Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Where is Jinsha Bay?

Where is Jinsha Bay?

Jinsha Bay is located in Haibowan City, where Wuhai Municipal Government is located.

Jinsha Bay Eco-tourism Zone is located in Haibowan City, where Wuhai Municipal Government is located, with a distance of 14 km to the north and an area of 2,000 hectares. It is closely connected with 1 10 National Highway, Airport Road and Beijing-Tibet expressway.

Jinsha Bay is the only eco-tourism area built in Wuhai during the 11th Five-Year Plan period. According to Records of the Historian Biography of Xiongnu, as early as Tang Yao and Yu Shun, the ancestors of Xiongnu lived in the "northern territory", dressed in leather and felt, and lived in the vault. Everyone knows that the "vault" in "the sky is like a vault, and the cage covers four fields" is the Mongolian felt tent that has been passed down to this day.

Jinsha Bay said:

Jinsha Bay Eco-tourism Zone is a national 4A-level tourist attraction, located at 1 1 km north of Haibowan, where Wuhai Municipal Government is located. Back to the green hills and embrace the sand sea. The sand dunes in the scenic area are continuous and the vegetation is scarce, which looks like a desert land in the bay. Because of its golden sand color, it is called "Golden Shawan".

There are vast deserts and boundless sand seas here. From a distance, you can't see the golden color. The sand waves are surging forward, and the sand dunes are staring at it.

The statue of Genghis Khan riding a horse and hanging a sword weighs 12 tons. What he is holding in his hand is a small Sulu ingot (also known as "Suled") with a sword-shaped military emblem representing the god of war. We can vaguely see the majestic posture of Genghis Khan galloping on the battlefield.

On the left rear of the statue is Karez, which is unique to China. According to legend, four Tang monks and mentors went to the west to learn from the scriptures. The Monkey King used Niu Wangmo's banana fan to put out the fire on the Flame Mountain, but the temperature was still unbearable. In order to survive, human beings dug holes in the ground to enjoy the cool, and later introduced water into the holes, making it a channel for running water.