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XI'AN, Nov. 7 (Xinhuanet) -- Anytime subways pass under the Forbidden City, trains roar alongside the Great Wall and jet planes fly over the Dunhuang Grottos, the ancient structures suffer from vibrations caused by engines of modern industrial civilization.
But China is now to set a national standard aiming to
address this problem.
Chinese scientists have drafted a regulation to ward
off any unnecessary industrial harm to cultural relics and has already submitted
it to legal authorities before the government pushes the standard with
administrative power.
"Earthquakes can cause great damage to relics, but
recent studies show that vibrations brought about by trains, automobiles, mining
and large machinery can also lead to fatal deterioration," said Prof. Pan Fulan,
a leading expert in the field of environmental vibration and director of the
standard-setting project.
Given the banality of industrial vibrations, few
scientists are dedicated to this worldwide problem.
In the last four years, Pan's group conducted a field
survey inscores of historic sites, collecting samples and testing to what extent
they can stand vibrations.
Pan said many historic sites, like the Dayan Pagoda,
built in 652 A.D. in northwest China's Xi'an, Liuhe Pagoda built in 970 A.D. in
east China's Hangzhou city and the over-1300-year-old Jietai Temple in Beijing
have more or less been damaged by industrial vibrations, some quite seriously.
Based on the surveys, experts crafted the standard to
control industrial vibrations on ancient wooden, brick and stone buildings and
grottos, said Pan.
Gu Yucai, deputy director of the relics protection
department under the State Administration of Cultural Heritage, said that by
setting up the standard, Chinese scientists are doing their part to protect the
world's cultural heritage. Enditem |