ASIA-PACIFIC 
Irrawaddy Delta: Asia's rice bowl
Thursday, 8 May, 2008
Satellite photos show the effect of a massive tidal surge on Burma's delta coastline caused by Cyclone Nargis. Here are some key facts about the area, once known as the "rice bowl of Asia".
The latest death toll estimate from the cyclone that tore through Burma's Irrawaddy delta last weekend is now at 100,000.
* The delta is a triangle of fertile land, mangrove swamps and tidal estuaries at the mouth of the Irrawaddy, Burma's longest river and its most important trade artery.
* Stretching from scattered islands in the Bay of Bengal to the southeast port city of Rangoon, the delta's base is about 240 km long and its western flank about 290 km.
* It is criss-crossed by a vast network of streams that swell to become small lakes during the May-October monsoon rains. Their muddy waters empty into the Andaman Sea.
* The delta was jungle and high grass when annexed as 'Lower Burma' by Britain in 1852 after the Second Anglo-Burmese War. The colonial rulers, in charge until independence in 1948, encouraged migration and rice cultivation in the delta, commercialising its once feudal lands.
* An estimated 3.5 million people now live in the delta's towns and villages -- 15 percent of a total population of 53 million. About five million live in Rangoon, Burma's biggest city, on the delta's southeast edge.
* Most people in the delta are from the majority Burman ethnic group, though minorities such as Karen and Shan also live there. It is one of Burma's most densely populated areas.
* Over the last 150 years huge areas of mangrove forest have been cleared and converted to paddy in order to grow rice. Before independence, Burma was the world's largest exporter of rice, most of it grown in the delta.
* Communication inside the delta is mainly water-based. Most households own a boat, and the southern delta's major towns are all connected by steamers.
Source: Reuters
The latest death toll estimate from the cyclone that tore through Burma's Irrawaddy delta last weekend is now at 100,000.
* The delta is a triangle of fertile land, mangrove swamps and tidal estuaries at the mouth of the Irrawaddy, Burma's longest river and its most important trade artery.
* Stretching from scattered islands in the Bay of Bengal to the southeast port city of Rangoon, the delta's base is about 240 km long and its western flank about 290 km.
* It is criss-crossed by a vast network of streams that swell to become small lakes during the May-October monsoon rains. Their muddy waters empty into the Andaman Sea.
* The delta was jungle and high grass when annexed as 'Lower Burma' by Britain in 1852 after the Second Anglo-Burmese War. The colonial rulers, in charge until independence in 1948, encouraged migration and rice cultivation in the delta, commercialising its once feudal lands.
* An estimated 3.5 million people now live in the delta's towns and villages -- 15 percent of a total population of 53 million. About five million live in Rangoon, Burma's biggest city, on the delta's southeast edge.
* Most people in the delta are from the majority Burman ethnic group, though minorities such as Karen and Shan also live there. It is one of Burma's most densely populated areas.
* Over the last 150 years huge areas of mangrove forest have been cleared and converted to paddy in order to grow rice. Before independence, Burma was the world's largest exporter of rice, most of it grown in the delta.
* Communication inside the delta is mainly water-based. Most households own a boat, and the southern delta's major towns are all connected by steamers.
Source: Reuters

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NASA satellite images show the coastal region of Burma before (top) and after (bottom) the cyclone Nargis. (AAP)