Written by Jennifer Hattam, Treehugger
China‘s rapid push to develop the country’s resources is now threatening its most iconic landmark. According to recent reports, both legal and illegal mining near the Great Wall are causing parts of the ancient, 4,000-mile-long structure to crumble away.
“The Great Wall of China may have survived the Huns and Mongol hordes, but widespread neglect, underfunding, and mining means that it is now falling down,” The Telegraph reported earlier this month, citing photographs that show “huge holes…punched through the wall in some areas” and entire sections up to 100 miles long in ruins.
Mining Operations Largely Unregulated
“We have no idea how many enterprises are engaged in mining along the Great Wall,” the British newspaper quoted Guo Jianyong, an engineer from the provincial architecture protection agency, as telling the People’s Daily.
The stability of the centuries-old wall is threatened by prospecting for copper, iron, molybdenum, and nickel, with some mining operations coming within 100 meters of the famous structure, Reuters reported. It said the country’s Land Resources Bureau is not required to consult with the Department of Cultural Heritage before issuing mining permits.
Maintenance Neglected
Villagers in Hebei Province told the Chinese state-run Xinhua News Agency that “about 700 meters of the wall, which was built during the reign of Emperor Wanli during the Ming Dynasty (1573-1620), had already collapsed, and more walls and even towers are likely to collapse if the mining continues unchecked.”
According to both The Telegraph and Reuters, maintenance of the wall has focused on the most-visited segments near Beijing, with other parts neglected and left to fall into disrepair. Xinhua quoted an engineer as saying that resources are so limited, many segments of the wall are only inspected once a year.
“There was a regulation to protect the wall in 2006, but the wall is so long it is hard to enforce… And the general awareness of the wall’s problems is low,” Dong Waohui, the vice-chairman of the Great Wall Association, told The Telegraph. “People just think of the famous sections and assume that the rest of the wall is in the same condition.”
This post was originally published by Treehugger.
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Read more: china, copper, great wall of china, iron, mining, nickle, treehugger
Photo from Samru via flickr
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a good rescue!
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87 comments
+ add your ownIls ne prennent déjà pas soin des animaux alors de leur muraille !!!
Yes, The greatest monument to institutionalized slavery needs to be saved.
I'm more concerned about what the mining is doing to the enviroment!
How very, very sad------------------------------------and this is supposed to be progress------hmmmmmm I think not
So sad!! A place I have always wanted to travel to.. may never get to :(
Very sad.
Very sad.
Why dig deeper when the real treasure is already standing out there. We need to preserve the Great Wall ... an achievement and heritage of all men.
It would certainly be a shame to see the great wall come down. some things are just meant to be kept intact...
How sad! In a metaphoric sense, I hope the American population has taken notice that mining is also tearing down our 'great wall,' our health.
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