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China ensures safety of underwater cultural relics with technological means


After taking a 91-meter-long escalator into the water, crossing a 146-meter-long horizontal
corridor, and walking into a viewing gallery which is 40 meters below the surface of the
Yangtze River, visitors find themselves at the Baiheliang Underwater Museum (or the
Underwater Museum of White Crane Ridge), located in the middle of the Yangtze River in
southwest China’s Chongqing municipality.


Involving a total investment of 193 million yuan ($30 million), the underwater museum built
in 2009 is hailed as the world’s first underwater museum that visitors can access without
having to dive by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO).


The underwater museum was built upon a natural stone ridge, which is 1,600 meters long and
15 meters wide. Situated at the intersection of the Yangtze River and its tributary Wujiang
River, in Fuling district, Chongqing, the stone ridge was an ancient hydrometric station that
used stone fish carvings to measure the water levels of the Yangtze River during dry seasons.


There are now 165 paragraphs of inscriptions on the ridge, which record the hydrological data
about the Yangtze River during dry years in more than 1,200 years since the Tang Dynasty
(618-907) and a large number of authentic calligraphy works of famous poets and artists and
have extremely important hydrological scientific value. The ridge is therefore known as the
world’s earliest hydrometric station in the world.


Through the 23 round glass windows of the underwater museum, visitors can see clearly the
inscriptions and fish carvings created by ancient Chinese people on the ridge.


As the ridge could be submerged in water forever when the Three Gorges Reservoir along the
Yangtze River achieves the annual target of storing water at 175 meters above sea level (The
target was first met in 2010), a Baiheliang in-situ protection project was initiated in 2003.


The project is the most difficult and technologically demanding and involves the most
investment among projects for the protection of cultural relics in the Three Gorges Dam area.


It adopted a “pressure-free container” method to realize in-situ preservation of these
underwater cultural relics. A huge container was built at tens of meters below the water
surface to envelop the core part of the inscriptions on the ridge. To ensure the container is
“pressure-free”, its inside is also filled with water.


At the entrance of the viewing gallery of the underwater museum, two professionally
qualified divers were preparing to dive into the water to clean the “pressure-free container”.
Since the water gets colder with depth, divers need to dress warmly inside the wetsuit. They
also add weights around the waist to control their buoyancy in water. After carefully checking
the air tightness of the diving gear, the divers jumped into the diving chamber.


“Every three months, poor water transparency, algal blooms, the growth of biofilms on the
surface of the inscriptions and other problems occur within the ‘pressure-free container’. So
we need to ask professional divers to clean it regularly,” said Yang Bangde, curator of the
Baiheliang Underwater Museum.

While swimming back and forth in the closed glass container, divers open the sewer backup
valve so that the sewage hose can remove the sediment in the protection container by the
pressure difference between the inside and outside of the container, and wipe the algae from
the glass widows and decorative lights.


The deeper they dive, the greater the water pressure becomes and the harder it is for them to
carry out tasks. Therefore, each diver usually work no longer than one hour each time, and
must wait at least 24 hours before performing another underwater task.


The temperatures and materials of underwater lights could affect the water quality, according
to Yang. The staff members of the museum have therefore constantly renewed the deep water
lighting system.


They changed the materials of lamps from aluminum to stainless steel so as to reduce the
matters produced by long-term immersion of aluminum lamps in deep water, and replaced
warm white lamp beads with cool white ones, effectively reducing the temperature of the
water and slowing down the growth rate of algae. Besides, they have employed a filtration
and circulation system that operates ceaselessly. “The water inside the protection container is
even less turbid than potable mineral water,” Yang pointed out.


“As a proverb in Fuling goes, ‘The sighting of the stone fish carvings promises a good
harvest,’” Yang said, pointing to carp carvings on the ridge.


Over 1,200 years ago, after careful observation of the water level of the Yangtze River, local
people found that once the stone fish carvings emerged from the water, it meant that the low-
water level days were gone and a year with adequate rainfalls and a bumper harvest was to
come. As far as Yang is concerned, the inscriptions on the stone ridge are like a book hidden
underwater that has recorded a history of more than a thousand years.

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