This picture taken on November 2, 2013 shows people walking beside an
ancient
stone bridge on the dried up lakebed of Poyang lake in Jiujiang
east China's Jiangxi province
The remains of the 2,930-metre-long bridge, made entirely of granite and
dating back nearly 400 years, appeared at Poyang lake in the central
province of Jiangxi, the Beijing News reported. The lake, which has been
as large as 4,500 square kilometers in the past, has been drying up in
recent years due to a combination of low rainfall and the impact of the
Three Gorges Dam, experts say.
State broadcaster China Central Television reported in November that
drought had shrunk the lake to less than 1,500 square kilometers,
threatening the plankton, fish and other organisms that inhabit it and
the livelihoods of the nearly 70 percent of local residents who make a
living by fishing.
By lowering the level of the Yangtze river, the vast Three Gorges dam
project has also caused an increased outflow of water from both Poyang
and Dongting, another lake in neighboring Hunan province, experts told
the Beijing News last year, decreasing the water levels of both bodies.
In 2012, Chinese authorities air-dropped shrimps, millet and maize over
Poyang lake to feed hundreds of thousands of birds at risk of hunger due
to the drought.
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