Great Wall of China is Now 700 km Longer
The Great Wall of China may be visible from outer space, but that doesn't mean it's easy to keep track of. The China Daily newspaper reported yesterday that archaeologists have discovered over 700 km of previously undetected sections of the wall in the Gansu and Shaanxi regions of northwest China. If we tack on those 700 km to the previous length of 8,852 km, giving us a mind-boggling figure roughly equal to the distance between London and Tokyo.
Of course, the 'Great Wall,' in singular form, is something of a misnomer. What we refer to as the Great Wall is not a single construction stretching in a continuous chain, but a series of walls, built piecemeal between the 5th century BC and 16th century AD. These walls are built near each other but are largely disconnected.
Liu Yulin, an archaeologist from the Jinta Museum, and his colleagues made the discoveries while working on a nation-wide survey of cultural relics, which began in 2007 and will end in December of 2011. His colleagues found chunks of the wall in remote, uninhabited sections of the Gobi Desert. "As the ancient buildings were built in the remote
According to reports, 26 kilometers of the wall were found in the Jinta (Gansu) province. Dating back to the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC - 24 AD), this section has been called by surveyors one of the best preserved in the country. Another roughly 700 km of walls were found in the Shaanxi province, with these sections being built in the Qin (221-206 BC), Western Han and Sui (581-618 BC) dynasties.
While stumbling upon 700 km of a monumental wall sounds like a rather uncanny discovery, the find is less unique than you might think. Just last September, surveyors found another previously uncharted section of the wall, this one reaching 11 km eastward in the northeastern province of Jilin. It appears the Great Wall, which was originally built to protect against invading barbarians from the north, has more secrets to reveal.
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