Graduate has assignment in underground station
Li Shoujuan, 26, a researcher in the Gurbantunggut Desert, observes the carbon flux of a desert plant. |
Li Shoujuan, 26, has a lonely and sometimes dangerous job.
From April to October, 9 am to 9 pm, Li, a researcher in the Gurbantunggut Desert, China's second-largest, monitors an electronic screen buried deep into the scorching earth.
She is finishing a thesis for her master's degree at the Fukang National Field Scientific Observation and Research Station.
The goal of her experiments is to observe the carbon flux of the desert plant Haloxylon ammodendron, better known as sacsaoul.
"The growing season is the busiest time for me," Li said.
To protect equipment from the baking earth, where the temperature sometimes reaches 80 C, Li buries them.
Li had a close call in August.
"I felt sick in the hole, so I climbed out. But I still felt like I was going to faint. You know, if I had fainted it would have been very dangerous. No one would know before 9 pm."
She had her wits about her, found shade nearby under a shrub, and managed to call the station.
Once a month she has to stay in the desert overnight for data observation.
"Normally, somebody comes to join me to share the experience of being in the desert at night under a blanket of stars."
Li confessed that she did not know the working conditions would be so tough.
Some of Li's fellow students have a more cosmopolitan life with plenty of time spent traveling and attending lectures.
"I used to admire them, but the longer I do research, the more I find that I like it here," she said.
Getting back to normal could be hard, she admits.
After she earns her master's degree, Li plans to continue to study and work in the Gurbantunggut Desert.