Beautiful Crescent Lake In China, End of an Oasis - Amazing Photos
For thousands of years pilgrims and  traders on the Silk Road to the West have used the Crescent Lake oasis  as a last stop off before they face the hardships of the Gobi Desert.   Six kilometers from the city of Dunhuang the oasis has persevered  throughout the millennia.  However, it may now be reaching its Waterloo.
 As well as an exit to the West,  Dunhuang was for more than two thousand years a crucial entrance in to  China.  Travelers followed a string of oases, skirting around the  unforgiving sands of the Gobi and Taklamakan Desert.  In this fashion  they would also avoid the ghosts and demons that were said to haunt the  desert.  It was said that the desert was so desolate and devoid of life  that the bones of those who had died in it were used as signposts.
Imagine the pleasure, then, of the  travelers as they reached Crescent Lake.  Locals say that it takes the  shape of the eye of a beautiful woman, lucid, clear and seductive. Yet  the very existence of the beautiful desert oasis of Crescent Lake is  threatened.
Over the last thirty years the water  has dropped at least twenty five feet.  This is as a result of two  things – the local farmers have redirected the water to feed their  crops.  Secondly the population of Dunhuang has more than doubled in  that period.  A desperate attempt to feed the lake from an artificial  aqueduct failed (due to pollutants) and so each year the lake slowly  shrinks a little more.
A fragile desert hydrology, stable for  thousands of years is now overstressed and the wonderful place that is  Crescent Lake is feeling the strain.  This ecological crisis is due  purely to human impact – much more water than the area can sustain is  being used.  However, there may be a human solution to this manmade  disaster.
The issue has been compounded by the  fact that western China is the country’s poorest region and the drive  towards economic development at all costs left the local people with  little choice.  There is no industry as such in Dunhuang – what  manufacturer would set up in the middle of a desert after all?  What  that meant was that the local industry already in place was forced to  expand – and that industry is agriculture.
The Dang River which flowed past the  city and was what inspired the original settlers to live there has been  dammed. That was a few decades ago and certainly, the yield of the local  farms improved.  However with that improvement came the inevitable  human arrivals to assist with further expansion.  More people meant more  demand for water and so the underground water table inevitably began to  drop.
In a desperate attempt to stave off  disaster local officials have brought in a new, strict policy.  It is  known as the Three Forbids.  No new wells are allowed, no additional  farmland may be irrigated and new migrants are prohibited.  The first  two forbids rather than the last are the most punitive to locals as more  than ninety percent of the water goes to agriculture.
The key to retaining the oasis  will be in the reduction of water consumption.  Despite the tourism that  the Crescent Lake attracts the amount of glacial melt from the distant  Qilian Mountains that feeds the Dang River has not changed for many  centuries. If the Three Forbids is rigorously enforced then perhaps the  Crescent Lake will be enjoyed by many generations to come. 














 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
