Archive for November 27th, 2008

Beijing Olympic – Map could help stop Shanghai sinking

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Scientists have developed a three-dimensional map of the city’s underground geology, which they say will help authorities tackle the problem of subsidence.

Wei Zixin, director of the Shanghai Institute of Geological Survey, said that although recent figures had shown the rate of subsidence was falling, it remained a problem.

However, with the new map, areas that are most at risk can be quickly identified and appropriate action taken.

Speaking at a forum on geological studies held in Shanghai on Wednesday, Wei said that once an area has been identified, water can be pumped underground to boost the groundwater level.

By doing so, the city’s skyscrapers will be free from the threat of subsidence for up to 100 years, he said.

According to figures presented at the forum, in 2004, Shanghai sunk 7.76 mm, and this year 7.5 mm. With the help of the new map, which details 6,700 sq km of the city’s subterranean environment, the level could be cut to just 5 mm by 2010, Wei said.

While helping reduce the threat of subsidence, the map can be used by planners to determine the most suitable areas for construction and the selection of digging routes, he said.

Subsidence has been a longstanding problem in Shanghai, mostly as a result of the over-exploitation of underground water and the construction of skyscrapers, Wei said.

More than 1,000 sq km of the city have been affected by subsidence, with the most serious case seeing the ground level fall by 2.6 m.

Although hot springs have been discovered in five separate areas of Shanghai, Sun Jianzhong, director of the information department at the city’s urban development information center, has warned against exploitation of the natural resource.

“The priority must be to protect Shanghai’s water environment, not exploit it,” he said yesterday.

Shanghai is built on the alluvial plain of the Yangtze River and any exploitation of underground water has a serious impact on the geological environment and can cause subsidence, Sun said.

In a bid to halt the city’s slow decline, the municipal government has introduced various measures including limiting the exploitation of underground water sources and pumping water into the subsurface.

Industrial consumers of water have also been moved out of the downtown area and are required to draw water from deep underground.

 (Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

China Travel – Yanshan Temple

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

The Yanshan Temple is located at the Tianyan village at the northern piedmont of Tianyan Mountain, 40 kilometers to the southeast of Fanzhi County, Shanxi Province.

The Yanshan Temple, originally called Lingyan Yard, was first built in the third year (1158) of the Zhenglong reign of the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234). It had been repaired many times during the Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties. The concurrent existent constructions include the temple gate, the bell tower, east and west side halls, the southern Hall and the Buddha hall.
The Wenshu Hall, the southern hall of the temple, was built in the Jin Dynasty and underwent a big innovation in the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368). The hall is five bays in width and six rafters in depth, with a single-eave gable and hip roof. Several statues such as Buddha, Bodhisattva, disciple and Buddha’s warrior attendants are kept on the Buddha altar in the hall, all of which retain the architecture style of the Jin Dynasty. Over 9,700 square meters of frescos are painted on the walls of the hall. Wang Kui, a royal painter, painted the frescos in the seventh year (1167) of the Jin Dynasty. The western wall is painted with the story about Buddhist monk; it narrates the life story of Sakyamuni. The eastern wall is painted the story about sutra and the source of life. The northern wall is painted with the story about that five hundred merchants suffered from a shipwreck when traveling in a big ship and were saved by Luosha Woman finally. A pagoda is painted in the east, where an octagonal seven-storeyed pagoda lies. The pagoda has an elegant shape and a refined construction, with city wall and gate tower below. The southern wall is painted with patterns of halls, pavilions and portraits. The fresco presents vivid, beautiful and affecting scenarios, including palace and street, gods and worldliness, mirage and cloud, forest and orchard, infants, nobles and citizens, etc. The pictures are arranged precisely. It is an excellent artwork among the frescoes of the Jin Dynasty. The fresco is rich in content and profound in meaning. It provides us with invaluable visual reference for the research into religion, architecture and arts of the Jin Dynasty.

(Source: chinaculture.org)

Chinese Culture – Sites of Han Dynasty at Juyan & Bamboo and Wooden Strips

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

 

Sites of beacon towers and walls of frontier fortress, the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD)

 

Location: Jinta County, Gansu Province, and Erjina Banner, the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region

 

Period: 119 BC – 91 AD

 

Excavated in 1930

 

Significance: It has supplied important materials to the study of the history and culture of the Han Dynasty, as well as that of the features of military institutions located in the remote areas.

 

 Introduction

 

Juyan is the sites of beacon towers and walls of frontier fortress of the Han Dynasty. The total length of the frontier fortress is about 250 kilometers. Archeologists have already discovered the ruins of 3 beacon towers so far. 

Silk fabrics written with six characters: token of delivering command or passing fortress (bottom, length 21 cm); Bamboo and wooden strips: (up)

 

Archeologists began their excavation in 1979 at the beacon-fire tower ruins in Juyan in northwest China‘s Gansu Province. Nearly 40,000 wooden slips and bamboo strips have been unearthed, together with a large quantity of bows and arrows, cuirass pieces, and iron tools, etc. The content of the strips are extensive, covering politics, military, economy, culture, technology, law, philosophy, religion, and people, etc. Some of the wooden slips and bamboo strips were not pure official documents, but newspapers issued by the central and local governments. At least 100 such newspapers were discovered; part of them were abstracts of imperial edicts and others, memorials presented by local officials to the central government.

Source: chinaculture.org