Introduction to Zhouqu: Zhouqu County, Gansu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Gansu Province, including the county, in the southeast of Gansu, southeast of Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, 1289 (Yuan twenty-six years), Lixi Gucheng military and civilian thousand households, 1949 established Xigu The county people's government established the Zhouqu Administrative Committee in 1954, changed to Zhouqu County in 1955, renamed Longdi County in January 1959, and restored Zhouqu County in 1962, and 3010 square kilometers in Zhouqu County in 2011. It consists of 2 towns, 17 townships, 210 villages, 403 natural villages, and 136,900 people, including 46,000 Tibetans, accounting for 34%. Zhouqu County is located in the mountains of the South Qinling Mountains. The terrain is high in the northwest and the southeast is a typical alpine valley. The climate is a warm zone. The “one river and two rivers (Bailong River, Gongba River, Boao River)” runs through it, and the terrain is complex. Natural disasters are frequent. Zhouqu County has national-level forest parks—Beach Forest Park, Cuifeng Mountain, Lahu Mountain and other natural landscapes. Zhouqu is a national key poverty alleviation county (80.2% of poverty-stricken areas), the “5.12” earthquake and the “8·8” flood disaster-stricken county, and the three major geological disaster-prone counties in the country (the landslide-type geological disaster density is as high as 0.052). /Km2), the country's natural disasters frequently occur in counties, and at the same time, it is also the most remote ethnic county in Lanzhou, the capital of Gansu Province, Gansu Province's economic aggregate ranks at the end of the county, the smallest economic county in Gansu Province, the poorest county, Gansu Province financial self-sufficiency rate The lowest county (only 1.25%), the least per capita arable land in Gansu Province (the per capita arable land is less than 1.2 mu). On August 8, 2010, a large mudslide disaster occurred in Zhouqu County.