There are several creation myths in China, but Pan Gu /P’an Ku (盘古) is most widely known as the   Creator, a very philosophical account of the   creation was written by Lao Tzu.There are two most popular and influential of the  Chinese  Creation Myths.
The most influential of these two creation myths is included in Tao Te Ching written by Lao Tzu, who says of the universe;
“There   was something undefined and complete, existing before Heaven and  Earth.  How still it was, how formless, standing alone and undergoing no   change, reaching everywhere with no danger of being exhausted. It may  be  regarded as the mother of all things. Truthfully it has no name, but  I  call it Tao. (or The Way).”
Tao Te Ching, Chapter 25.
Tao   is often compared to water: clear, colourless, unremarkable, yet all   beings depend on it for life, and even the hardest stone cannot stand in   its way forever. This way of thought has spawned Taoism, Chinese   Buddhism as well as philosophical schools of thought.
The   creation though for most is described in the tale of Pan Gu and the   creation not only of heaven and earth, but of the separation of Yin and   Yang.
The P'an Ku Creation story though there are many many translations and versions, goes something like this:

"In the beginning the heavens and earth were still one and all was chaos.
The universe was like a big black egg with Pan Gu asleep inside.
After 18 thousand years Pan Gu woke from his long sleep. He took a
broad   axe and swung it with all his might to crack open the egg. The light   part of it floated up and formed the heavens and the other, colder   matter stayed below to form the earth. Pan Gu stood in the middle, his   head touching the sky, his feet planted on the earth.
 The  heavens  and the earth began to grow and Pan Gu grew with them. After  another 18  thousand years the sky was higher and Pan Gu stood between  the heavens  and earth so they would never join again.
 When  he died, he filled  in the rest of the world. His breath created the  wind and clouds. His  flesh became soil, his bones rock, and his blood  filled the rivers and  seas. His limbs and body became the five major  mountains in China. His  hair became the stars in the sky. From his  sweat came the rain to  nourish the land. His eyes became the sun and  the moon. And finally,  from the small creatures on his body, which has  been equated to  parasites in some translations, came man.
 Others  say that the  half-dragon goddess Nuwa was born after Pan-gu died, from  part of the  mixture of yin and yang that he had separated. She decided  to create  humans to have some other beings to talk to and share ideas  with, but  mostly just to love.
 Nuwa  went down to the edge of the Yellow  River where there were vast, soft  mud banks. She began forming figures  out of clay.  She decided that it  would be much more practical for her  creations to have legs instead of a  dragon tail, thus her humans were  not made in her image.
 Nuwa was delighted and began making more and more humans. She   made hundreds and hundreds of mud humans, but soon realized that it   would take centuries for her to make enough people to fill the vast   earth completely. Nuwa grabbed hold of a muddy stick and flung drops of   mud across the land.
 As  the sun dried each drop, it became a new  man or woman. Some say that  these humans were the less intelligent ones.  Those formed by Nuwa’s own  hands became great leaders.
 She  told  them to go and populate the earth. As they grew she loved them  and  protected them, and was revered as the mother of all humans."
The   Pan Gu or P’an Ku myth is similar to that of Lao Tzu’s theory, as the   egg or planet was still, and undisturbed, prior to Pan Gu awakening.   Both of which could be seen to have existed prior to what we know now as   Heaven and Earth. This creation story is one of many told across  China,  because of its dis-separate tribal history.

Very Interesting!!
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