Great Wall of China
Several sections of the Great Wall of China, a
man-made phenomenon that has become a symbol of Chinese
civilisation, can be viewed in the Beijing area. In Yanqing county
in northwest Beijing is the 600-year-old Badaling Fortification,
representative of the Ming dynasty sections of the Great Wall.
Other sections can be seen at Jinshanling, Mutianyu and Simatai.
The Great Wall, 4,000 miles (6,350km) long, was built in stages
from the 7th century BC onwards, snaking its way across the
mountains and valleys of five provinces in northern China as a
mammoth defence bulwark.
Zhoukoudian Cave
About 25 miles (40km) south of Beijing in the Fangshan
District is the Zhoukoudian Cave, source of the largest collection
of Homo erectus fossils from any single site in the world. The
fossils recovered from Zhoukoudian represent about forty
individuals. Most famous of these remains is a cranium element
commonly known as the 'Peking Man', the world's earliest fire-using
primitive man who lived between 200,000 and 700,000 years ago.
German anatomist Franz Weidenreich studied the Peking Man remains
in the 1930s and recognised 12 anatomical features that he believed
Peking Man shared with modern Chinese, a milestone in the study of
paleoanthropology. Visitors to the Zhoukoudian site on Dragon Bone
Hill can view a comprehensive seven-room exhibition of fossils and
artefacts depicting human evolution and the lifestyle of primitive
man. Visitors can also enter the cave where the Peking Man cranium
and other Homo erectus remains were found.






