The Taiwan Strait is a 180km-wide strait separating continental Asia and the island of Taiwan. A strait is a narrow water passage connecting two larger bodies of water, usually two seas. Straits can be formed naturally by tectonic plate movements or created by humans (called canals like the Suez Canal). While most straits are navigable, some are too narrow or shallow to allow safe movement of vessels.
Contents:
Where Is The Taiwan Strait? Geographical Features Brief History EconomyWhere Is The Taiwan Strait?

Geographical Features

About 370 million tons of sediments are deposited annually by the rivers of Taiwan draining into the Taiwan Strait. Several islands are located in the strait. Kinmen and Matsu are two of the largest and most significant islands in the strait located off the Fujian coast of China. The biggest islands along the Taiwan side include Penghu (or Pescadores), Xiamen, and Pingtan. The Xiamen and Pingtan Islands are administered by the People’s Republic of China, while the other three islands: Penghu (or Pescadores), Kinmen, and Matsu are under the administration of the Republic of China (Taiwan). The Penghu (or Pescadores) Island is the largest and most populous island in the Taiwan Strait.
Brief History

Historically, the strait has been an active battlefield witnessing military confrontations between the People’s Republic of China (Mainland China) and the Republic of China (Taiwan) on several occasions. In the year 1661, Zheng Chenggong (Koxinga) led his army across the Taiwan Strait to recapture the islands of Taiwan from the Dutch colonists. Naval confrontations occurred on the Strait between Taiwan and Mainland China during the Chinese Civil War of the 1940s. The Civil War ended in 1949 and led to the establishment of two governments after the Nationalist forces retreated to Taiwan and reestablished their own government. Armed conflict between the two governments erupted on the strait over the control of the Quemoy (Kinmen) and Matsu islands and came to be known as the “First Taiwan Strait Crisis “of 1954-1955. However, the two governments were involved in another armed confrontation on the strait, that came to be known as the “Second Taiwan Strait Crisis” of 1958. In response to a series of missile tests that were conducted by the People’s Republic of China in the Taiwan Strait, another dispute broke out in the year 1995-1996. It was known as the “Third Taiwan Strait Crisis” of 1996. Even though the relations between China and Taiwan have started improving, marine transport along the Taiwan Strait is strictly restricted along the “cross-strait meridian”, a maritime border established on the strait to define the boundaries of jurisdiction of the two governments.
Economy
