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Altitude:
6 - 15 feet
Area: 2,383 square miles (including the city itself, the suburbs, and
an agricultural hinterland)
Coastline: 80 miles
Population: 12.3 million
Climate: Shanghai has a fairly extreme climatic
range, with four distinct seasons. Winters can be bone-chillingly cold
with occasional snow, while summers are very hot. Humidity levels are
high almost year round. It can rain for days on end, though the official
rainy season lasts from mid June to mid July. The best weather tends to
occur in September and October.
Average temperature: 2-3.5 degrees [translate to Fahrenheit] in January,
27-38 degrees [translate to Fahrenheit] in July.
Average annual rainfall: 1000 mm [translate to inches]
Time zone: The whole of China operates as one
time zone, eight hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time. There is no daylight
savings time adjustment in the summer.
Formerly an unimportant fishing village, Shanghai
(translated literally, "on the sea") is one of the world's largest seaports
and a major industrial and commercial center of China. It is located on
the coast of the East China Sea, between the mouth of the Yangtze River
to the north and the bays of Hangzhou to the south.
Since
first opening to the outside world in the 19th century (a result of the
expansion of foreign nations abroad) and, more recently, reopening to
the outside world (after the period of upheaval of the Cultural Revolution),
Shanghai has become China's most energetic and cosmopolitan city. It has
attracted immigrants from within China as well as abroad. Its residents
are known for their business talents, quick wit, and sophistication. It
is the site of China's first and foremost stock exchange, the Shanghai
Stock Exchange. Its industrial products rank the best in quality in China.
It is one of China's leading centers of higher education and scientific
research, including the famous Fudan and Jiao Tong universities. In 1993,
with the strong support of the central government, Shanghai established
the Pudong New Area Administration to oversee the development of the Pudong
New Area into a special economic zone, including a modern financial center,
a high technology development park, and an export processing and free
trade zone.
A tourist city, Shanghai attracts travelers
from both home and abroad because of its commercial activity rather than
for its scenic beauty.
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