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In an area of grassland known as ***, families of Mongolian are gathering. The name *** means rich head waters and they’ve come here to set up temporary homes to grace a life stock on the lush summer ***. The search for fresh ford for their animals keeps them on the go, and being able to move home so easily is a real advantage. It takes only a few minutes for the Mongolian family to set up their yurts. But the Mongolian don’t have this place all to themselves. 1 T" x0 _7 G' c. W0 k Y
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The rich resources also attract the huge variety of birds. The Mosel cranes, wading birds and waterfowl migrate here from all over Asia, drawn to the rivers of wetland, fed by glacier melt water from nearby mountains. This place is known in China as one lake. It is the world’s most important breeding site for *** swans and mosquitoes as well. 9 ^- h0 O: c# y5 ^, O) Q0 ]; A
0 \. T0 f0 a0 @ VThe *** at the swan lake provide endless grass for birds to nest in and for life stock to eat. It would seem there’s plenty for everybody, but occasionally they can’t get too close for comfort. 800 years ago Mongolian people are the most feared people on Earth, but they have a spiritual side as well. The birds of swan lake have little cause to worry. The Mongolians protect these ones and venerate them, calling them birds of god.. P' X" w/ \% u! v! e
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The Great Wall’s journey through northern China continues westward, by setting a landscape that becomes increasingly parched. Our journey has brought a half way across northern China and the grasslands are becoming hot, dry and deserted. Wandering these wastes are creatures that look more African than Asian. These are ***, *** and easily ***. When threatened by danger they are as fast as race horse, but in this *** they favor a gentler pace. There’s little standing water here but the *** have remarkable ability to extract water from dry grass, although finding enough worth eating keeps them constantly move.
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0 E- l3 z0 w/ c! g! w* o( a/ xEven out here in the semi-deserts, the wall continues its long march. Here it’s made of little more compacted earth, but with hardly any rain falling, it suffers very little erosion over centuries. Hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives building it, yet it seems hard to believe that anyone felt this distant waste land needed protecting. But the wall still has one final surprise. This is Jiayuguan, the mighty fortress in the desert. Built in the Ming dynasty over 600 hundred years ago, legend says the construction of the fortress is so *** planed that one hundred thousand bricks were specially made and only one brick was left unused. This fortress marks the end of the Great Wall of China, the greatest man-made barrier on Earth. But ahead lies a even more formidable barrier, a vast, no man’s land of desert that stretches westward to the borders of central Asia. Jiayuguan fortress was considered to be the last outpost of Chinese civilization. Beyond this point lay ***. # @: f# V. e! v) z9 N
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China’s largest desert, the Takalamagan, lies out here, its name has been translated as ‘you go in and you never come out’. This is a place of intense heat, the brassive wind blow sand, totally hostile to life. Yet there was a route through the desert for those brave enough to risk their lives for it. People were *** into the horrors of the deserts, because the Chinese had a secrete so power that it changed the course of the history. The key to the secrete lies in the distant past. Legend has it that around 5000 years ago, a princess was walking in her garden when something unusual fell into her tea cup. A magical thread was extracted, and it became more prized than gold or jade, the thread was silk. ( u2 `4 _! m2 z" ]; c, d
& U% c+ q/ ^6 l8 g" A6 ?$ B1 j% iIncredibly such a beautiful substance and all the history behind it comes from a humble little insects, the silk worm. Silk moths lay several hundred eggs and the tiny caterpillars that emerge eat nothing but mulberry leaves. After 50 days of ***, they grow 10 thousand heavier. By this stage 25% of their body mass is made up of silk glands. In the process turning into adult moths they spin a cocoon from a single strand silk which can be over a thousand meters long. It was the legendary strength and brightness of silk fibers that made it so ***. |