Fangshan
UNESCO Global Geopark of China is in the Asia Pacific region, set on the border
of southwestern Beijing and Hebei Province. The Geopark spreads across two
provincial and municipal jurisdictions and three districts and counties,
covering the Fangshan District of Beijing, Laishui County and Laiyuan County of
Hebei Province. Sea-level elevation ranges from 26 to 2,161m.
Fangshan
UNESCO Global Geopark holds very rich geological remains and has a complete
series of rock formations developed over 3,500 million years. A wide variety of
rocks can be found in the UNESCO Global Geopark, including sedimentary rocks
formed in marine and terrestrial environment, metamorphic rocks created by
regional dynamometamorphic processes, granite formed from solidified lava,
different tectonic features shaped by crustal movements as well as ground and
subterranean rivers, karst peak clusters and caves resulting from erosion
processes. In the Geopark, the well-developed surface karst landforms and many
caves are typical representatives of North China’s landscape and are of great
interest. Tower-shaped mountains jut into the sky and make for grand scenery
while the curtain-like mountain ranges extend for tens of miles in a seemingly
inaccessible panorama so close to the urban center.
The
discovery of “Peking Man” in the Geopark in 1929, one of our ancestors who
lived in the area 700,000 years ago, astonished the whole world and the site
has since been recognized as one of the birthplaces of humankind. These
precious geological remains inspired China’s first geological survey more than
100 years ago and fostered its first generation of geologists. Even today,
Fangshan UNESCO Global Geopark is a cradle of geology professionals, having
nurtured some 50,000 geology students who spent their internship and lectures in the park, and thousands of whom have become geologists. The first Chinese
Geology Dictionary was published here; moreover, many geological terms were
officially named here. Bestowed with unparalleled geosites and heritage
resources, Fangshan UNESCO Global Geopark is a veritable “geology
encyclopedia”.
Its long human history has made for profound cultural heritage in the Geopark. The
architecture, grottoes, stone inscriptions, relics and ancient tombs comprise
abundant cultural, geological and tourism resources.
Fangshan
UNESCO Global Geopark has improved its Science-Popularisation Education
Facilities and made continuous efforts to develop its museum network. In the
past years, Fangshan UNESCO Global Geopark rolled out a great variety of
science-popularisation activities. They organised an annual Earth Day and
Science Popularisation Week activities with different themes, along with patriotic education initiatives, Earth science-popularisation summer camps, and
writing competitions. They also have ongoing cooperation with
BNU Lianxiang Affiliated Secondary School to establish a science-popularisation
programme which will be effective in the long term. Fangshan UNESCO Global
Geopark is now the science-popularisation base for local schools, where
students can share popular geoscience culture and knowledge with international
exchange students. The “Popular Science Forum'' is an important approach and
element of the school’s sustainable and effective youth science-popularisation
education programme.