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Two Chinese sites added to World Heritage List

2024-07-27 09:32:03China Daily Editor : Li Yan ECNS App Download

China's Badain Jaran Desert: Towers of Sand and Lakes, and the Migratory Bird Sanctuaries along the Coast of the Yellow Sea-Bohai Gulf of China (Phase II) successfully passed the review process on Friday by the World Heritage Committee to be included on the World Heritage List by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, said the National Forestry and Grassland Administration.

The decision was announced during the 46th session of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee held in New Delhi, India.

China now has 15 World Natural Heritage sites, leading in the total number of World Natural Heritage sites worldwide. It also has four mixed cultural and natural heritage sites.

The Badain Jaran Desert, located in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, is China's third-largest desert.

Scattered among the towering dunes are numerous lakes, showcasing a typical and ongoing process of aeolian landform development on Earth, while also serving as a rich and diverse habitat for wildlife, the administration said.

Within the Badain Jaran Desert are the world's tallest fixed dunes, the most densely distributed desert lakes and a variety of wind-sculpted landforms.

During the ongoing 46th session of UNESCO's World Heritage Committee in New Delhi, the Migratory Bird Sanctuary along the Yellow Sea Coast and Bohai Gulf of China (Phase II) is among the latest natural sites added to the World Heritage List. (PANJIE/FOR CHINA DAILY)

The other nomination, the migratory bird sanctuaries, is a serial extension of the property of the same name that is already listed on the World Heritage List. The newly admitted five sites, namely an estuarine wetland in Chongming, Shanghai; the Yellow River estuary in Dongying, Shandong province; a wetland area in Cangzhou, Hebei province; a national-level nature reserve in Dalian, Liaoning province as well as the Yalu River estuary in Dandong, Liaoning, are part of Phase II, while Phase I sanctuaries, were inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2019.

According to the administration, the sanctuaries provide breeding, resting and wintering grounds for tens of millions of waterbirds.

China's heritage sites, including the two newly listed ones, are typical representatives of China's ecological civilization and the construction of a beautiful China, the administration said.

They also highlight China's strong determination and outstanding contributions to global biodiversity conservation, it added.

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