Society
China to restore ancient Buddhist grottoes
Updated: 2011-05-08 11:23
(Xinhua)
TAIYUAN - Archaeologists and engineers are working to restore protective eaves and attics to the 15,000-year-old Yungang Buddhist Grottoes, a world heritage site in northern Shanxi Province, to slow down its weathering.
|
Engineers will first work on six most-damaged grotto caves, where some of the grotto columns are likely to collapse, he said.
The Yungang Buddhist Grottoes in Datong City boast 51,000 Buddhist images in 53 caves stretching for one kilometer along a cliff. The carving of the grottoes started 1,500 years ago. It was listed as a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage site in 2001.
E-paper
War of the roses
European Chinese rose growers are beating their Chinese rivals at their own game
High-tech park gets big boost
At the source
Merchant of Venice
Specials
High-tech park gets big boost
Zhongguancun sets sights on being one of the top technology hubs in the world
Learning to close the gap
Thousands of students have benefited from Tibet middle school program set up outside the autonomous region
The Cixi story
Two books about the Empress Dowager cast new light on the iconic ruler.