Shijiazhuang is Hebei province.
Shijiazhuang belongs to Hebei province. Shijiazhuang, called Stone for short and Shimen in ancient times, is the capital of Hebei Province and one of the important central cities in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region of China approved by the State Council. It is called the northern granary and the cradle of new China. Shijiazhuang is located in the south-central part of Hebei Province, bordering Hengshui City in the east, Xingtai City in the south, Shanxi Province in the west and Baoding City in the north. It is located in the southwest of Beijing, 283 kilometers away from the main city of Beijing.
Shijiazhuang City spans two geomorphic units, Taihang Mountain and North China Plain, and the west is located in the middle of Taihang Mountain, accounting for about 50% of the total area of Shijiazhuang City. Hutuo River alluvial plain is in the east, and the area under its jurisdiction is structure, which belongs to the marginal zone of Shanxi platform and Bohai Depression, with low topography in the southeast and high topography in the northwest. Taihang Mountain in the west of Shijiazhuang is about 1000 meters above sea level, with high terrain. The east of Beijing-Guangzhou Railway is a part of North China Plain.
Characteristics of Shijiazhuang
The rivers within the jurisdiction of Shijiazhuang belong to the Daqinghe River System and Ziya River System in Haihe River Basin. There are 6 main flood channels, of which Shahe and Cihe wood road ditch in the north belong to Daqing River system, and Hutuo River, Hutuo River, Jinhe River, Huaihe River and Bahe River in the south-central part belong to Ziya River system. The total drainage area is 33,500 square kilometers.
Shijiazhuang is located at the eastern edge of the Eurasian continent in the middle and low latitudes, close to the Bohai Sea belonging to the Pacific Ocean, and has a temperate monsoon climate. The seasonal variation of solar radiation is remarkable, with frequent high and low pressure activities on the ground, four distinct seasons, distinct cold and summer, and precipitation concentrated in summer and autumn. The dry-wet cycle is obvious, with long summer and winter and short spring and autumn. It takes about 55 days in spring, 0/05 days in summer, 60 days in autumn and 0/45 days in winter.