• Omaha
  • Zhenjiang

Omaha (/ˈoʊməhɑː/ OH-mə-hah) is the largest city in the U.S. state of Nebraska and the county seat of Douglas County. Omaha is in the Midwestern United States on the Missouri River, about 10 mi (15 km) north of the mouth of the Platte River. The nation's 39th-largest city, Omaha's 2020 census population was 486,051.

Omaha is the anchor of the eight-county, bi-state Omaha-Council Bluffs metropolitan area. The Omaha Metropolitan Area is the 58th-largest in the United States, with a population of 967,604. The Omaha-Council Bluffs-Fremont, NE-IA Combined Statistical Area (CSA) totaled 1,004,771, according to 2020 estimates. Approximately 1.5 million people reside within the Greater Omaha area, within a 50 mi (80 km) radius of Downtown Omaha. It is ranked as a global city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network, which in 2020 gave it "sufficiency" status.

Omaha's pioneer period began in 1854, when the city was founded by speculators from neighboring Council Bluffs, Iowa. The city was founded along the Missouri River, and a crossing called Lone Tree Ferry earned the city its nickname, the "Gateway to the West". Omaha introduced this new West to the world in 1898, when it played host to the World's Fair, dubbed the Trans-Mississippi Exposition. During the 19th century, Omaha's central location in the United States spurred the city to become an important national transportation hub. Throughout the rest of the 19th century, the transportation and jobbing sectors were important in the city, along with its railroads and breweries. In the 20th century, the Omaha Stockyards, once the world's largest, and its meatpacking plants gained international prominence.

Zhenjiang, a prefecture-level city under the jurisdiction of Jiangsu Province, is an important port and scenic tourist city in the Yangtze River Delta, with a geomorphological trend of high in the west and low in the east, high in the south and low in the north, belonging to the north subtropical monsoon climate, with a total area of 3847 square kilometers. it has jurisdiction over 3 districts and 3 county-level cities; the resident population is 3.1964 million in 2018. Zhenjiang changed its name many times: it was called "Zhu Fang" in the Spring and Autumn period, "Guyang" in the warring States period, "Dantu" in the Qin Dynasty, "Jingkou" in the three Kingdoms, "South Xuzhou" in the Southern Dynasty and Song Dynasty, and "Runzhou" after the unification of the Sui Dynasty. The name of Zhenjiang has been changed since the Northern Song Dynasty. Zhenjiang is located in the southeast coast of China, southern Jiangsu, the center of the north wing of the Yangtze River Delta, the only confluence hub of the Yangtze River and the Beijing-Hangzhou Grand Canal; Changzhou and Wuxi to the south, Yangzhou to the north and Nanjing to the west; it is an important traffic center in East China. Within the territory
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