Photograph via UrinalCakes on Reddit
Located approximately 6 km (3.73 miles) from the outskirts of the city of Dunhuang in Western China, lies Crescent Lake, an incredible oasis in the Gobi desert. Known as Yueyaquan in Chinese. The crescent-shaped lake is a major tourist attraction where one of the world’s great shrines to Buddhism resides.
Designated a World Heritage Site, the lake has been shrinking since the 1970s and is now about a third of its original size. In the last three decades alone, the lake has dropped more than 25 feet. However, it has been reported that the government has recently taken steps to preserve the site and restore the depth of the lake to previous levels (unsure how well that initiative is going though).
An ancient city that once served as China’s gateway to the West, Dunhuang is now threatened by very modern demands. A dam built three decades ago to help local farming, combined with a doubling of the population, have overstressed a fragile desert hydrology that had been stable for thousands of years. As more people arrived, the underground water table that is the city’s main source of drinking water started dropping.
Photograph by Richard Towell on Flickr
Photograph by Richard Towell on Flickr
Photograph by black_lava on Flickr
Photograph by Tom Thai (eviltomthai on Flickr)
Photograph by newlite on Flickr
Photograph by Sigismund von Dobschutz
Photograph by FeverZ on Flickr
Photograph by Alex Kwok
Photograph by Chris Wang (pictouring on Flickr)
Photograph by Richard Towell on Flickr
Photograph by CHAAAAAAR on Flickr
Photograph by FeverZ on Flickr
Source - New York Times, Wikipedia
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