• The "
Baiheliang hydrographic mark"—In 763, during the Guangde period of the
Tang dynasty emperor
Daizong, people discovered about 165 paragraphs of an inscription with almost 30,000 characters. There are 18
carps carved in the stone along with the inscription, and they were used as hydrographic markers to record water fluctuations during low-water periods, to forecast agricultural outcomes. According to an initial estimate, after the reservoir is filled by the Three Gorges Dam, parts of Baiheliang, with 20 years of records, would be submerged. In 2001,
Ge Xiurun, a member of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences proposed to use an "unstressed container" to safeguard the original site underneath the water and to construct tunnels to connect it to the ground above so that visitors can have access. Eventually these proposals would lead to the
Baiheliang Underwater Museum. •
Shibaozhai, or the Precious Stone Fortress, is located in (), of
Zhong County of Chongqing Municipality. Built between 1796 and 1820, during the reign of Qing Emperor
Jiaqing, these buildings represent high-rise column-and-tie constructions of the south of China. When the Three Gorges project began, a dam was built around this fortress for its protection. • The
Zhang Fei Temple, of
Yunyang County of Chongqing, constructed no later than the
Song dynasty, stood on the south bank of the Yangtze River in the northern foothills of the Feng Fei Mountains. Being close to the Yangtze River it was flooded more than once. The present temple is that which was repaired during the reigns of emperors
Tongzhi and
Guangxu of the Qing dynasty. The area of the temple complex is . A large number of calligraphy and paintings, stone inscriptions and woodcarvings from the
Tang and
Song dynasties, such as the first and second odes on
The Red Cliffs () by
Su Shih, have been saved. Since the temple's elevation was between , and it would have been submerged when the Three Gorges reservoir reached , the Zhang Fei Temple was relocated in its entirety. After the construction of the
Three Gorges Dam was approved, archaeologists were allowed time and resources to carry out rescue work. However, after the dam was built and used to store water, a large number of cultural relics, including hanging coffins and stone inscriptions that cannot be protected, were covered by the reservoir. ==See also==