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Documentary 'Underwater China' reveals hidden side of ancient country(2)

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2020-01-17 09:03:23Global Times Editor : Li Yan ECNS App Download
A scecret garden underwater. (Photo/Courtesy of Dive the World)

A scecret garden underwater. (Photo/Courtesy of Dive the World)

Underwater town, Great Wall and shipwrecks

From February 2017 to August 2019, six cameramen, including Zhou, visited 24 cities around China, reaching as far north as Long Island, where the Yellow Sea meets the Bohai Sea, as far south as the South China Sea and as far east as Lanyu Island off the coast of the island of Taiwan.

The crew recorded an underwater town that has sat beneath the surface of Thousand Island Lake in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang Province, since 1959. 

To help better understand the underwater town, the production team interviewed the original residents of the town. 

One of residents surnamed Xu recalled his old house in the town, inspiring Zhou to choose Xu's house as the lynchpin of one episode. "These old private houses can tell many moving stories," Zhou said.

Xu told the production team that his house was called Qing Yu Tang, and a stone tablet was hung on the door. He remembered there was  a fallen tree in the yard and a staircase in the backyard that led to the second floor. 

Before photographers got ready for the water shoot, Xu asked Zhou if she could bring back one of the house tiles, which Zhou agreed to do. 

Zhou successfully found Xu's house underwater, perfectly preserved. The tiled roof looked exactly as it did when it sank beneath the rising waters more than 60 years ago.

Although Zhou picked up a roof tile to bring back, she ended up putting it back where she found it. "I struggled for a long time, but still decided to let the tile stay. It should be left at a memory of 60 years ago."

Zhou told the Global Times that there is a 300-year-old memorial archway in the underwater town, the only underwater archway in China that has not collapsed.

"I saw the stone head of a dragon on the archway. In a flash, it gave me the sense that I had a mission. I felt that I had to show this underwater world to the public," Zhou said.

The production team went to North China's Hebei Province to shoot another underwater wonder - a roughly 50-kilometer-long section of the Great Wall.

This section of the Great Wall was submerged in the waters of the Luanhe River due to the construction of the Panjiakou Reservoir. 

"The water temperature is 6 C and visibility can be up to 10 meters. This is the most gorgeous Great Wall I have ever seen!" Zhou said.

The documentary also talks about the evolution of sunken ships, from a merchant ship of the Song Dynasty (960-1279) that sunk in the South China Sea to a oceangoing freighter of South Korea that sunk near the island of Taiwan in 1983.

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