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| The ancient Silk Road town of Dunghung of north west China is fed by water from the melting glaciers. |
The station lies in the heart of a region called the Third
Pole, an area that contains the largest area of frozen water outside of the
North Pole and South Pole.
Despite its relative anonymity, the Third Pole is vitally
important; it is the source of Asia's 10 largest rivers including the Yellow,
the Yangzi, the Mekong, the Irrawaddy and the Ganges — and their fertile
deltas.
Flows from the glaciers that give the pole its name support
roughly 1.3 billion people in China, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Bangladesh and
Afghanistan — and the glaciers are melting fast.
Chinese authorities have opened up a remote research station
on the Qinghai Tibetan Plateau and revealed alarming research on the pace of
global warming.
Half a century of research shows the temperature has
increased by 1.5 degrees in the area, more than double the global average. More
than 500 glaciers have completely disappeared, and the biggest ones are
retreating rapidly.
Read the ABC story
by China correspondent Matthew Carney - “Crisis on high.”

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