Low Graphics Site
White bar
.: Latest News :. .: News in Pictures :.
Dawn e-paper
Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Horoscope Recipes Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker



Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Weather

FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon TV Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Irfan Hussain Jawed Naqvi Mahir Ali Kamran Shafi The Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition Next Story

November 06, 2007 Tuesday Shawwal 24, 1428





$2.4m project to clean lake, save legendary turtle



By Frank Zeller


HANOI: Pollution threatens the lake that is the heart and soul of Vietnam’s capital — and a legendary turtle who lives below its murky waters — but now a high-tech solution may be at hand to save them both.

Over the next three years, in time for Hanoi’s 1,000th birthday in 2010, scientists intend to clean up Hoan Kiem Lake, home to the creature that symbolises Vietnam’s centuries-old struggle for independence.

Vietnamese and German experts say they will use a new device, which borrows from the designs of corkscrews, submarines and tanks, to suck several metres of toxic sludge from the bottom of the ‘Lake of the Returned Sword’.

The $ 2.4 million project will be a delicate one. The famed, algae-green lake is home to an elusive turtle that is a key figure in Vietnam folklore.

In a story that every Vietnamese child learns at school, the 15th century farmer-turned-rebel leader Le Loi used a magical sword to drive out Chinese invaders and found the dynasty named after him.

When Le Loi, by now the emperor, went boating on the lake one day, a turtle appeared, took his sacred sword and dived to the bottom of the lake, keeping the weapon safe for the next time Vietnam may have to defend its freedom.

Today, occasional sightings of a giant soft-shell turtle draw large crowds, and photographs and amateur video clips attest to the claim that at least one turtle indeed still lives in the lake.

“Since 1991 the turtle has come up about 400 times,” said Vietnam’s pre-eminent authority on the animal, Professor Ha Dinh Duc of the Hanoi University of Science — better known here as the ‘turtle professor’.

“Several times when it came up, it coincided with important events,” he said. “It’s something we can’t explain.” The turtle has appeared when Chinese presidents have visited, during the inauguration of a Le Loi statute, at the start of last year’s Communist Party congress, and even during a conference on endangered reptiles, Duc said.

The professor says he doesn’t know the age of the turtle — which he says is a new species he has named Rafetus Leloiiis. He says it weighs around 200kg (440 pounds).

Previously, at least four of the turtles lived here — one of them is now stuffed and on display in an island temple on the lake — but today only one is left and Duc frets about its well-being.

Stormwater run-off from the growing city has sullied the stagnant lake with chemicals and organic pollutants that feed algae blooms and choke off oxygen.

“The water quality is decreasing, and we expect a breakdown of the aquatic habitat within a decade,” said Professor Peter Werner of Germany’s Dresden University of Technology. “The lake could be dead in 10 years.” Hoan Kiem Lake, about 600 metres long and 200 metres wide, is now only about 1.5 metres deep while a four-to-six-metre deep layer of sludge has accumulated on the lake bed, said Christian Richter of German company HGN Hydrogeologie.

German scientists have developed a “subaquatic vacuum cleaner” that will crawl along the lake floor using two corkscrew-like spirals that dig up and funnel the mud into a pipe while also propelling the device forward.

The remote-controlled “SediTurtle” will use buoyancy to rise and sink like a submarine and use brakes on its two coils to move left and right like a tank, said engineer Dr Frank Panning of company GSan oekologische Gewaessersanierung.

“We are using low-impact environmental technology that is silent and minimises turbulence and the release of toxic compounds,” said Werner. “This project is very sensitive. We have to take care of the turtle.” In the first phase, set to start early next year and take 24 months, scientists will first analyse water and sediment samples from Hoan Kiem and test the SediTurtle in another Hanoi lake.

If all goes well, Vietnamese experts could then take over and use the new technology to clean up the famous lake itself, said Werner.—AFP






Previous Story Top of Page Next Story

Seprater
Contributions
Privacy Policy
© DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2007