Above  Shi-Ku in  Li-Chiang Shien, Yunnan, the upper Yangtze or Ching-Sha-Chiang flows from northwest to south-east, but near-by Shi-Ku, it gives an abrupt turn to north-east forming an horse-shoe curve which has been known as "the first curve of the Yang-tze".  This curious curve has long since caught  the  attention  of  Chinese  and  foreign geographers and geologists who explained it in  various  ways.   Most  scholars,  such  as V. K. Ting, C. Y. Lee, J. W. Gregory, W. Credner,  G.  B.  Barbour,  Li  Shi-thing,  Lin Wen-ing, P.  Misch,  r. II. roptuKOS,  Jen Mei-ngo,  believed  that  this  phenomenon  is the  result  of  river-capture;while others, such as Li Chen-san,  Yuan  Fu-li  considered it as the result of geologic structure or entrenching meander. In  1962, the present writers spent two months in surveying this region  and have arrived at the conclusion that the theory of river-capture  is  based  on  insufficient  evi-dences.  First, the great curve near-by Shi-Ku is formed by geologic structure.  Secondla. the broad valley between the villages Hung-Wen-Chen and Chien-Chuan, which is more than  50 Km. in width, develops along the great  fault  directing  NNE-SSW.   In  the northern part of this broad valley, there are four large depressions developed by- solu-tion, and in the middle part of it, there arc Chiu Ho basin and Ho-Tung Valley, filled with Tertiary red beds, and its southern part is occupied by the Chien-Chuan basin.  In old Tertiary time both sections of the Ching-Sha-Chiang above Shi-Ku,  in Te-La of Te- Chin  Shien, and below Shi-Ku in Shi-Tu-Kang of Li-Chiang-Shien,  were  occupied  by small  basins filled with local deposits of red beds.  Thus, it is clear that at that time China-Sha-Chiang had not yet been integrated into  an  unified  river-system.   During  the Himalaya Movement between old and new Tertiary, this region was  raised, and at the same time,  these  formerly  separated  basins have been gradually linked  together to be a  single river-system.   The  old  Ching-Sha-Chiang was thus formed.  During this move-ment, part of the region south of Chien-Chuan was sunk by block fault and became basins filled with  new Tertiary deposits,  such as Ta-Li  basin,  Er-Yuan  basin,  Lien-Ti-Kai basin etc., all of which consist of late Tertiary lake deposits with brown coal.  At the end of Tertiary, this region had been denudated to a peneplain, but afterwards it rose again in a large scale and becomes Yunnan plateau to-day.  During the uprising, Ching- Sha-Chiang cut downward and became a great canyon.   Above and below Shi-Ku, the shapes and breadths of  Ching-Sha-Chiang valleys are very similar to each other.  Even in the narrow  Hu-Tiao-Canyon, rock-shoulders  are  found  comparable to  those  of  the upper valley about 2500 m. in  height.  This fact alone is sufficient to prove that this part of Ching-Sha-Chiang valley is very old and had been linked up long ago.
							
							
														
														
														
						 
					 	
										
					
						
						
							
																SHEN YU-CHANG AND YOUNG I-CHOU
																. NEW RESEARCH ON THE PROBLEM OF RIVER-CAPTURE OF CHING-SHA-CHIANG (THE UPPER YANGTZE), WESTERN YUNNAN, CHINA[J]. Acta Geographica Sinica, 1963
																, 29(2)
																								: 87
																-108
																								. 
																 DOI: 10.11821/xb196302001