Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.
...on the one hand, and the low-lying Kiangsi Basin and the southwest part of Chekiang Province, on the other. Along this boundary run the Wu-i Mountains, which, in the extreme north, include the Hsien-hsia Mountains on the Chekiang–Fukien border.
mountain chain in eastern Zhejiang province, eastern China. Tiantai is also the name of a mountain in the chain. The range forms the northeastern extension of the great Xianxia Mountains in southern Zhejiang, which form the watershed between the Ling River and the Ou River, draining to the east coast of Zhejiang, and the Yin River, the Cao’e River, and rivers of the Qiantang River system,...
...A second main line, completed in 1997, runs from Hengfeng (in Jiangxi) through Fenshui Pass to Nanping (in Fujian). To the northeast of the range are the somewhat higher and even more rugged Xianxia Mountains, which extend into Zhejiang province.
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