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¡¡¡¡The Yi ethnic group with a long history distributed in the Southwest
of China, with a population of 7762272( year of 2000).is mainly
distributed over the provinces of Sichuan, Yunnan and Guizhou, and
the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. There are more than one million
Yis in Sichuan Province, and most of them live in an area south
of the Dadu River and along the Anning River. Traditionally, this
area is subdivided into the Greater Liangshan Mountain area, which
lies east of the Anning River and south of the Huangmao Dyke, and
the Lesser Liangshan Mountain area, which covers the Jinsha River
valley and the south bank of the Dadu River. There are over a million
Yis in the Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture, which holds the single
largest Yi community in China. Yunnan Province has more than three
million Yis, most of whom are concentrated in an area hemmed in
by the Jinsha and Yuanjiang rivers, and the Ailao and Wuliang mountains.
Huaping, Ninglang and Yongsheng in western Yunnan form what is known
as the Yunnan Lesser Liangshan Mountain area. In Guizhou, more than
half a million Yis live in compact communities in Anshun and Bijie.
Several thousand Yis live in Longlin and Mubian counties in the
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
¡¡¡¡Most Yis are scattered in mountain areas, some in frigid mountain
areas at high altitudes, and a small number live on flat land or
in valleys. The altitudinal differences of the Yi areas directly
affect their climate and precipitation. Their striking differences
have given rise to the old saying that "the weather is different
a few miles away" in the Yi area. This is the primary reason
why the Yis in various areas are so different from one another in
the ways they make a living.

Photo by HuangPingshan |
¡¡¡¡The Yi areas are rich in natural resources. The Jinsha River
running through Sichuan and Yunnan and its tributaries surging through
the Yi areas in northern and northeastern Yunnan are enormous sources
of water power. The Yi areas are not only rich in coal and iron,
but are also among China's major producers of non-ferrous metals.
Gejiu, China's famous tin center, reared the first generation of
Yi industrial workers. Various Yi areas in the Greater and Lesser
Liangshan Mountains, western Guizhou, and eastern and southern Yunnan
abound in dozens of mineral resources, including gold, silver, aluminum,
manganese, antimony and zinc. Vast forests stretch across the Yi
areas, where Yunnan pine, masson pine, dragon spruce, Chinese pine
and other timber trees, lacquer, tea, camphor, kapok and other trees
of economic value grow in great numbers. The forests teem with wild
animals and plants as well as pilose antler, musk, bear gallbladders
and medicinal herbs such as poris cocos and pseudoginseng.
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The Fourth International
Conference on Yi Studies:
Bimo Practice, Traditional Knowledge, and Ecosystem Sustainability
in the 21st Century |
| Time and Place of the
Conference£º
a) Time: August 19-24, 2005; 5 days total; 3 days conference,
2 days field investigations:
August 19: Reporting date.
August 20-22: Scholarly Conference
August 23-14: Field Investigations
b) Place: Bapu Town, Meigu County, Liangshan Yi Autonomous
Prefecture, Sichuan, China.
Lodging for Conference Attendees: Meigu Hotel
Conference Meeting Location: Meigu People's Government
Conference Center.
Scope of the Conference:
The number of conference attendees will be less
than 100, with approximately 30 foreign and 70 Chinese
attendees.
Conference Expenses:
Conference expenses will be covered by the People's
Government of Meigu County, Liangshan Yi Autonomous
Prefecture, Sichuan, which has full authority to undertake
these expenses.
Conference Website:
The conference website has been underway at http://www.iel.org.cn/
http://www.elchina.org/
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Photo by Tanghu
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