The
Dujiangyan Irrigation Project is long-established water
conservation works. It is 56 kilometers (34.8miles) west
of Chengdu at Dujiangyan city lying in the middle reach
of Minjiang River, which is the longest tributary of Yangtze
River.
Since
ancient times the Minjiang River has surged downward from
Mt. Minshan thrusting itself into the Chengdu Plain. When
reaching the flatlands the rivers speed slowed down abruptly.
Thus the watercourse filled up with silt making this area
extremely vulnerable to flooding. The people living on
the Chengdu Plain consequently suffered a great deal from
frequent floods.
Around
BC 250 during the Warring States Period, Libing, a governor
of Shu in Qin state (present Sichuan Province) with his
son directed the construction of Dujiangyan. The governor
gave up the old ways of dam building which was simply
try to catch the floodwaters. Instead he employed a new
method by channeling and dividing the water to harness
the Minjiang River. He accomplished this by separating
the project in to two main parts: the headwork and the
irrigation system. The project effectively put the flooding
waters under control.
For
over two thousand years the whole system has functioned
perfectly, serving as not only as flood prevention but
also as an immense source for irrigation as well as a
means to facilitate shipping and wood drifting. It has
contributed greatly to the richness of Chengdu Plain and
helps it earn its reputation as "The Land of Abundance".
On
November 29th, 2000, Dujiangyan was listed on world cultural
heritages by UNESCO.
Headwork
of Dujiangya Irrigation System
The
headwork consists of three projects: Yuzui, Feishayan,
Baopingkou.
Yuzui:
It is a long and narrow dyke built in the center of the
Minjiang River, dividing Minjiang into the inner river
and the outer. Uniquely Libing designed it in a shape
of fish mouth, in order to receive least water resistance.
In average, 40 percent of river' runoff goes into the
inner river in flood season, 60 percent into the outer,
and vice versa in dry season. The inner river diverts
water into Chengdu Plain through Baopingkou. And the outer
is the main flow, which carries off 80 percent of silt.
Baopingkou:
It is the main diversion gate to draw in water for irrigation
in shape of bottleneck. In construction of irrigation
system, Libing had a canal cut through Mt. Yulei toward
Chengdu Plain. Baopingkou marks the inlet of the man-made
river. It works for conducting water and controlling the
volume of inflowing water.
Feishayan:
It is spillway for releasing flood and silt from inner
river to outer river. When the volume of water in inner
river goes beyond the upper limit of influx at Baopingkou,
excessive water will flow over Feishayan to outer river.
At the same time, the eddy force of overflowing water
helps take along the silt and sand, which in other cases
would settle to the bottom. In ancient times, with no
cement in use, Feishayan spillway was originally made
of piles of bamboo cages filled with cobblestones. If
there happened unusual big flood, Feishayan could collapse
by itself, leaving water channel much clearer. Now it
has been constructed in concrete.
Anlan
Suspension Bridge
Anlan
Suspension Bridge also called Couple's Bridge, spans 500
meters (1641 feet) long over both the inner and outer
river, right above Yuzui dyke. It used to be secured by
thick bamboo rope. Although it is reinforced by tight
steel wire now, visitors still can have fun by swinging
back and forth on the bridge while walking across.
Erwang
Temple
The
Erwang Temple was built to commemorate Libing and his
son, who together made great contributions to the project.
Being
an outstanding hydraulics engineer, Libin invented the
fish-mouth style dyke. He also erected a stone man in
the middle of river to act as water gauge for long-time
observation of water in different seasons. He buried a
stone rhino on bottom of the inner river as gage for measuring
the concentration of silt and sand when dredging for annual
maintenance.
An
eight words inscription on a wall inside the temple sums
up his experience of water-control: "Dredging the
sand deeper, building the dam lower."
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