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China expands protection for its sunken treasures

China to increase the protection of its underwater cultural heritage, said Shan Jixiang, the director of the State Administration of Cultural Heritage.
China expands protection for its sunken treasures
 
The Underwater Archaeology Center of China was founded in 1987
As of now, China has found more than 200 underwater cultural heritages and more than 70 sunken ship heritages.

A newly signed agreement between the State Administration of Cultural Heritage (SACH) and the State Oceanic Administration (SOA) will see the two institutions work closely together in various fields including underwater archaeology and management of underwater relics.

Apart from the number of China's underwater cultural heritage sites, Shan also revealed that domestic underwater archaeologists inspected the Nansha Islands and managed a large amount of information about the local environment, climate and so on, and the excavation and salvage operations of "Nanhai No.1," "Huaguangjiao No.1," "Nan'ao No.1" and other ancient sunken ships were going well.

Regarding the large amount, complicated environment and difficulty in management of China's underwater cultural heritages, Shan said the two agencies were going to strength daily patrol and supervision around those heritages to prevent damage from various ocean developments in accordance with the agreement.

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