Sham Chun River

The Sham Chun River or Shenzhen River (Chinese: 深圳河; pinyin: Shēnzhèn Hé) serves as the natural border between Hong Kong and Mainland China, together with Deep Bay, Mirs Bay, and the Sha Tau Kok River.It formed a part of the limit of the lease of the New Territories in 1898 in the Convention for the Extension of Hong Kong Territory (known also as the Second Convention of Peking).The Shenzhen Reservoir also flows into the river when it is full.Efforts have been made to alleviate flooding and pollution problems through river draining, which produced the Lok Ma Chau Loop.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article related to a river in Hong Kong is a stub.
City of Shenzhen and Yuen Long , Hong Kong, divided by the Sham Chun River
Luohu DistrictShenzhenHong KongWutong MountainShenzhen BaySimplified ChineseStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinYue: CantoneseYale RomanizationJyutpingChinesepinyinnatural borderMainland ChinaDeep BayMirs BaySha Tau Kok RiverYuen LongNew TerritoriesConvention for the Extension of Hong Kong TerritoryYuen Long DistrictNorth DistrictGuangdongtributariesPing Yuen RiverShek Sheung RiverSheung Yue RiverNg Tung RiverBuji RiverTan Shan RiverShenzhen ReservoirMai Po MarshesestuaryLok Ma Chau LoopLin Ma HangHeung Yuen Wai Control PointLiantang PortNga YiuMan Kam To Control PointWenjindu PortLo Wu Control PointLuohu PortLo Wu BridgeLok Ma Chau Control PointHuanggang PortLok Ma Chau Spur Line Control PointFutian PortXRL Hong Kong SectionMainland SectionFrontier Closed AreaList of rivers and nullahs in Hong Kong