The sandstorms in Beijing are actually "dust storms".
The dust is blown to Beijing from dried salt lakes, wasteland, and
degraded grassland, said experts from the Institute of Geology
under the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences (CAGS) on
Wednesday when attending an academic seminar.
Han Tonglin, a researcher from CAGS, said that on
April 16, last year, a total of 336,000 tons of sand fell in
Beijing in the form of a large sandstorm. After the sandstorm, he
and his 7 other fellow researchers carried out an investigation in
Hebei and Inner Mongolia. Later they wrote two reports
on the research results titled "The Nature of the Sandstorms in
Beijing and Tianjin and How to Handle Them" and "Proposals
on the Beijing and Tianjin Sandstorms Handling Work". The two
reports aroused high attention from the State Development and
Reform Commission, which later responded to their reports. Both
reports give scientific analysis of the sandstorm happening in
Beijing on April 16 from geological environmental perspective. The
two reports conclude that the sandstorm that occurred on that day
was caused mainly by dust in the dried salt lakes in Inner
Mongolia, and some by dust from wasteland and degraded grassland.
Since deserts and sand land contained little dust, they were not
the sources for the sandstorm that occurred on April 16 in
Beijing.
For the past 50 years, people in Beijing and Tianjin
have tried to control sandstorms by planting many trees. However,
this method has not been very effective, because the sandstorms in
Beijing and Tianjin are not actually "sandstorms" but "duststorms".
The dust can be blown to 2,000-3,000 meters high in the air by wind
before it falls down to the ground. Trees can not stop such dust at
all, said Lin Jingxing, one of Han's fellow researchers.
In order to prevent such duststorms, people should
improve the ecological environment of dried salt lakes. Instead of
trees planting , more grass should be grown on the
earth.
(Chinanews.cn April 13, 2007)
|