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Zhongsha Islands
中沙岛礁镇
Zhongsha Daojiao Town
Country People's Republic of China
Province Hainan
Prefecture-level city Sansha
District Xisha District
Government
 • Type Town
Area
 • Total0.000003 km2 (0 sq mi)
Population
 • Total0
Time zone UTC+8 (China Standard Time)
Territorial Dispute: There are on-going territorial disputes in the entire area covered by the town, whose administrative authority is not internationally recognized.
Zhongsha Archipelago
Simplified Chinese 中沙群岛
Traditional Chinese 中沙群島
Literal meaningCentral Sands Archipelago
Zhongsha District
Simplified Chinese 中沙群岛 及其 海域
Traditional Chinese 中沙群島 及其 海域
Literal meaningIslands, Reefs, and Waters of the Zhongsha Archipelago

The Zhongsha Islands is a Chinese term for a collection of two skerries, many entirely submerged banks, seamounts, and shoals in the South China Sea. There are in fact, no islands in the Macclesfield Bank, the main part of Zhongsha. The Scarborough Shoal, which consists of two skerries, is not contiguous with the Macclesfield Bank but Chinese sources treat them as one chain of geographical features. The whole of the region is claimed by both the PRC and the ROC, and various bits of the eastern parts are claimed by the Philippines. No country has constant control of the whole region, and there are disputes - for example, see Scarborough Shoal standoff.

The PRC claim to administer the area as Zhongsha Daojiao Town, a town under Xisha District of the Sansha prefecture-level city in Hainan. It has one Village-level division, “Zhongsha Daojiao Residential Community”. However, the seat of this town and residential community is not within the Zhongsha Islets but, in Yongxing Town .

Aquaculture research has been conducted on Walker Shoal. [1]

Geography

The Zhongsha Islets include:

To the west, near the Paracel Islands:

To the east, near Luzon:

To the north:

To the south, near the Spratly Islands:

References

  1. ^ "China Focus: South China islands see green transformation". news.xinhuanet.com. 30 July 2014. Archived from the original on September 13, 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
    Interesting article, but it makes NO mention of either Aquaculture research or Walker Shoal ...