Vietnam
stretches over 1600km along the eastern coast of the Indochinese Peninsula
(from 8?34' N to 23?22' N). The country's land area is 326,797 sq km, or
329,566 sq km including water. This makes it slightly larger than Italy and a bit smaller than Japan. Vietnam has 3451 km of coastline and 3818km of
land borders: 1555km with Laos,
1281km with China and 982km
with Cambodia.
Vietnamese often describe their country as resembling a bamboo pole
supporting a basket of rice on each end. The country is S-shaped, broad
in the north und south and very narrow in the centre where at one point
it is only 50km wide.
The country's two main cultivated areas arc the Red River Delta (15,000 sq
km) in the north and the Mekong Delta (60,000 sq km) in the south. Silt carried
by the Red River and its tributaries (confined
to their paths by 3000km of dikes) has raised the level of the river beds above
that of the surrounding plains. Breaches ill the levees result in disastrous
flooding.
Three-quarters of the country consists of mountains and hills, the highest
of which is 3143m-high Fansipan (or 'Phan Si Pan') in the Hoang Lien Mountains in the far northwest. The Truong Son Mountains (Annamite Cordillera), which form the
central highlands, run almost the full length of Vietnam
along its borders with Laos
and Cambodia.
The largest metropolis is Ho Chi Minh City
(usually still called Saigon), followed by Hanoi,
Haiphong and Danang.