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The ancient Karez system is comprised of
a series of wells and linking underground channels that uses gravity to
bring ground water to the surface, usually far from the source. In Turpan
county there are more than 470 systems, totaling over 1,600 kilometers
(1, 000 miles) of tunnels. It is considered as one of the three great
projects in China with the other two being the Great Wall and the Grand
Canal.
Originally ancient oasis towns depend on
the streams and rivers nearby into which glaciers in far-off mountains
feed. As the glaciers gradually shrank over the centuries, the streams
they fed likewise diminished, resulting in less or water flowing to the
oasis towns. Then people ingeniously created the karez to draw the underground
water to irrigate the farmland. Wells begin at the base of the mountains
along the contours of the hillside. To keep the underground channels unclogged,
two men and a draught animal work as a team - one man is lowed down to
clear the tunnel and buckets of mud are hoisted to the surface by the
animal. The tunnels slope less than the contours of the geographical depression,
so that the water reaches the oasis close to ground level. The water in
karez will not evaporate in large quantities even under the scorching
heat and fierce wind, hence ensuring a stable water flow and gravity irrigation.
The history of Karez can be traced back to
the Han dynasty. Recorded in the "Records of Historian" - a
chronological historical book written by Sima Qian, the great Han dynasty
historian known for his realistic records of historical events, it was
called "Well Canals". Most of today's karezes in the Turpan
were built in the Qing dynasty and in after years. Nowadays, large stretches
of fertile land are still irrigated by karezes. The Wudaolin karez and
the karez in the Wuxing Town are open to visitors.
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