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Visitors can explore maze of minerals at Koktokay township's mining site

China Daily | Updated: 2019-07-19 09:59

The Koktokay scenic spot in Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. [Photo/IC]

URUMQI - The mining site of Koktokay has become a new attraction that tourists should not miss when visiting the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

Dubbed "the natural geological museum", the mining site in Koktokay township in the county of Fuyun has more than 80 kinds of minerals, nearly half of the 170-plus types known in China. The mining site also has one of the largest pits in the world, which is more than 200 meters deep.

The minerals and rare metals produced at the mining site played a crucial role in the development of the country's aerospace, national defense and other industries.

However, as the mineral resources at the mine became depleted at the end of the 1990s, the mine had to overcome the predicament of shrinking profits and increasing pollution.

Developing tourism based on the mine has become an option. The local government invested over 3.7 billion yuan ($540 million) in restoring vegetation, building roads and other projects involving the improvement of the environment around the mine.

The government also shut down an electrolytic aluminum plant and others with high pollution, and built cultural industry parks on the sites of the plants to attract culture and tourism companies.

The efforts proved successful. About 1.6 million tourists visited Fuyun county in 2015, and half of them visited Koktokay.

Tourists can experience a mazelike world full of various minerals such as quartz and mica in an 800-meter-long mine cave, where the temperature is 0 C all year long.

The booming tourism industry in Koktokay helped increase the annual per capita income of the residents in the township to about 15,000 yuan.

"Seeing the beautiful environment at the mining site, I am as proud to work here as my father was," said Tan Shengli, a manager of a scenic area at Koktokay national mine park whose father was a miner.

In recent years, Xinjiang has been pushing forward the high quality development of its tourism industry. In 2018, the number of tourists in the region exceeded 150 million, up more than 40 percent year-on-year.

Xinhua

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