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HOHHOT, May 13 (Xinhua) -- Chinese meteorologists
claim to haveidentified the "routes" used by winds that cause sandstorms in
China.
A ten-year research project found that sandstorms
affecting China were closely related to the cold front from Siberia, said Kang
Ling, deputy head of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Regional Meteorological
Station.
The front swirls through large desert areas,
including the Gobi Desert, often combining with cyclones in Mongolia and
bringing sandstorms to China, said Kang.
Kang said the front arrived in China via three
routes.
On the east, the front runs southward through central
and eastern Mongolia, affecting northeast China, central and eastern Inner
Mongolia, Shanxi and Hebei Provinces and areas to the south of these regions.
The central route goes southward through central and
western Mongolia, affecting central and western Inner Mongolia and eastern areas
of northwest China, central and southern parts of north China and regions to the
south of these areas.
To the west, the front blows southward through
western Mongolia and northeast Kazakhstan, affecting northeastern part of
Xinjiang, the westernmost region of China, north China and areas to the south of
these regions.
Kang said the routes were exactly the same passages
through which sandstorms came to affect China.
Sandstorms influencing Beijing and Tianjin came
mainly through the central route, which runs through a desert area in Inner
Mongolia and is the closest route to Beijing and Tianjin. "Sandstorms from the
central route are the worst for Beijing and Tianjin areas," Kang said.
He said some of the sandstorms originated in China
and others came from abroad.
"Most of the sandstorms influencing Beijing and
Tianjin areas this year came from abroad and mainly through the central route,"
Kang said.
Scientists from the China Meteorological
Administration, the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Regional Meteorological Bureau and
Japanese meteorologists have participated in the research program. They used
satellite, remote sensing, radar and other high technologies to study the source
regions, routes and their influences on Beijing.
They suggested that Beijing should establish a
shelterbelt forest, and plant more trees to curb desertification in Inner
Mongolia.
Scientists suggested that China should work with
Mongolia to draft a long-term plan to prevent and curb the occurrence of
sandstorms originating from the desert areas of southern Mongolia.
To date, China has invested 55.8 billion yuan (6.97
billion U.S. dollars) in projects, including tree planting, designed to prevent
and curb sandstorms in Beijing and Tianjin areas. Enditem
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