Qinghai-Tibet Railway

Tibet has long been a place shrouded in mystery, in large part due to the difficulty associated with reaching it. Located on a plateau at 4500 meters and surrounded on all sides by imposing mountain ranges, until the turn of the 20th century, few outsiders had laid eyes on the so-called “roof of the world.”
After the 1950 occupation of Tibet, air and road links were established by the Chinese but the expensive and arduous journey was not undertaken by the masses. All of this is likely to change with the opening of the Qinghai-Tibet railway, which began operation in July 2006. For a mere $48 one can get on a train in Beijing and arrive two days later in Lhasa, the capitol of the Tibetan Autonomous Region. The train is a true engineering marvel, reaching over 5000 meters and passing over 240 miles of permanently frozen ground, it is the only train of its kind in the world.
The train, like most large Chinese building projects, has been the focus of much international scrutiny leading up to its opening. The Chinese government claims that the rail link will bring modernity to Tibet and help improve the standard of living. Critics worry that the new rail link will lead to even more Chinese migration, further dilute the Tibetan culture and expedite the pillaging of Tibet’s natural resources.
Whether or not the railway will bring prosperity or more hardship to Tibet remains to be seen, but to ride the train is undeniably spectacular. Over the course of forty-eight hours the scenery transforms from concrete jungle to desert steppe, over permanently frozen glaciers and by snowy peaks to arrive at the grasslands of the Tibetan plateau.
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