The source of the Jialing, in name, is in the Jialin, which means "the tomb of Jia (嘉陵)" in Chinese. Jia (赵代王嘉) was the last king of State Zhao (
赵国), who was kidnapped to State
Qin (now called
Tianshui,
Gansu Province,
甘肃省天水市) after Qin defeated Zhao. The river briefly flows through
Gansu before reentering Shaanxi and then crossing south into
Sichuan. The longest stem of the Jialing River, however, can be traced to a source in
Aba Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture,
Sichuan and the entire river is long. This source is located at the head of the
Baozuo River, considered a tributary of the
Bailong River, itself the primary tributary and main stem of the Jialing River system. The branches named Jialing and Bailong meet in
Guangyuan in Sichuan and continue as the Jialing to the Yangtze. The river reaches the floor of the Sichuan Basin at
Langzhong and continues in a sinuous route into
Chongqing and its junction with the
Yangtze River. Besides the Bailong River which forms a portion of the main stem, the largest tributaries of the Jialing River include the
Xihan River, the
Fu River (also known as Sui He), and the
Qu River. The Xihan meets the Jialing in Shaanxi, while both the Fu and the Qu join the Jialing's respective right and left banks in
Hechuan, Chongqing. The cities along the Jialing's course include
Tianshui,
Baoji,
Longnan,
Guangyuan,
Langzhong,
Nanchong, and
Chongqing. Cities found within the Jialing's basin and along its tributaries include
Tianshui,
Baoji,
Longnan,
Longnan,
Mianyang,
Suining,
Bazhong,
Wanyuan,
Dazhou, and
Guang'an. ==Fauna==