亚洲精品无播放在线播放,精品国精品自拍自在线,免费国产污网站在线观看不要卡,97色欧美视频在线观看,久久精品本无码一本,国产精品高清视亚洲一区二区,全部无码特级毛片免费播放

RSSNewsletterSiteMapFeedback

Home · Weather · Forum · Learning Chinese · Jobs · Shopping
Search This Site
China | International | Business | Government | Environment | Olympics/Sports | Travel/Living in China | Culture/Entertainment | Books & Magazines | Health
Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
China's Titanic to 'sail' into glasshouse
Adjust font size:

A sunken ship from the Song Dynasty (960-1279), the largest Chinese wreck discovered from that period, will be hauled from its watery grave tomorrow.

 

Dubbed the "Titanic of China", the ship was heavily laden with a cargo of ceramic, gold and jewel exports when she sank.

 

The 30-m-long vessel went down with 80,000 cultural relics aboard about 60 km west of Hailing Island near Yangjiang more than eight centuries ago.

 

Labeled Nanhai No 1, the shipwreck will be salvaged by professionals under the Ministry of Communications (MOC) and the Guangdong salvage bureau.

 

The rare historical retrieval will be broadcast live on television across the nation.

 

 

After it breaches the surface, the wooden wreck will be housed in a huge iron container, which, together with seabed mud encasing the find, will weigh about the same as 15 train carriages, ministry officials told China Daily.

 

The shipwreck and its rich treasure will be loaded on a cargo ship to be ferried next week to a specially built glass house on the beach of Yangjiang.

 

The eagerly anticipated treasures will be guarded heavily at every stage, from retrieval to preservation.

 

Archaeologists will spend two years inside the glasshouse, painstakingly unveiling the nautical discovery and carefully removing her relics.

 

Several hundred reporters from around the world and thousands of others involved in the operation have descended on the small costal city of Yangjiang.

 

They have come to see the recovery of the first ancient vessel discovered beneath the "Marine Silk Road".

 

Historians expect it to shed light on China's centuries at sea, which only a limited number of surviving documents and salvaged artifacts have hitherto shed light on.

 

The findings may bolster a school of thought in the academic world that China's international contacts were built more at sea than over land.

 

According to Chen Gaohua, academician and historian at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, ancient China's sea trade blossomed in the 10th century.

 

"Contrary to traditional beliefs, shipping lanes were much more important than the Silk Road in linking the East and West," he said.

 

(China Daily December 21, 2007)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read

Comment
Username Password Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Nanhai No. 1 to be salvaged this year
- Ancient ship to be lifted
- Work Begins to Bring Ancient Ship Back to Port
Most Viewed >>
-100,000-year-old human skull found
-2008 China Wuhan Plum Blossom Festival opens
-A keen eye for the unseen
-Zhang Hanzhi, legendary diplomat and Mao's English tutor
-Terracotta Warriors Visit British Museum
SiteMap | About Us | RSS | Newsletter | Feedback

Copyright ? China.org.cn. All Rights Reserved E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-88828000 京ICP證 040089號

  • <th id="fomfv"></th><noscript id="fomfv"></noscript>

    <fieldset id="fomfv"><font id="fomfv"></font></fieldset><sup id="fomfv"><menuitem id="fomfv"></menuitem></sup>

    1. <dfn id="fomfv"></dfn>
        1. 亚洲精品无播放在线播放,精品国精品自拍自在线,免费国产污网站在线观看不要卡,97色欧美视频在线观看,久久精品本无码一本,国产精品高清视亚洲一区二区,全部无码特级毛片免费播放 毛片无码免费无码播放 国产精品美女乱子伦高潮 久久男人av资源网站无码 亚洲精品中文字幕AV一本 国产成年无码V片在线 特级毛片直接看不用下载 亚洲深夜无码视频