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| The train coded "Zang (Tibet) 2" from Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, runs past the railway station on the Tanggula Mountain Pass of 5,068 meters above sea level, the highest of world's railway, at 17:38 July 1, 2006. (Xinhua Photo) |
TANGGULA MOUNTAIN, Tibet, July 1 (Xinhua) -- A
passenger train heading for Lanzhou of northwest China's Gansu Province from
Lhasa passed the Tanggula Mountain Pass of 5,072 meters above sea level, the
highest section of world's railways, at 17:38 Saturday.
The track location is 255 meters higher than the
century-old record of world's railway altitude previously kept by Peru at 4,817
meters above sea level for its tracks from the Pacific coast up to Andes.
The Mountains of Tanggula, meaning "mountains on the
plateau " in Tibetan, was regarded as "insurmountable even by eagles" in the
eyes of locals, where the lowest temperature reach 45 Celsius degree under zero.
It is also the source area of the Yangtze River, the longest river in China.
The train, "Tibet 2", carried about 700 passengers
with 16 carriages. It will run more than 2,100 kilometers across "the roof of
the world" and is expected to arrive at the terminal of Lanzhou in some 30
hours.
Although the oxygen content at the Tanggula Mountain
Pass is only 50-60 percent of that at sea level, no passengers on "Tibet 2" felt
sick thanks to the oxygen supply on the train, according to Xinhua reporters on
the train.
Many passengers took the rare chance to take pictures
of the snow-covered mountains while, outside the train, Gyachong, head of the
Gangni Town in Amdo County, was leading more than 70 villagers patrolling along
the railway.
"I had never expected to see a train traveling across
the Tanggula. It is a miracle," said Gyachong.
Tanggula Railway Station, the world's highest at
5,068 meters above sea level, has no stationed workers because of the high
altitude.
"The equipment of the station is controlled via the
satellite and its operation is also under the eyes of a long-distance monitoring
system," said Qin Zhijun, an official with the No. 19 Bureau of the China
Railway Group, which is in charge of the station construction.
"Tibet 2" met another passenger train, "Qing 1",
which left Golmud for Lhasa this morning, when passing the next stop of
Buqiangge at 18:04 Saturday.
Passengers on the two vehicles waving to each other
excitedly, which, however, only lasted for a matter of one minute as "Tibet 2"
rolled out of the station at a speed more than 80 kilometers without resting.
The Qinghai-Tibet Railway, the world's longest
plateau railroad, stretches 1,956 kilometers from Qinghai's provincial capital
Xining to Lhasa. The section of 814 km from Xining to Golmud began operation in
1984 and the Golmud-Lhasa section started construction on June 29, 2001.
Experts and builders overcame three difficulties, namely
frozen tundra, high altitude and plateau environmental protection, to finish the
track-laying of the more challenging Golmud-Lhasa section in last October.
All the railway around the Tanggula Mountain Pass
runs on frozen earth, which "poses a major challenge to the railway
construction," said La Youyu, deputy director-general of the headquarters for
the Qinghai-Tibet Railway construction.
"Frozen earth is vulnerable to climate change, which
will thaw in summer and distend the railway base in winter, " La said.
To avoid possible dangers, the deputy director-general said, designers of the railway used technology of heat preservation, slope protection and roadbed ventilation in frozen earth areas.
"The project is not only a magnificent feat in China's history of railway construction, but also a great miracle of the world's railroad history," said Chinese President Hu Jintao when addressing the launching ceremony of the railway Saturday morning. Enditem
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| The train coded "Zang (Tibet) 2" from Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, runs past the railway station on the Tanggula Mountain Pass of 5,068 meters above sea level, the highest of world's railway, at 17:38 July 1, 2006. (Xinhua Photo) |