HOHHOT, Sept. 7 (Xinhua) -- China's Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region will set hand to preserve and protect its local section of the
Great Wall, the first such kind of move in the local history, said the regional
government on Sunday.
Preservation and protection will go to a 2-km-long
section that locates in the Beibao Village, Qingshuihe County, which was built
in the Ming Dynasty (1368 A.D. to 1644), government official told Xinhua.
Like any other architectural site in the world, the
Great Wall is at risk of damage caused by natural and human activities. In some
sections, its bricks and dirt have even been used as construction materials.
According to the official, preservers has finished
field survey earlier, and the project is expected to be finished in two or three
years.
The Great Wall, which was listed as the United
Nations World Heritage Site in 1987, was first built in the Warring States
Period (475-221 B.C.) to defend China against invasion by northern nomadic
tribes.
The northern Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region owns
15,000-km-long Great Wall built in different dynasties, accounting for one third
of the country's total. The section that built in Ming Dynasty stretches about
1,100 km.