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BEIJING, Aug. 30 -- The ancient Xi'an City Wall,
a landmark-engineering feat in Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi Province, is under
threat from the tides of time.
"There are more than 100 cracks in the wall, and the ancient construction is also suffering from subsidence," said
Liu Chuzhang, an official from the Xi'an City Wall Protection Committee.
"I saw a crack only a finger wide in the wall last
year, but now a fist can be put through it," said Li Jianzhang, a local resident
who exercises everyday in the City Wall Park.
Earlier this month, the protection committee
conducted an investigation into the ancient construction and submitted a report
to the local government, saying the city wall is now threatened by cracks and
subsidence, said Liu.
The wall was built in 1374 during the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644). Standing 12 metres high with a width of 13 metres at the top and 16
metres at the bottom, the 13.7-kilometre wall is the only example of such an
ancient construction in China to have been so well preserved.
"Although the wall has been preserved, it has become
very much worn over the last 600 years. Since 1983, the wall has been rennovated
three times, but it still faces a number of serious problems," Liu said.
According to experts in ancient relics protection,
the wall is threatened by four major factors: packed earth, holes and cracks,
rainwater infiltration and the massive pressure caused by its own weight on the
ground.
"The city wall was built on the foundations of the
city wall built in the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907) and the packed earth inside the
older wall is different from that used in the Ming Dynasty. It cannot bear the
heavy tread of so many tourists the ancient city wall is one of the hottest
tourist spots in Xi'an," said Wang Yingliang, an expert in ancient building
protection.
Wang said the wall used to have a good drainage
system, but now many of the drainage facilities are damaged, creating pools of
water on the wall and rain infiltration. Moreover, the holes made in the wall
during war time have made the situation all the more serious.
"The increase of pressure on the ground as a result
of high-rises built in recent years around the wall and the excessive extraction
of ground water have led to subsidence and cracks," the expert said.
"Recreational and commercial activities staged on the
wall should be limited or forbidden, in order to better protect the ancient
construction," said Liu Qi, a member of the Xi'an Committee of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference.
(Source: China Daily) |