributary of the Jiulong River northwest of Xiamen.

Xi River system

Xijiang river system (italics referring to the river lies outside Guangxi)
He (贺江) Xi (西江)
Li (漓江) Gui (桂江)
Beipan River (北盘江) Hongshui (红水河) Qian (黔江) Xun (浔江)
Nanpan River (南盘江)
Rong (融江) Liu (柳江)
Long (龙江)
You (右江) Yong (邕江) Yu (郁江)
Zuo (左江)

Major cities along the river

References