From the northeastern corner of the internal seas to the south:
The Kingdom of Ju Yan is located in the northeastern corner.
Within the Flowing Sands are the kingdoms of Zhunduan and Xihuan, southeast of the Kunlun Void. Some say these are prefectures within the internal seas, but they do not belong to any prefecture or county and are found within the Flowing Sands.
Outside of the Flowing Sands lie the kingdoms of Da Xia, Shusha, Juyao, and the Yue Zhi.
The White Jade Mountain of the Western Hu people is east of Da Xia, while Mount Cangwu lies to the southwest of the White Jade Mountain, all located west of the Flowing Sands and southeast of the Kunlun Void. The Kunlun Mountain itself is west of the Western Hu. All these places are in the northwest.
In the Thunder Marsh resides the God of Thunder, who has a dragon's head but a human face and drums on his belly. This is located west of Wu.
The Island of Duzhou is located in the sea. Some call it Yuzhou.
The Langya Terrace is situated between the Bohai Sea and Langya to the east. There is a mountain to the north, which some say is located between the seas.
The Han Geese are found in the sea, south of Duzhou.
The First Dove is located in the sea, south of Yuanli.
Mount Kuaiji is located south of the Great Chu.
The three rivers of Min flow from Mount Wen. The main river, the Great River, flows from Mount Wen, the northern river from Mount Man, and the southern river from Mount Gao. Mount Gao is west of Chengdu and flows into the sea, south of Changzhou. The Zhejiang River originates from the capitals of the Three Heavenly Lords, located east of there, northwest of Min, and flows into the sea, south of Yujing. The Lu River flows from the capitals of the Three Heavenly Lords and into the Great River, west of Pengze. Some call this the Emperor's Barrier. The Huai River flows from Mount Yu, located east of Chaoyang and west of Yixiang, and flows into the sea, north of Huaipu. The Xiang River originates from the southeastern corner of Emperor Shun’s tomb, encircling it from the west, and flows into Dongting Lake. Some call this the southeastern western marsh. The Han River flows from Mount Fuyu, where Emperor Zhuanxu is buried on the sunny side, and his nine consorts on the shady side, guarded by the Western Snake. The Meng River originates west of Hanyang and flows into the Great River, west of Nie’er. The Wen River flows from Mount Kongtong, south of Linfen, and into the Yellow River, north of Huayang. The Ying River flows from Mount Shaoshi, south of Yongshi, and flows into the Huai River, north of Yan. Some call this Goushi. The Ru River flows from Mount Tianxi, located southwest of Liangmianxiang, and flows into the Huai River, north of Qisi. Some say the Huai River is located north of Qisi. The Jing River originates from the northern mountains of the Great Wall, in the northern part of Yuzhi and Changyuan, and flows north into the Wei River. It lies north of Xi. The Wei River flows from the Bird-Mouse Mountain, eastward into the Yellow River, and into the northern part of Huayin. The White River flows from Shu and southeast into the Great River, entering Jiangzhou City. The Yuan River flows from Xiangjun’s Xincheng, west of Mount Tan, and flows eastward into the Great River, merging into Dongting Lake. The Gan River flows from Mount Nie, northeast into the Great River, and enters Pengze from the west. The Si River flows from the northeast of Lu and southward, passing west of Huling and flowing southeast into the East Sea, entering north of Huaiyin. The Yu River flows from Xiangjun and flows southwest into the South Sea, entering southeast of Xuling. The Yi River flows from southwestern Linjin and southeast into the sea, entering west of Panyu. The Huang River flows from the northwestern mountains of Guiyang and southeast into the Yi River, entering west of Dunpu. The Luo River flows from the western mountains of Luo and northeast into the Yellow River, entering west of Chenggao. The Fen River flows from the north of Shangyu and southwest into the Yellow River, entering south of Pishi. The Qin River flows from the eastern mountains of Jingxing, southeast into the Yellow River, entering southeast of Huai. The Ji River flows from Mount Gong, south of Dongqiu, through the Great Marsh of Julu, and into Bohai, entering Liaoyang. The Hu Tuo River flows from the southern part of Jinyang City, flowing westward to the north of Yangqu and eastward into Bohai, entering north of Zhangwu. The Zhang River flows from the eastern part of Shanyang, flowing eastward into Bohai, entering south of Zhangwu.
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