Relocation of stone inscriptions at Qutangxia Gorge will not affect
tourism in the Three Gorges area, an official said here Sunday.
Wang Wei, tourism director of Fengjie County in southwest China's
Chongqing Municipality, said that the relocation will better
preserve the stone inscriptions and retain the cultural feature
ofthe spectacular gorge scene, which has inspired many Chinese
poets.
While the ancient inscriptions are being removed from the cliffs,
archaeologists are busy excavating ancient city sites dating back
to the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279) in a nearby tourist
attraction of Beidicheng on the Yangtze River.
The relocation and excavation are both part of the Chinese
government's ambitious plan to protect 1,087 cultural relics from
being inundated in the construction of the Three Gorges project,
the world's largest water control project.
Many experts have been invited to re-design the Three Gorges region
so as to best protect the treasured cultural heritages in the
area.
"We can not afford to lose the heritages that constitute an
important part of Chinese culture and history," said Lu Huijie, the
manager in charge of the project to relocate and protect the stone
inscriptions. Enditem
(Xinhua News
Agency January 20, 2002)