Shaoguan Tuhua, a Local Vernacular of Northern Guangdong Province, China: a New Look from a Quantitative and Contact Linguistic Perspective

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Shaoguan Tuhua, a Local Vernacular of Northern Guangdong Province, China: a New Look from a Quantitative and Contact Linguistic Perspective Shaoguan Tuhua, a Local Vernacular of Northern Guangdong Province, China: A New Look from a Quantitative and Contact Linguistic Perspective Thesis Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Litong Chen, B.A. Graduate Program in East Asian Languages and Literatures The Ohio State University 2012 Thesis Committee: Marjorie K. M. Chan, Advisor Donald Winford Zhiguo Xie Copyright by Litong Chen 2012 Abstract This thesis reanalyzes data collected from published fieldwork sources and brings a new perspective to Shaoguan Tuhua, the genetically unclassified vernacular speech used in the Shaoguan area, northern Guangdong Province, China. The reanalysis consists of a quantitative study of the Shaoguan Tuhua varieties and some Hakka varieties (the regional lingua franca) and a contact linguistic study on one of the Shaoguan Tuhua varieties, Shibei Shaoguan Tuhua, and its Hakka neighbor, Qujiang Hakka. This thesis uses a combined methodology. It consists of the traditional Chinese dialectological research methods, phylogenetic network (computational) methods, and contact linguistic frameworks. Neither phylogenetic network methods nor contact linguistic frameworks are sufficiently used in Chinese dialectology. In terms of studying Shaoguan Tuhua, the use of these methodologies is new. This thesis first of all introduces the historical and sociolinguistic contexts of Shaoguan Tuhua. Shaoguan Tuhua has been in contact with Hakka for about seven hundred years, and Hakka speakers significantly outnumber Shaoguan Tuhua speakers. The majority of Shaoguan Tuhua speakers, especially the younger generation, can speak fluent Hakka. ii Based on the historical and sociolinguistic background, this thesis goes on to examine the result of the Shaoguan Tuhua-Hakka contact. A phylogenetic network method is then conducted by drawing distance-based graphs called neighbor-net splits. This thesis encodes the data and generates network graphs using the SplitsTree4 software. The graphs show that on lexical, phonological, and morphosyntactic levels, Shaoguan Tuhua and Hakka do not diverge categorically but the differences are gradual. In the continuum, Shibei Shaoguan Tuhua and Qujiang Hakka form a cluster, which indicates their similarity on all levels. These two varieties are lexically and structurally closer to each other than they are to other varieties in the Shaoguan area—than even to their own sister varieties. Then, under Van Coetsem’s (1988) framework of “borrowing and imposition”, this thesis proposes that the mechanism of the Qujiang Hakka-Shibei Shaoguan Tuhua transfer of language materials is imposition. This means that the transfer is carried out by those bilinguals who are more fluent in Qujiang Hakka, and the direction of transfer is from Qujiang Hakka (the Source Language) to Shibei Shaoguan Tuhua (the Recipient Language). The proposal is then corroborated by statistical, structural, and sociolinguistic evidence. iii Dedication Dedicated to my mother, Dequn Tan, a loving, brave, and joyful woman iv Acknowledgments It is my pleasure to thank those who made this thesis possible. It is impossible to overstate my gratitude to my thesis advisor, Dr. Marjorie K. M. Chan (“Ma Laoshi”). Her enthusiasm and extensive knowledge of Chinese dialectology made this field very intriguing for me. Throughout my thesis-writing period, “Ma Laoshi” provided encouragement and sound advice. I would have been lost without her guidance. I also owe my gratitude to Dr. Donald Winford. Through our discussions I was often inspired by his valuable suggestions on contact linguistics theories and insightful critiques of my data analysis. I would like to thank Dr. Zhiguo Xie for his careful comments on the thesis drafts. I benefited greatly from his constructive advice on structure, methodology, and many other details of the thesis. I am indebted to Debbie Knicely. She assisted me in many ways, in navigating through graduate requirements, the logistics pertaining to the thesis, and many other ways during my two years in the Master’s program in the department. I also thank Jeff Holliday for kindly and carefully proofreading the post-defense draft of my thesis. I wish to give thanks to my many student colleagues for providing a stimulating and critical environment in which I learned more about linguistics. I am especially grateful to Tsz-Him Tsui, Yutian Tan, Seth Wiener, and Rongbin Zheng. I also thank Xin Zhang and Zhini Zeng. I truly enjoyed the days and nights we studied together. I would like to show my gratitude to my friends. Zezhen Cheng, Jing Li, Xu Zhang, Xiaoli Liu, Nicholas Joch, Kayu Tsang, Yu Jia Xiao, Rich Mendola, Tuyata Tserev, Jinman Huang, and Tim & Mary Kirk deserve special mention for their constant prayer and encouragement. Lastly, and yet most importantly, I wish to thank my parents, Weijun Chen and Dequn Tan. They bore me, raised me, supported me, taught me, and loved me. To them I own my deepest gratitude. I also wish to thank my wife-to-be, Dinglei Huang, for helping me get through the difficult times, and for providing all the logistical, emotional, and spiritual support. It is my greatest joy and blessing to have her in my life. Soli Deo Gloria. v Vita April 10, 1987……………… Born, Chongqing, China 2008-2009…………………. Chinese Teaching Assistant, Department of Modern and Classical Languages, Allegheny College 2010………………………... B.A. Chinese Linguistics, Renmin University of China 2010-2011…………………. University Fellowship, The Ohio State University 2011-2012…………………. Graduate Teaching Assistant, Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures, The Ohio State University Fields of Study Major Field: East Asian Languages and Literatures Concentration: Chinese Linguistics (Dialectology and Contact Linguistics) vi Table of Contents Abstract ............................................................................................................................... ii Dedication .......................................................................................................................... iv Acknowledgments............................................................................................................... v Vita ..................................................................................................................................... vi Table of Contents .............................................................................................................. vii Table of Tables ................................................................................................................. xii Table of Figures ............................................................................................................... xiii Table of Maps .................................................................................................................. xiv Chapter 1 Introduction ................................................................................................... 1 1.1 Topic, Motivations, and Aims of This Thesis ...................................................... 1 1.2 Organization of the Chapters ................................................................................ 3 1.3 Background of the Shaoguan Area and Shaoguan Tuhua .................................... 5 1.3.1 Shaoguan: the Area ....................................................................................... 5 1.3.2 Varieties of Tuhua in the Prefecture of Shaoguan ........................................ 6 1.3.3 “Shaoguan Area” ........................................................................................ 10 1.4 Previous Research on Shaoguan Tuhua ............................................................. 11 1.4.1 Three Research Areas ................................................................................. 11 1.4.2 Zhuang (2004) ............................................................................................. 13 1.4.3 Li and Zhuang (2009) ................................................................................. 15 vii Chapter 2 Shaoguan Tuhua in Historical and Sociolinguistic Context ....................... 18 2.1 Immigration History and Demographic Changes ............................................... 18 2.1.1 Prior to the 13th Century: Early History ...................................................... 19 2.1.2 After the 13th Century: Wars, Riots, and Hakka Immigration .................... 20 2.1.3 Immigration History of Speakers of Other Varieties of Chinese in the Shaoguan Area .................................................................................. 24 2.2 Non-Tuhua Languages in the Shaoguan Area .................................................... 26 2.2.1 Hakka .......................................................................................................... 26 2.2.2 Cantonese .................................................................................................... 27 2.2.3 Putonghua ................................................................................................... 28 2.2.4 Other Language Varieties ........................................................................... 29 2.3 Shaoguan Tuhua: Language Use and Language Attitude .................................. 30 2.3.1 Geographic Distribution of Shaoguan Tuhua-Speaking Area .................... 31 2.3.2 Shaoguan Tuhua Speakers .........................................................................
Recommended publications
  • The Guangzhou-Hongkong Strike, 1925-1926
    The Guangzhou-Hongkong Strike, 1925-1926 Hongkong Workers in an Anti-Imperialist Movement Robert JamesHorrocks Submitted in accordancewith the requirementsfor the degreeof PhD The University of Leeds Departmentof East Asian Studies October 1994 The candidateconfirms that the work submitted is his own and that appropriate credit has been given where referencehas been made to the work of others. 11 Abstract In this thesis, I study the Guangzhou-Hongkong strike of 1925-1926. My analysis differs from past studies' suggestions that the strike was a libertarian eruption of mass protest against British imperialism and the Hongkong Government, which, according to these studies, exploited and oppressed Chinese in Guangdong and Hongkong. I argue that a political party, the CCP, led, organised, and nurtured the strike. It centralised political power in its hands and tried to impose its revolutionary visions on those under its control. First, I describe how foreign trade enriched many people outside the state. I go on to describe how Chinese-run institutions governed Hongkong's increasingly settled non-elite Chinese population. I reject ideas that Hongkong's mixed-class unions exploited workers and suggest that revolutionaries failed to transform Hongkong society either before or during the strike. My thesis shows that the strike bureaucracy was an authoritarian power structure; the strike's unprecedented political demands reflected the CCP's revolutionary political platform, which was sometimes incompatible with the interests of Hongkong's unions. I suggestthat the revolutionary elite's goals were not identical to those of the unions it claimed to represent: Hongkong unions preserved their autonomy in the face of revolutionaries' attempts to control Hongkong workers.
    [Show full text]
  • Greater Bay Area Logistics Markets and Opportunities Colliers Radar Logistics | Industrial Services | South China | 29 May 2020
    COLLIERS RADAR LOGISTICS | INDUSTRIAL SERVICES | SOUTH CHINA | 29 MAY 2020 Rosanna Tang Head of Research | Hong Kong SAR and Southern China +852 2822 0514 [email protected] Jay Zhong Senior Analyst | Research | Guangzhou +86 20 3819 3851 [email protected] Yifan Yu Assistant Manager | Research | Shenzhen +86 755 8825 8668 [email protected] Justin Yi Senior Analyst | Research | Shenzhen +86 755 8825 8600 [email protected] GREATER BAY AREA LOGISTICS MARKETS AND OPPORTUNITIES COLLIERS RADAR LOGISTICS | INDUSTRIAL SERVICES | SOUTH CHINA | 29 MAY 2020 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INSIGHTS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 3 MAP OF GBA LOGISTICS MARKETS AND RECOMMENDED CITIES 4 MAP OF GBA TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM 5 LOGISTICS INDUSTRY SUPPLY AND DEMAND 6 NEW GROWTH POTENTIAL AREA IN GBA LOGISTICS 7 GBA LOGISTICS CLUSTER – ZHUHAI-ZHONGSHAN-JIANGMEN 8 GBA LOGISTICS CLUSTER – SHENZHEN-DONGGUAN-HUIZHOU 10 GBA LOGISTICS CLUSTER – GUANGZHOU-FOSHAN-ZHAOQING 12 2 COLLIERS RADAR LOGISTICS | INDUSTRIAL SERVICES | SOUTH CHINA | 29 MAY 2020 Insights & Recommendations RECOMMENDED CITIES This report identifies three logistics Zhuhai Zhongshan Jiangmen clusters from the mainland Greater Bay The Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau We expect Zhongshan will be The manufacturing sector is Area (GBA)* cities and among these Bridge Zhuhai strengthens the a logistics hub with the now the largest contributor clusters highlights five recommended marine and logistics completion of the Shenzhen- to Jiangmen’s overall GDP. logistics cities for occupiers and investors. integration with Hong Kong Zhongshan Bridge, planned The government aims to build the city into a coastal logistics Zhuhai-Zhongshan-Jiangmen: and Macau. for 2024, connecting the east and west banks of the Peral center and West Guangdong’s > Zhuhai-Zhongshan-Jiangmen’s existing River.
    [Show full text]
  • China's Claim of Sovereignty Over Spratly and Paracel Islands: a Historical and Legal Perspective Teh-Kuang Chang
    Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law Volume 23 | Issue 3 1991 China's Claim of Sovereignty over Spratly and Paracel Islands: A Historical and Legal Perspective Teh-Kuang Chang Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/jil Part of the International Law Commons Recommended Citation Teh-Kuang Chang, China's Claim of Sovereignty over Spratly and Paracel Islands: A Historical and Legal Perspective, 23 Case W. Res. J. Int'l L. 399 (1991) Available at: https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/jil/vol23/iss3/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Journals at Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law by an authorized administrator of Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons. China's Claim of Sovereignty Over Spratly and Paracel Islands: A Historical and Legal Perspective Teh-Kuang Chang* I. INTRODUCTION (Dn August 13, 1990, in Singapore, Premier Li Peng of the People's Re- public of China (the PRC) reaffirmed China's sovereignty over Xisha and Nansha Islands.1 On December. 29, 1990, in Taipei, Foreign Minis- ter Frederick Chien stated that the Nansha Islands are territory of the Republic of China.2 Both statements indicated that China's claim to sov- ereignty over the Paracel and Spratly Islands was contrary to the claims of other nations. Since China's claim of Spratly and Paracel Islands is challenged by its neighboring countries, the ownership of the islands in the South China Sea is an unsettled international dispute.3 An understanding of both * Professor of Political Science, Ball State University.
    [Show full text]
  • Top 100 Languages by Total Number of Native Speakers in 2007 Rank
    This is a service by the Basel Institute of Commons and Economics. Browse more rankings on: http://commons.ch/world-rankings/ Top 100 languages by total number of native speakers in 2007 Number of Country with most Share of world rank country speakers in native speakers population millions 1. Mandarin Chinese 935 10.14% China 2. Spanish 415 5.85% Mexico 3. English 395 5.52% USA 4. Hindi 310 4.46% India 5. Arabic 295 3.24% Egypt 6. Portuguese 215 3.08% Brasilien 7. Bengali 205 3.05% Bangladesh 8. Russian 160 2.42% Russia 9. Japanese 125 1.92% Japan 10. Punjabi 95 1.44% Pakistan 11. German 92 1.39% Germany 12. Javanese 82 1.25% Indonesia 13. Wu Chinese 80 1.20% China 14. Malay 77 1.16% Indonesia 15. Telugu 76 1.15% India 16. Vietnamese 76 1.14% Vietnam 17. Korean 76 1.14% South Korea 18. French 75 1.12% France 19. Marathi 73 1.10% India 20. Tamil 70 1.06% India 21. Urdu 66 0.99% Pakistan 22. Turkish 63 0.95% Turkey 23. Italian 59 0.90% Italy 24. Cantonese 59 0.89% China 25. Thai 56 0.85% Thailand 26. Gujarati 49 0.74% India 27. Jin Chinese 48 0.72% China 28. Min Nan Chinese 47 0.71% Taiwan 29. Persian 45 0.68% Iran You want to score on countries by yourself? You can score eight indicators in 41 languages on https://trustyourplace.com/ This is a service by the Basel Institute of Commons and Economics.
    [Show full text]
  • Epidemiologic Clues to SARS Origin in China Rui-Heng Xu,* Jian-Feng He,* Meirion R
    RESEARCH Epidemiologic Clues to SARS Origin in China Rui-Heng Xu,* Jian-Feng He,* Meirion R. Evans,†‡ Guo-Wen Peng,* Hume E Field,§ De-Wen Yu,* Chin-Kei Lee,¶ Hui-Min Luo,* Wei-Sheng Lin,* Peng Lin,* Ling-Hui Li,* Wen-Jia Liang,* Jin-Yan Lin,* and Alan Schnur#1 An epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome ipalities (Foshan, Jiangmen, Zhongshan, Guangzhou, (SARS) began in Foshan municipality, Guangdong Shenzhen, Zhaoqing) from November 2002 to mid- Province, China, in November 2002. We studied SARS January 2003. On February 3, 2003, province-wide case reports through April 30, 2003, including data from mandatory case reporting of atypical pneumonia that used case investigations and a case series analysis of index a standard case definition and reporting form was institut- cases. A total of 1,454 clinically confirmed cases (and 55 deaths) occurred; the epidemic peak was in the first week ed. The provincial health department also introduced a of February 2003. Healthcare workers accounted for 24% range of public health control measures, including guide- of cases. Clinical signs and symptoms differed between lines on epidemiologic investigation of cases and contacts children (<18 years) and older persons (>65 years). (February 3) and on hospital admission, clinical manage- Several observations support the hypothesis of a wild ani- ment, and infection control arrangements for patients mal origin for SARS. Cases apparently occurred independ- (February 9). Subsequently, the department issued guide- ently in at least five different municipalities;
    [Show full text]
  • HONG KONG and SOUTH CHINA: a BRIEF CHRONOLOGY (From Various Sources)
    HONG KONG AND SOUTH CHINA: A BRIEF CHRONOLOGY (from various sources) 214 BCE Guangzhou established in the Northern Pearl River delta and walled by Emperor Qin Shi Huang of the Qin dynasty (221-206 BCE). Area becomes a center for industry and trade. Nauyue kings of Western Han dynasty rule there (206 BCE-24 CE; tomb in Guangzhou). By Tang Dynasty (618-907 CCE): Guangzhou is international port, controlling almost all of China's spice trade amid activities of maritime coast. 12th –15th C. Southern Sung (1127-1280) and Yuan Dynasties (1280-1363) Hakka (guest) peoples move southward and settle in marginal areas. Guangzhou less accessible to Southern Sung capital than other centers in Fukien. 1368-1644 Ming Dynasty: consolidation of Chinese Rule. Guangzhou continues to develop, particularly known for silk, crafts and trade. Local intellectuals explore Cantonese culture. After 1431, however, China cuts off trade and contact with the world. 1513 Portuguese Jorge Alvares reaches mouth of the Pearl river on board a rented Burmese vessel and realizes he has located "Cathay" building upon a Portuguese route around Africa, India and Indonesia. In 1517 Tomas Pires, ambassador from Portugal, arrives with fleet in Canton. After waiting two years, meets the emperor in Nanjing, but treaties fail in Beijing when the Emperor Chang Te dies. After further misunderstandings on land and a sea battle with the fleet, relations deteriorate. Pires and his mission die in prison. 1540 Portuguese settle at Liampo on the Pearl River and begin lucrative trade with the Japanese, whom they find by accident in 1542. Liampo sacked by Chinese in 1549 and Portuguese retreat to the island of Sanchuang.
    [Show full text]
  • CHINA MERCHANTS LAND LIMITED 招商局置地有限公司 (Incorporated with Limited Liability in the Cayman Islands) (Stock Code: 978)
    Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited and The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong Limited take no responsibility for the contents of this announcement, make no representation as to its accuracy or completeness and expressly disclaim any liability whatsoever for any loss howsoever arising from or in reliance upon the whole or any part of the contents of this announcement. CHINA MERCHANTS LAND LIMITED 招商局置地有限公司 (Incorporated with limited liability in the Cayman Islands) (Stock Code: 978) DISCLOSEABLE AND CONNECTED TRANSACTIONS: ACQUISITION OF EQUITY INTERESTS IN, AND PROVISION OF SHAREHOLDER’S LOANS TO, TWO PROJECT COMPANIES COOPERATION FRAMEWORK AGREEMENT I The Board is pleased to announce that on 5 May 2015, Guan Hua Gang, an indirect wholly- owned subsidiary of the Company, Shenzhen Lianxin, a company indirectly controlled by Ping An Real Estate, CR Land Shenzhen and Guangzhou Lianzhou, a project company established specifically for the construction and development of the real estate project on the AT1004010 Land situated in Tianhe District, Guangzhou, the PRC, entered into the Cooperation Framework Agreement I pursuant to which, among other things, (i) Guan Hua Gang, Shenzhen Lianxin and CR Land Shenzhen will subscribe in cash for their respective portions of the capital increase in the registered capital of Guangzhou Lianzhou as a result of which Guangzhou Lianzhou, which is wholly-owned by Shenzhen Lianxin as at the date of this announcement, will be owned as to 34%, 33% and 33% by Guan Hua Gang, Shenzhen Lianxin and CR Land Shenzhen respectively; and (ii) upon completion of the Guangzhou Lianzhou Capital Increase, Guan Hua Gang, Shenzhen Lianxin and CR Land Shenzhen will provide shareholders’ loans to Guangzhou Lianzhou in proportion to their shareholding percentage in Guangzhou Lianzhou.
    [Show full text]
  • Hardships from the Arabian Gulf to China: the Challenges That Faced Foreign Merchants Between the Seventh
    57 Dirasat Hardships from the Arabian Gulf to China: The Challenges that Faced Foreign Merchants Between the Seventh Dhul Qa'dah, 1441 - July 2020 and Thirteenth Centuries WAN Lei Hardships from the Arabian Gulf to China: The Challenges that Faced Foreign Merchants Between the Seventh and Thirteenth Centuries WAN Lei © King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies, 2020 King Fahd National Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data Lei, WAN Hardships from the Arabian Gulf to China: The Challenges that Faced Foreign Merchants Between the Seventh and Thirteenth Centuries. / Lei. WAN. - Riyadh, 2020 52 p ; 23 x 16.5 cm ISBN: 978-603-8268-57-5 1- China - Foreign relations I-Title 327.51056 dc 1441/12059 L.D. no. 1441/12059 ISBN: 978-603-8268-57-5 Table of Contents Introduction 6 I. Dangers at Sea 10 II. Troubles from Warlords and Pirates 19 III. Imperial Monopolies, Duty-Levies and Prohibitions 27 IV. Corruption of Officialdom 33 V. Legal Discrimination 39 Conclusion 43 5 6 Dirasat No. 57 Dhul Qa'dah, 1441 - July 2020 Introduction During the Tang (618–907) and Northern Song (960–1127) dynasties, China had solid national strength and a society that was very open to the outside world. By the time of the Southern Song (1127–1279) dynasty, the national economic weight of the country moved to South China; at the same time, the Abbasid Caliphate in the Mideast had grown into a great power, too, whose eastern frontier reached the western regions of China, that is, today’s Xinjiang and its adjacent areas in Central Asia.
    [Show full text]
  • Research on the Image Perception of Shaoguan Tourism Food Based on Kelly Grid Technology
    E3S Web of Conferences 251, 03025 (2021) https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202125103025 TEES 2021 Research on the Image Perception of Shaoguan Tourism Food Based on Kelly Grid Technology Li Yanfen1, * Guangzhou International Economics College, Baiyun District, Guangzhou City, Guangdong Province, China Abstract. This study takes Shaoguan City, Guangdong Province as an example to study tourists' perception of local tourist food image. The research method uses the Kelly grid technique. Through interviews with 24 tourists who have travelled to Shaoguan, 36 key constructs are obtained, and they are divided into cognitive and emotional constructs. Seven final representative constructs are presented. After sub-analysis, it was found that Shaoguan's tourism food development is lagging behind, the food environment needs to be improved, and the lack of representative food in the city, etc., and proposed to establish representative tourism food, improve dietary hygiene awareness, and use the Internet to increase publicity and other optimization development suggestions. attractiveness; from the perspective of tourism economy, tourism food can increase tourism income; from the 1 Introduction perspective of tourists, tourism food can enrich the In 2021, due to the impact of the new crown pneumonia tourism experience. epidemic, international travel will be restricted, and Therefore, this research starts with tourist food, domestic tourism and short-distance travel will increase analyzes tourists’ perception of Shaoguan’s food image, during the normalization and control phase of the finds problems, finds out countermeasures, and improves epidemic in China. the tourist attraction of Shaoguan. Shaoguan is located in the northern part of Guangdong Province, and Shaoguan has unique tourism resources.
    [Show full text]
  • GUANGDONG CHINA Research Visit November 2006
    HOME AGAIN: DEVELOPING HISTORICAL LINKS BETWEEN AUSTRALIA AND CHINA GUANGDONG CHINA Research Visit November 2006 Gordon Grimwade GUANGDONG CHINA Research Visit November 2006 Gordon Grimwade CONTENTS Executive Summary..................................... i Background ................................................ 1 Acknowledgements .................................... 2 Diary ........................................................... 3 Meetings .................................................... 4 Site Visits .................................................... 6 Conclusion ................................................. 14 References ................................................. 15 Copyright: Gordon Grimwade and National Trust of Queensland. 2007 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Preliminary research in Guandong Province, China Sung Goong, Cairns, and Innisfail collections. was undertaken in November 2006. It was made Initial assessment suggests that Queensland possible with assistance from the Brisbane has some collections of exceptional significance, Consulate of the Peoples’ Republic of China, the both in intactness and quality. Guangdong Provincial Government (Overseas • The Cultural Revolution took a toll in many parts Chinese Affairs Office), the Australia China Council of China but the Chinese are resourceful and and the National Trust of Queensland. many antique artefacts have now reappeared in It provided opportunities to: once desecrated temples. While the quantity of material that has been restored is commendable • establish the potential
    [Show full text]
  • China to Keep Watch on TPP
    Table for strangers Hainan helps visitors Memory protection Special police target tourism An app connects amateur chefs industry irregularities in Sanya with willing dining companions Database to be created on > CHINA, PAGE 4 > LIFE, PAGE 9 the Nanjing Massacre > p3 MONDAY, October 12, 2015 chinadailyusa.com $1 COMMERCE China to keep watch on TPP Such trade deals can disrupt non-signatories: offi cial By ZHONG NAN highly unlikely that the TPP would in Beijing lead to the creation of a trade bloc [email protected] that excludes China. “The economic development China will conduct comprehensive mode in China has already changed and systematic assessments of the from low-end product trade to ‘going fallout from the Trans-Pacifi c Part- global’ strategies like setting up or nership, a broad agreement between moving manufacturing facilities and 12 Pacifi c Rim countries, including to more direct investment in over- Japan and the United States, since it seas markets,” said Fan. believes that such deals have disrup- Besides the US, other signatories tive eff ects on non-signatory nations, to the TPP are Australia, Brunei, a top government offi cial said. Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mex- Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng ico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore said China is of the view that changes and Vietnam. in the global trade pattern should be China has to date signed bilateral decided by adjustments in the indus- and multilateral free trade agree- trial structure and through product ments with seven TPP members. competitiveness in global
    [Show full text]
  • Lead, Zinc and Copper Accumulation and Tolerance in Populations of Paspalum Distichum and Cynodon Dactylon
    http://www.paper.edu.cn Environmental Pollution 120 (2002) 445–453 www.elsevier.com/locate/envpol Lead, zinc and copper accumulation and tolerance in populations of Paspalum distichum and Cynodon dactylon W.S. Shua, Z.H. Yeb, C.Y. Lana, Z.Q. Zhanga, M.H. Wongb,* aSchool of Life Sciences and State Key Laboratory for Biocontrol, Zhongshan University, Guangzhou 510275, People’s Republic of China bInstitute for Natural Resources and Environmental Management, and Department of Biology, Hong Kong Baptist University, Kowloon, Hong Kong, People’s Republic of China Received 29 March 2001; accepted 28 December 2001 ‘‘Capsule’’: Metal-tolerant populations of the plants Paspalum distichum and Cunodon dactylon were identified. Abstract Both Fankou and Lechang lead/zinc (Pb/Zn) mine tailings located at Guangdong Province contained high levels of total and DTPA-extractable Pb, Zn and Cu. Paspalum distichum and Cynodon dactylon were dominant species colonized naturally on the tailings. Lead, zinc and copper accumulation and tolerance of different populations of the two grasses growing on the tailings were investigated. Tillers of these populations including those from an uncontaminated area were subjected to the following concentra- tions: 5, 10, 20, 30 and 40 mg lÀ1 Pb, 2.5, 5, 10, 20 and 30 mg lÀ1 Zn, or 0.25, 0.50, 1 and 2 mg lÀ1 Cu for 14 days, respectively, then tolerance index (TI) and EC50 (the concentrations of metals in solutions which reduce 50% of normal root growth) were calculated. The results indicated that both Lechang and Fankou populations of the two grasses showed a greater tolerance to the three metals than those growing on the uncontaminated area, which suggested that co-tolerant ecotypes have evolved in the two grasses.
    [Show full text]