Planning (25–220 CE) statue of Li Bing, the hydraulic engineer responsible for Dujiangyan During the
Warring States period, people who lived in the area of the
Min River were plagued by annual flooding.
Qin hydrologist
Li Bing investigated the problem and discovered that the river was swelled by fast flowing spring melt-water from the local mountains that burst the banks when it reached the slow moving and heavily silted stretch below. One solution would have been to build a
dam, but the Qin wanted to keep the waterway open for military vessels to supply troops on the frontier, so instead an artificial
levee was constructed to redirect a portion of the river's flow and then to cut a channel through Mount Yulei to discharge the excess water upon the dry
Chengdu Plain beyond.
Construction King Zhao of Qin allocated 100,000
taels of silver for the project and sent a team said to number tens of thousands. The levee was constructed from long sausage-shaped baskets of woven
bamboo filled with stones known as Zhulong held in place by wooden tripods known as Macha. The construction of a water-diversion levee resembling a fish's mouth took four years to complete. Cutting the channel proved to be a far greater problem, as the hand tools available at the time, prior to the
invention of gunpowder, would have taken decades to cut through the mountain. Li Bing devised an ingenious method of using fire and water to
rapidly heat and cool the rocks, causing them to crack and allowing them to be easily removed. After eight years of work, a channel wide had been gouged through the mountain.
Legacy After the system was finished, no more floods occurred. The irrigation made
Sichuan the most productive agricultural region in
China for a time. The construction is also credited with giving the people of the region a laid-back attitude to life; by eliminating disaster and ensuring a regular and bountiful harvest, it left them with plenty of free time. Turmoil surrounding the conquering of Chengdu by peasant rebel leader
Zhang Xianzhong in 1644, and the
Ming-Qing transition more generally, led to depopulation and the deterioration of the Dujiangyan irrigation system to the point where rice cultivation was set back for decades. The original Dujiangyan irrigation system was destroyed by the
1933 Diexi earthquake. The current Dujiangyan irrigation system was rebuilt after the Diexi earthquake in 1933 by Zhang Yuan (张沅) and his sons, including Zhang Shiling (张世龄). In 2000, Dujiangyan became a
UNESCO World Heritage Site. Today it has become a major tourist attraction.
2008 Sichuan earthquake On May 12, 2008, a massive earthquake struck a vast portion of west Sichuan, including the Dujiangyan area. Initial reports indicated that the Yuzui Levee was cracked but not severely damaged. Diversion of flow could still be seen as the river turns. ==Engineering constructions==