Ancient lion city
The Lion City, otherwise known as Shi Cheng, is an ancient
submerged city that lies at the foot of Wu Shi Mountain (Five Lion Mountain),
now located about 25 – 40 metres beneath the spectacular Qiandao Lake (Thousand
Island Lake) in China. Officials have taken a renewed interest in the sunken city after discovering that, despite
more than 50 years underwater, the entire city has been preserved completely
intact, transforming it into a virtual time capsule.
The Lion City was built during the Eastern Han Dynasty (25 –
200 AD) and was first set up as a county in 208 AD. It was once the centre of
politics and economics in the eastern province of Zhejiang. But in 1959, the
Chinese government decided a new hydroelectric power station was required - so
it built a man-made lake, submerging Shi Cheng under 40 metres of water.
After erecting a dam, now known as Xin'an River
hydroelectric, the historical metropolis was slowly filled with water until it
was completely submerged by the turquoise-blue mass now referred to as Qiandao
Lake. Qiandao Lake covers an area of 573 km² and has a storage capacity
of 17.8 km³. More than 1,000 large islands dot the lake and a few thousand
smaller ones are scattered across it.




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