Three parallel rivers
national park in China
The Three parallel rivers region is in Yunnan, China, in part of the same complex of mountain ranges as the Himalayas, at the eastern end of the Himalaya proper. Descending from Tibet, three mighty rivers here run parallel to each other for over 200 km (125 miles), carving out vast canyons, before diverging halfway across Asia, nourishing billions and giving rise to splendid civilizations.

Parts of the area are a UNESCO World Heritage Site; the UNESCO page says "The site consists of 15 protected areas (in eight geographic clusters) ..."
The three rivers (listed east-to-west) are:
- the Yangtze, China's greatest river, empties into the East China Sea near Shanghai
- the Mekong, Southeast Asia's lifeblood, empties into the South China Sea near Ho Chi Minh City
- the Salween, Myanmar's second river, empties into the Bay of Bengal near Kyaikkami
Their mouths are thousands of kilometers apart, flowing into different seas. Their headwaters are also fairly widely separated. However, in this region they are quite near each other, flowing along three enormous more-or-less parallel gorges which wind through a region of large mountains.
The three rivers have different names in this region than downstream and the names in Chinese do not sound anywhere near their names in English. To avoid confusion when communicating with locals, it is advisable to memorize the Chinese pronunciations. The Salween is Nù Jiāng (怒江), the Mekong is Láncāng Jiāng (澜沧江), and the Yangtze is Jin Sha Jiang (金沙江).
The Irrawaddy River follows a similar path but is not included in this park area because its gorge lies across the border in Myanmar. Nor is the Yarlong River (called the Bramhaputra in India) which has the world's largest canyon in Tibet, west of the Three Gorges.