JIUZHAIGOU Huanglong Leshan Mt Emei 九寨沟黄龙乐山峨眉
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4 Days Jiuzhaigou (Double Entry) and Huanglong Private Tour (By Air)
[email protected] +86-28-85593923 4 days Jiuzhaigou (double entry) and Huanglong private tour (by air) https://windhorsetour.com/jiuzhaigou-tour/jiuzhaigou-huanglong-indepth-tour Jiuzhaigou Fly to Jiuzhaigou for an in depth exploration of beautiful Sichuan and local Tibetans life. Two full days offers you a more relaxing opportunity to soak in the atmosphere. Matched with Huanglong National Park enjoy the countless lakes. Type Private Duration 4 days Theme Photography Trip code WS-402 Price From US$ 456 per person Itinerary Jiuzhaigou Vally and Huanglong National park are two hottest popular travel destinations in Sichuan. Jiuzhaigou Vally features breathtaking scenery by its fabled blue and green lakes, spectacular waterfalls, narrow conic karst land forms and its unique wildlife. Huanglong is famous for its colorful lakes, snow-capped peaks, glaciers, mountain landscape, diverse forest ecosystems, waterfall and hot springs. Day 01 : Arrival at Jiuzhaigou / Huanglong National Park Upon arrival at Jiu-Huang airport, pick you up and drive to Huanglong Park (2 hours driving) for sightseeing around 3 - 4 hours, Huanglong National Park is famous for its colorful lakes. Considering your physical condition, you can either enjoy the tour by foot or cable car. Afterward, drive to Jiuzhaigou for overnight. B = Breakfast Day 2-3 : Jiuzhaigou National Park Sightseeing- 2 full days (B) You'll have two full days to visit Jiuzhaigou National Park. With crystal clear lakes, waterfalls, virgin forest, and Tibetan villages to explore, two days will give you enough time to relax and soak in the atmosphere of Jiuzhaigou. You can take the pollution-free sightseeing buses to the top of the valley, then walk down to appreciate the nice scenery along the way. -
Conservation in China Issue, Spring 2016
SPRING 2016 CONSERVATION IN CHINA A Note from the Director For over twenty-five years, it has been the Getty Conservation Institute’s great privilege to work with colleagues in China engaged in the conservation of cultural heritage. During this quarter century and more of professional engagement, China has undergone tremendous changes in its social, economic, and cultural life—changes that have included significant advance- ments in the conservation field. In this period of transformation, many Chinese cultural heritage institutions and organizations have striven to establish clear priorities and to engage in significant projects designed to further conservation and management of their nation’s extraordinary cultural resources. We at the GCI have admiration and respect for both the progress and the vision represented in these efforts and are grateful for the opportunity to contribute to the preservation of cultural heritage in China. The contents of this edition of Conservation Perspectives are a reflection of our activities in China and of the evolution of policies and methods in the work of Chinese conservation professionals and organizations. The feature article offers Photo: Anna Flavin, GCI a concise view of GCI involvement in several long-term conservation projects in China. Authored by Neville Agnew, Martha Demas, and Lorinda Wong— members of the Institute’s China team—the article describes Institute work at sites across the country, including the Imperial Mountain Resort at Chengde, the Yungang Grottoes, and, most extensively, the Mogao Grottoes. Integrated with much of this work has been our participation in the development of the China Principles, a set of national guide- lines for cultural heritage conservation and management that respect and reflect Chinese traditions and approaches to conservation. -
IUCN TECHNICAL EVALUATION MOUNT SANQINGSHAN NATIONAL PARK (CHINA) – ID No. 1292
WORLD HERITAGE NOMINATION – IUCN TECHNICAL EVALUATION MOUNT SANQINGSHAN NATIONAL PARK (CHINA) – ID No. 1292 1. DOCUMENTATION i) Date nomination received by IUCN: April 2007 ii) Additional information offi cially requested from and provided by the State Party: IUCN requested supplementary information on 14 November 2007 after the fi eld visit and on 19 December 2007 after the fi rst IUCN World Heritage Panel meeting. The fi rst State Party response was offi cially received by the World Heritage Centre on 6 December 2007, followed by two letters from the State Party to IUCN dated 25 January 2008 and 28 February 2008. iii) UNEP-WCMC Data Sheet: 11 references (including nomination document) iv) Additional literature consulted: Dingwall, P., Weighell, T. and Badman, T. (2005) Geological World Heritage: A Global Framework Strategy. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland; Hilton-Taylor, C. (compiler) (2006) IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland; IUCN (ed.) (2006) Enhancing the IUCN Evaluation Process of World Heritage Nominations: A Contribution to Achieving a Credible and Balanced World Heritage List. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland; Management Committee (2007) Abstract of the Master Plan of Mount Sanqingshan National Park. Mount Sanqingshan National Park; Management Committee (2007) Mount Sanqingshan International Symposium on Granite Geology and Landscapes. Mount Sanqingshan National Park; Migon, P. (2006) Granite Landscapes of the World. Oxford University Press; Migon, P. (2006) Sanqingshan – The Hidden Treasure of China. Available online; Peng, S.L., Liao, W.B., Wang, Y.Y. et al. (2007) Study on Biodiversity of Mount Sanqingshan in China. Science Press, Beijing; Shen, W. (2001) The System of Sacred Mountains in China and their Characteristics. -
2 Days Leshan Giant Buddha and Mount Emei Tour
[email protected] +86-28-85593923 2 days Leshan Giant Buddha and Mount Emei tour https://windhorsetour.com/emei-leshan-tour/leshan-emei-2-day-tour Chengdu Mount Emei Leshan Chengdu A classic trip to Leshan and Mount Emei only takes 2 days. Leshan Grand Buddha is the biggest sitting Buddha in the world and Mount Emei is one of the four Buddhist Mountains in China. Type Private Duration 2 days Theme Culture and Heritage Trip code WS-302 From £ 214 per person £ 195 you save £ 19 (10%) Itinerary Mt.Emei lies in the southern area of Sichuan basin. It is one of the four sacred Buddhist Mountains in China. It is towering, beautiful, old and mysterious and is like a huge green screen standing in the southwest of the Chengdu Plain. Its main peak, the Golden Summit, is 3099 meters above the sea level, seemingly reaching the sky. Standing on the top of it, you can enjoy the snowy mountains in the west and the vast plain in the east. In addition in Golden Summit there are four spectacles: clouds sea, sunrise, Buddha rays and saint lamps. Leshan Grand Buddha is the biggest sitting Buddha in the world. It was begun to built in 713AD in Tang Dynasty, took more than 90 years to finish this huge statue. And it sits at Lingyue Mountain, at the Giant Buddha Cliff, you will find out a lot of stunning small buddha caves, you will be astonished by this human project. Leshan Grand Buddha and Mt.Emei both were enlisted in the world natural and cultural heritage by the UNESCO in 1996. -
9 Days World Heritages Sichuan Tour
[email protected] +86-28-85593923 9 days World heritages Sichuan tour https://windhorsetour.com/sichuan-highlights-tour/chengdu-emei-jiuzhaigou-tour Chengdu Dujiangyan Mount Emei Leshan Jiuzhaigou Huanglong Chengdu This tour takes you explore the top fantastic natural sceneries and precious cultural heritage in Sichuan. Enjoy the happy time with the adorable pandas in Chengdu, unspoiled natural world at Jiuzhaigou and more. Type Private Duration 9 days Theme Culture and Heritage, Natural scenery, Panda Trip code WS-201 From £ 1,197 per person £ 1,088 you save £ 109 (10%) Itinerary The Chinese often refer to Sichuan as the Heavenly Kingdom (Tian Fu Zhi Guo), a reference to the province's abundance in natural resources and cultural heritage. Sichuan boasts a lot of mountains, rivers and historic relics. UNESCO inscribed Jiuzhaigou, Hulong scenic area, Mount Emei with the Leshan Giant Buddha, and Mount Qingcheng-Dujiangyan Irrigation Project on the World Heritage List in 1992, 1996 and 2000 respectively. Day 01 : Chengdu airport pick up Chengdu airport pick up and transfer to your hotel. Have a good rest at the first day. Overnight at Chengdu. B=breakfast Day 02 : Chengdu city one day sightseeing (B) Morning around 07:30 - 08:00 to be met in your hotel lobby and head over to Chengdu Panda Breeding and Research Center, about half an hour drive. You will catch pandas' feeding time, breakfast they most active time of a day. Enjoy both adult and baby pandas as the gobble up fresh bamboo. Later then watch the film at Panda Story Cinema to learn about a pandas daily life, baby's birth, dating, mating and more. -
Trip to China
Trip to China May 12 to May 26, 2020 In Partnership with The Confucius Institute at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln Trip to China May 12-26 The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute in partnership with the Confucius Institute at the University of Nebraska – Lincoln is proud to yet again lead a trip to China for OLLI members. OLLI and the UNL Confucius Institute are working together, again, to organize a 15-day trip to China in May 2020. This trip, unlike previous trips, will be planting the OLLI flag in the mountainous nature southwest of China. We will visit culturally diverse parts of China, going through Tibetan, Hmong, Han, Zhuang, Bai, and Naxi regions of China. The trip will begin in Chengdu, visiting the Jiuzhaigou Nature Preserve, Panda Preserve. Then we will travel to Guilin, known for towering karst mountains among rice paddy farms, where we will stay in a rural guest house from which you can explore the area on bike (or electric bike). Lastly, we will travel to Yunnan in the very southwest of China where we will visit historic towns and villages representing various different cultures. At this information session we will be sharing details with potentially interested travelers as well as take feedback and input. Tentative Itinerary Day 1 (Tuesday, May 12) Nebraska to Chengdu We will spend the whole day in the air, leaving from Lincoln or Omaha to Chengdu with 1 or 2 stops in between depending on the air-tickets we can reserve. We will fly over Canada, Alaska, the Arctic Ocean and Russia en route. -
Strategies for Sustainable Tourism at the Mogao Grottoes of Dunhuang, China
SPRINGER BRIEFS IN ARCHAEOLOGY ARCHAEOLOGICAL HERITAGE MANAGEMENT Martha Demas Neville Agnew Fan Jinshi Strategies for Sustainable Tourism at the Mogao Grottoes of Dunhuang, China 123 SpringerBriefs in Archaeology Archaeological Heritage Management Series Editors Douglas Comer Helaine Silverman Willem Willems More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/10186 Martha Demas • Neville Agnew • Fan Jinshi Strategies for Sustainable Tourism at the Mogao Grottoes of Dunhuang, China With contributions by Shin Maekawa, Lorinda Wong, Wang Xudong, Su Bomin, Chen Ganquan, Wang Xiaowei, and Li Ping Martha Demas Neville Agnew Getty Conservation Institute Getty Conservation Institute Los Angeles , CA , USA Los Angeles , CA , USA Fan Jinshi Dunhuang Academy Dunhuang , China ISSN 1861-6623 ISSN 2192-4910 (electronic) ISBN 978-3-319-08999-7 ISBN 978-3-319-09000-9 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-09000-9 Springer Cham Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London Library of Congress Control Number: 2014945549 © The J. Paul Getty Trust 2015 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. Exempted from this legal reservation are brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis or material supplied specifi cally for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. -
Research on the Tourism Circular Economy Mode—Mt.Emei Scenic Area
International Journal of Managerial Studies and Research (IJMSR) Volume 3, Issue 6, June 2015, PP 91-96 ISSN 2349-0330 (Print) & ISSN 2349-0349 (Online) www.arcjournals.org Research on the Tourism Circular Economy Mode—Mt.Emei Scenic Area ZHANG Xuemei1,2, Xiao Cong1 1Chengdu University, Chengdu Sichuan China 610106 2Sichuan Province Cyclic Economy Research Center, Mianyang Sichuan China 621010 Abstract: The circular economy, circular economy of tourism, and the mode of operation of circular economy are analyzed in this article. Lack the concept of tourism circular economy, tourism scenic spot bearing excessive visitors, the tourism resources recycling utilization rate are low, scenic employees have low quality are the main problems of tourism circular economy of Mt.Emei scenic area, and discussed the construction of Mt.Emei tourism circular economy mode of operation. Keywords: Tourism scenic area; Circular economy mode of operation; Mt.Emei Scenic Area. 1. CIRCULAR ECONOMY 1.1. Circular Economy and its Mode of Operation Circular Economy refers to a substance-based closed loop flow economy, abbreviated as resource recycling economy: (Closed loop flow refers to a substance-based economy, referred to resource recycling economy.) It is based on resource recovery, recycling, and economic development model. The basic principle of this model is about how to achieve low consumption, low emissions, high efficiency of production by reducing, reusing, and recycling resources (reducing, reusing, recycling, in order to achieve the production of low consumption, low emissions, highly efficiency.) Circular economy’s mode of operation refers to a sustainable economic development mode based on the principle of circular economy to achieve the low-power, high-yield economical operation. -
A Case in Mt Qingcheng -Dujiangyan Scenic Area
2020 International Conference on Social and Human Sciences (ICSHS2020) The Study on Constructing the Sense of Place &the Impact to Tourists Shopping Behavior in Tourism District----A Case in Mt Qingcheng -Dujiangyan Scenic Area JunYi Wei and Yan Liu * School of tourism management Sichuan Agricultural University, Dujiangyan, China Corresponding author: Yan Liu, Email: [email protected] *corresponding author Keywords: Place attachment; shopping experience; purchase intention Abstract: This paper selected Mt.Qingcheng-Dujiangyan scenic area as study site, applied the Sense of place theory to develop five dimensionality including tourists’ purchase intention, shopping experience, place identity, place attachment as well as place dependence based on 20 indicators. The data was analyzed with SPSS19.0 and Amos21.0. The study have shown that: (1) There is a obvious positive correlation between shopping and 3 dimensions of tourists’ sense of place including place identity, place attachment and place dependence. (2) There is a distinguished positive correction between shopping experience and purchase intention. (3) The purchase intention is a key dimensionality on regulating tourists’ sense of place and shopping experience. Some recommendations have been offered accordingly. 1. Introduction Tourism is a comprehensive industry that composed by food, shelter, transportation, travel, shopping and entertainment. As one of the six elements of tourism activities, shopping has become the important force to promote the development of tourism, and its proportion in the total tourism revenue has become a sign to measure the maturity of tourism development(An, 2014). Compared with other tourism activities elements, shopping is tourists’ elastic demand, and the satisfaction of tourists' shopping experience is an important factor affecting their overall satisfaction(Chen, Xu, & Guo, 2013). -
Knowing the Paths of Pilgrimage the Network of Pilgrimage Routes in Nineteenth-Century China
review of Religion and chinese society 3 (2016) 189-222 Knowing the Paths of Pilgrimage The Network of Pilgrimage Routes in Nineteenth-Century China Marcus Bingenheimer Temple University [email protected] Abstract In the early nineteenth century the monk Ruhai Xiancheng 如海顯承 traveled through China and wrote a route book recording China’s most famous pilgrimage routes. Knowing the Paths of Pilgrimage (Canxue zhijin 參學知津) describes, station by station, fifty-six pilgrimage routes, many converging on famous mountains and urban centers. It is the only known route book that was authored by a monk and, besides the descriptions of the routes themselves, Knowing the Paths contains information about why and how Buddhists went on pilgrimage in late imperial China. Knowing the Paths was published without maps, but by geo-referencing the main stations for each route we are now able to map an extensive network of monastic pilgrimage routes in the nineteenth century. Though most of the places mentioned are Buddhist sites, Knowing the Paths also guides travelers to the five marchmounts, popular Daoist sites such as Mount Wudang, Confucian places of worship such as Qufu, and other famous places. The routes in Knowing the Paths traverse not only the whole of the country’s geogra- phy, but also the whole spectrum of sacred places in China. Keywords Knowing the Paths of Pilgrimage – pilgrimage route book – Qing Buddhism – Ruhai Xiancheng – “Ten Essentials of Pilgrimage” 初探«參學知津»的19世紀行腳僧人路線網絡 摘要 十九世紀早期,如海顯承和尚在遊歷中國後寫了一本關於中國一些最著名 的朝聖之路的路線紀錄。這本「參學知津」(朝聖之路指引)一站一站地 -
China Natural Wonders
Day 07: Kunming (B.L.D) Today you travel to the incredible Stone Natural Wonders Forest, 89 km from Kunming, known as China The No. 1 Wonder under Heaven. In the afternoon enjoy a sightseeing tour to & Minorities 13 days – fully inclusive Western Hill with a Dragon Gate carved into the sheer cliff, and spectacular views over Kunming and Dianchi Lake. Day 08: Kunming / Dali (B.L.D) In the morning fly to Dali where you are met and transferred to the four-star Hotel (Local Best). The afternoon tour brings you to the Three Towering Pagodas of Chongshen Monastery; Bai Minority People tie dying cloth with wax, Bai Minority Fishing Village with its traditional style courtyards at Xizhou Town and cruise on the beautiful Erhai Lake in a small fishing boat that lets you enjoy the overwhelming sceneries. Enjoy this once-in-a-lifetime experience Day 09: Dali / Lijiang (B.L.D) on this magical train journy to the ‘roof of the world’. Today you travel by road to Lijiang and pass through many enchanting minority villages on the way. Upon your arrival, you Day 01: Australia / Day 02: Chengdu / Day 03: Chengdu / are met and transferred to the four-star Guangzhou / Chengdu Dujiangyan / Chengdu (B.L.D) (B.L.D) Jiuzhai Valley Hotel. Depart for China by your international You will have one-day excursion to This morning, you will fly to Jiuzhai Valley carrier and start your adventure. Arrive Dujiangyan, where you can see the massive Scenic Zone. The essence of Jiuzhaigou, Day 10: Lijiang (B.L.D) in Guangzhou in the afternoon. -
Wa Shan – Emei Shan, a Further Comparison
photograph © Zhang Lin A rare view of Wa Shan almost minus its shroud of mist, viewed from the Abies fabri forested slopes of Emei Shan. At its far left the mist-filled Dadu River gorge drops to 500-600m. To its right the 3048m high peak of Mao Kou Shan climbed by Ernest Wilson on 3 July 1903. “As seen from the top of Mount Omei, it resembles a huge Noah’s Ark, broadside on, perched high up amongst the clouds” (Wilson 1913, describing Wa Shan floating in the proverbial ‘sea of clouds’). Wa Shan – Emei Shan, a further comparison CHRIS CALLAGHAN of the Australian Bicentennial Arboretum 72 updates his woody plants comparison of Wa Shan and its sister mountain, World Heritage-listed Emei Shan, finding Wa Shan to be deserving of recognition as one of the planet’s top hotspots for biological diversity. The founding fathers of modern day botany in China all trained at western institutions in Europe and America during the early decades of last century. In particular, a number of these eminent Chinese botanists, Qian Songshu (Prof. S. S. Chien), Hu Xiansu (Dr H. H. Hu of Metasequoia fame), Chen Huanyong (Prof. W. Y. Chun, lead author of Cathaya argyrophylla), Zhong Xinxuan (Prof. H. H. Chung) and Prof. Yung Chen, undertook their training at various institutions at Harvard University between 1916 and 1926 before returning home to estab- lish the initial Chinese botanical research institutions, initiate botanical exploration and create the earliest botanical gardens of China (Li 1944). It is not too much to expect that at least some of them would have had personal encounters with Ernest ‘Chinese’ Wilson who was stationed at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard between 1910 and 1930 for the final 20 years of his life.