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9 l% @ E# j Z) _! kTo outsiders this is a mysterious land. It contains dazzling man-made structures, and it’s home to some of China’s rarest and most charismatic creatures. The people who live here, the Han Chinese, comprise the largest ethnic group in the world, and their language, mandarin, is the world’s oldest and most widely spoken language.
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6 O/ e+ v8 t. l5 y( pIn the last 50 years, China has seen massive development, bringing many environmental problems. But the relationship of the Chinese to their environment and its creatures is in fact deep, complex, and extraordinary. In this program we will look for clues to this ancient relationship and what it means to the future of China.; W' [ ]' C0 y
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Our journey starts at the very heart of China – Beijing. China’s capital is a vast metropolis, home to 15 million people. This *** modern city seems an unlikely place for traditional beliefs and customs. But beneath the contemporary over near, it’s possible to see glimpses of a far old China. Every morning people head to the parks around the Forbidden City, to continue a custom which is centuries old. Many Chinese keep birds as companions, specifically a type of laughing thrush from southern China. But they know that *** up in doors birds may become depressed, so they try to brighten their day by meeting other birds. This surprising scene in the heart of Beijing is a clue to China’s oldest spiritual ambition: the harmonious co-existence of man and the nature. But from the 1950s onwards this ancient belief was to be severely challenged. 9 |$ p! Y( p# D; q# G
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After a century of humiliation and invasion by foreign powers, Chairman Mao thought to rebuild China’s dignity. Mao believes strongly in self reliance, achieve through using all nature resources. Mao’s first concern is to feed the Chinese people, by turning as much land as possible over to grain production, destroying non-*** crops and uprooting fruit trees in the process. A campaign to *** crop-eating sparrows backfired when insect-eating birds were also targeted, causing an increase in insect pests. 7 d |6 n3 Z" J8 J
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Efforts to make China’s self reliant in steel resulted in 10% of the country’s forests being felt to fill the furnaces. This had a profound impact on China’s environment, with the fact in some cases lasting in present day. Mao’s policy towards the countryside has been described in the phrase: man must conquer nature, quite different from the ancient concept of harmonious co-existence with nature. ) K8 v# T9 Q6 z) K" I% B2 I
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As modern China engages with the outside world, which of these attitudes seems to be likely to prevail? To find the answers, we will travel to the far reaches of the heart land, to see how the traditional cultures and unique creatures are faring today. 7 G) I* O. T' g, D' L
, J! ?2 y9 b9 g: zBeijing has always depended on the north China plane, a rich farmland twice the size of UK. The fertility of this plane derives from further west, from the loess plateau. The mineral rich soil of loess plateau is incredibly fertile. People have lived here for thousands of years, hollowing their homes out of the soft soil. The caves might lack the glamor of Beijing, but people can survive here, warm, secure, and best of all, well fed. * f5 x. {; E' O% @/ V; x: r! F
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As a result of centuries farming, the landscape has become scarred, with thousands of water worn gullies. But this spectacular erosion has had an unexpected benefit. The streams which drain the gullies carry the fertile yellow soil into the plateau’s major river, known to the Han people as the mother of Chinese civilization. This is the Yellow River. Each year the Yellow River carries billions of tons of sediments from the loess plateau eastwards to the cross fields of Chinese heart land.
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Historically the Chinese relationship with the river has been uneasy. Sediments filling up the river bed has caused the river burst its banks periodically, unleashing *** floods, resulting in millions of deaths. But when tamed with dykes and channels, the river’s bounty is legendary.
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Even today half of China’s wheat comes from the Yellow River flood plane. For thousands of years, the sediments rich Yellow River has underpinned the prosperity of the Chinese heart land. But increase demand for water by people and industry now threaten to run the river dry. And the source of its fertility, the loess plateau is also under threat. Loosened by cultivation, it’s soft soil is blown away.
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' v3 ~) Q+ `2 |( [& _The north China plane is choked with duststorms that even loom in Beijing. So much so that the Chinese government has made improving the city’s air quality a priority, in the run up to Beijing Olympics. Heart land China’s life support system is in trouble, yet in a few areas it’s still possible to find landscapes that appear to have remained untouched. & @! u/ v4 n7 w a, a! ]
# ~/ Y; k, k0 @8 Q+ eAt the southern edge of north China lies the Qinling Mountains. At 1500 kilo meters long they run like a back bone through middle of China. Deep with the mountains is a maze of remote valleys and forests, home to strange and wonderful creatures. This is golden snub-nosed monkeys, a species unique to China. Seldom seen, they are frequently heard. Their strange childlike *** and extraordinary appearance might have inspired the local tales of *** like wild man of the mountains. As winter temperature drops to minus 10 Celsius, their fur keeps them warm. Neutral grooming not only keeps their precious fur in good condition, but also helps to reinforce the bound within the troops. ! w: f, v0 e9 S4 i3 @( b
8 ?/ f9 I- _: |8 cIn summer the monkey go around in huge bands, but at this lean time of the year they split up into smaller foraging parties. In the dead of winter the monkeys are forced to *** around the rocks for a few *** of lichens and moss. As the world surrounding their mounting home has filled up with towns and croplands, the snub-nosed monkeys’ habitat has changed dramatically. Today they’re just 10000 left in existence.
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) \4 v5 ?# h6 p% o9 f( X$ ]3 UTo the people who live in the Qinling Mountains, the forests and its wildlife are the resources to be used, the basis of their lively hood. These people share the forests with a even more illusive animal. It’s probably China’s most famous animal, but very few have ever seen it. Unlike the monkeys this creature has a very specific diet – bamboo. It’s a wild giant panda. Secretive and sensitive to noise, the giant panda is often gone before anyone can get close to it. The panda has long been known by Chinese, it was mentioned in dictionaries more than 2000 years ago and the emperor garden is said to have housed one. In the dense bamboo of the forest, one panda rarely sees another, instead they communicate by subtle scent signals. |
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