Lí Jiāng - 漓江 

Where's Lí Jiāng?

The Lijiang River (Chinese: 漓江; pinyin: Lí Jiāng) or Li River is a river near Guilin city in Guangxi, south of China.

Along the 100-kilometer stretch of the Li River, mountain peaks rise into the sky. It is one of China's most famous scenic areas, featured in many scroll paintings and classified as a AAAAA scenic area by the China National Tourism Administration.

Features include:

Reed-Flute Rock: a limestone cave with a large number of stalactites, stalagmites, stalacto-stalagmites, rocky curtains, and cave corals.
Seven-Star Park: the largest park in Guilin.

Mountain of Splendid Hues: a mountain consisting of many layers of variously colored rocks.

Elephant-Trunk Hill: a hill that looks like a giant elephant drinking water with its trunk. It is symbol of the city of Guilin.

Lingqu Canal: dug in 214 BC, is one of the three big water conservation projects of ancient China and the oldest existing canal in the world.

By the way, the imagery of the Li River is featured on the fifth series of the 20 yuan note.