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Karez

Karez (坎儿井, Kān’ěr Jǐng)

Karez (坎儿井, Kān’ěr Jǐng) is an ancient underground gravity irrigation system in Turpan, Xinjiang, China.

Basic Facts

Other names: “underground canal”, “well canal” (ancient China); qanat (Middle East).

Location: Mainly Turpan & Hami, Xinjiang.

Nickname: One of China’s Three Great Ancient Projects (with the Great Wall & Grand Canal).

Age: Over 2,000 years (Han Dynasty).

Scale: Turpan has ~1,100 karez, total length ~5,000 km.

Honor: World Irrigation Heritage (2024).

Structure (4 parts)

Vertical shafts (竖井)

    Wells for digging, ventilation & maintenance; 15–30 m apart.

    Underground tunnel (暗渠)

      Core: 3–10 km long; carries groundwater without evaporation.

      Surface channel (明渠)

        Brings water from tunnel exit to fields.

        Reservoir (涝坝)

          Small pond for storage & flow regulation.

          How it works

          Captures Tianshan snowmelt groundwater.

          Uses natural slope for 100% gravity flow (no pumps).

          Reduces evaporation in Turpan’s extreme heat (~16 mm rain/year, ~3,000 mm evaporation).

          Visiting tips

          Museum/Exhibition: Turpan Karez Museum (with underground tunnels to walk through).

          Best time: May–Oct (grape season).

          Ticket: ~CNY 40–60.

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