www.chinapage.com/earthquake/sichuan/tangiashan.html

2008 汶川大地震

Tangjiashan Landslide-made Lake
唐家山堰塞湖

The aerial photo taken on May 26, 2008 shows the landslide mud that formed the Tangjiashan quake lake near Beichuan County in southwest China's Sichuan Province.

The earthquake-induced lake is at risk of bursting and threatening thousands of people downstream. (Xinhua Photo)



 
Amid race to drain Chinese quake lake, emergency plans proceed
	 	
20:30, May 28, 2008

 
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· 8.0 Richter scale earthquake hits SW China
 
Emergency workers are scrambling to get residents downstream of a rising 
quake-created lake ready to go if the water body bursts.

Tangjiashan lake, formed by landslides that blocked a river known as the 
Jianjiang after the May 12 quake, is at risk of breaching its bank.

Every resident from the targeted areas in Mianyang, a hard-hit city in the 
May 12 quake, has been kept well-informed of the emergency evacuation plans 
through repeated drills and public announcements, including routes for 
evacuation, directions to safe areas and locations of temporary shelters, 
said Tan Li, Party Secretary of Mianyang.

"The efforts are aimed at getting all the 1.3 million residents on the move 
within four hours in case the quake lake bank fully opens, and zero deaths 
in the process of evacuation. Otherwise, it will mean a breach of duty on our 
part as government employees," said Tan, who is also chief of Mianyang City 
Quake Control and Relief Headquarters.

To this end, many soldiers, armed police and security officers are on standby 
and will go door-to-door to look for laggards in case of emergency, according 
to Tan.

Meanwhile, hundreds of workers, using 40 large pieces of earth-moving equipment 
including bulldozers, have been working non-stop on top of the Tangjiashan 
barrier, constructing a diversion channel.

Yang Hailiang, a leading on-site rescue operation officer, told Xinhua that 
one third of the sluice was finished thanks to factors including fine weather 
on Wednesday and airlifts of machinery and other supplies.

Water resources workers have been closely monitoring hydrological data 
concerning Tangjiashan, one of 35 such lakes, around the clock.

The lake is some 3.2 kilometers away from the seat of Beichuan County, 
the area worst hit in the devastating quake on May 12. It is inaccessible 
by road and can only be reached by foot or air.

The lake holds about 130 million cubic meters of water, said Liu Ning, 
the Ministry of Water Resources chief engineer, who is at Tangjiashan to 
oversee the diversion work. Its water level was 727.02 meters on Tuesday, 
up 1.82 meters from Monday and only about 25 meters below the lowest part 
of the barrier.

However, the rise in the water level at the lake has slowed down. From 
7 p.m. on Tuesday to 7 a.m. on Wednesday, it only rose by 83 centimeters, 
according to Yang Hailiang, a leading on-site rescue operation officer.

At least 50,000 cubic meters of debris would have to be removed to build 
the diversion channel on the blockage body. Rescuers, however, were aiming 
to remove 100,000 cubic meters of debris if the weather allowed.

Altogether, 158,000 people threatened by the swollen quake lake in 169 
communities of 33 townships, Mianyang, were evacuated to safe ground as of 
Wednesday in line with an emergency plan drawn up for the contingency of 
one third of the Tangjiashan lake volume bursting its banks.

Two other plans require the relocation of 1.2 million people if half of the
 lake volume is released or 1.3 million if the barrier fully opens.

The diversion channel won't be in place until June 5, experts with the 
Mianyang quake relief headquarters said.

Source: Xinhua


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