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Trang An landscapes complex toward the Inscription on the World Heritage List
Located in the centre of the province of Ninh Binh, 80 km from
the city of Hanoi to the south, Trang An is a complex of scenic landscapes and
historical and cultural heritages boasting a system of adjoining limestone
mountains and valleys belonging to the ancient ocean branch of the Tethys from
China into Vietnam, on an area of around 10,000 ha, including three areas: Trang
An eco-tourism site, Tam Coc – Bich Dong tourism site and Hoa Lu Ancient Capital
cultural and historical heritage site.
Trang An complex is often referred to as a “Ha Long Bay on land”, but few people
know that only a few thousand years also there existed an ancient bay
demonstrated by the water marks on the limestone cliffs, vestiges of oysters on
them, abrasion terraces, and marine sediments of the Quaternary period.
Trang An is also a tropical karst landscape with a humid monsoon climate, and
witnessed a lot of sea invasions and transformations similar to Ha Long Bay; its
karst landscape are terrestrial, concentrated on a smaller area, and regular in
variety of shapes and sizes.
The landscape is replete with tower shaped karst along the fringe of a block of
limestone islands with flat peaks of varying styles. The karst islands are
widely scattered among incoherent flat fields and, in season, neighbor to a sea
of golden grain.
These cone shapes of different sizes seem to be floating, scattered and
unconnected on the even and flat rice fields, filed with the color of ripen
rice. The karst landscape, with a pyramid shape in the middle, connects the
sharp pointed peaks into a chain with vertical cliffs enclosing deep valleys in
an isometric or linear form.
Trang An is made up of a complex of scenic landscapes and has intricate and
diversified ecosystems, particularly as a cradle of the prehistoric people.
All these factors have made a scenic landscapes complex of Trang An to have
outstanding and distinctive values terms of landscape, geomorphology, geology,
and culture.
Values in terms of landscape and karst geomorphology:
Trang An has many types of distinctive and unique karst landscape:
“remaining karst hills separated from the plains”, “peaks connecting valleys”,
“peaks connecting sinkholes”, “tropical karst submerged by the sea”.
No where else in the world is there a landscape similar to Ha Long Bay but
fossilized on land like in Trang An.
No where else in the world is the karst terrain shaped like a narrow wall with
sloped skeleton walls extending into an arch enclosing a large, empty space
inside like that in Trang An – the rock capital city.
Geological and geomorphologic values:
Trang An, Ninh Binh is located in an area full of historical geological
upheavals: bearing unique characteristics in terms of structure and tectonics in
the style of a “broken rice pancake”.
Trang An is characterized by a “meshy” network of young isometric non-pronous
sinkholes.
The long and wide valley connected with the aged plains in the Southeast parts
of the Trang An limestone block is characteristic: They become narrower toward
the northwest and extends toward the southeast.
The typical “pulse” neotectonic movements lead to the formation of a “surface
balance valley” and “front mountain balance surface.” The three floors of the
cave area 10m – 20m, 20m – 30m and 40m – 60m.
Cultural values:
Recently scientists from the Cambridge University (the UK) and the Vietnam
Archaeology Institute conducted surveys, research and eight archaeological
excavations at Nui Tuong Cave, Oc Cave, vang stone roof, Ong Hay stone roof, Cho
stone roof, Trong Cave, Boi Cave and five relics at Hang Pagoda.
The results included many working tools, pottery, and food remains of the
ancient people such as animal bones, shells of species of mollusks and
crustaceans.
Especially, excavations found human remains in three of six locations. Based on
the results of the research, scientists at home and abroad have put forward some
initial assessment of the value of the prehistoric culture of the Trang An
region.
Trang An pre-historic relics are concentrated in high density, forming different
groups in the swampy and follow karst valley. Scientists discovered a relatively
intact cultural layer from 1.0m – 2.0m thick, reflecting one or two periods,
before, during or after the middle Holocene marine transgression.
The tradition of manipulating limestone objects and using of chiseling tools
made from limestone was long maintained.
Pottery appeared early, and was homogeneous in material, pattern, and type among
the relics and stayed stable and unified during the long history of the culture
of the swampy and hollow valley.
Permanent settlements took place in the caves (2,300 – 3,000 years ago),
affected by changing karst valley landscape environment, caused by marine
transgression and recession.
Assorted livelihoods were evident along a wide spectrum, with gathering
overrunning hunting, planting outdoing animal husbandry, and adaptations to the
natural environment.
Trang An landscapes complex boasts outstanding, fascinating and unique values in
terms of natural landscapes and preserves the vestiges of natural history,
cultural imprints, and many remains of outstanding traditional cultural values
of the local communities that are being promoted and conserved..
Source: CPV |
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