The Maijishan Grottoes are a  series of 194 caves cut in the side of the hill of Majishan in Tianshui,  Gansu Province, northwest China. This example of rock cut architecture  contains over 7,200 Buddhist sculptures and over 1,000 square meters of  murals. Construction began in the Later Qin era (384-417 CE). 
 They were first properly  explored in 1952-53 by a team of Chinese archeologists from Beijing, who  devised the numbering system still in use today. Caves #1-50 are on the  western cliff face; caves #51-191 on the eastern cliff face. They were  later photographed by Michael Sullivan and Dominique Darbois, who  subsequently published the primary English-language work on the caves  noted in the footnotes below.
 The name Maijishan consists of  three Chinese words that literally translate as "Wheatstack Mountain",  but because the term "mai" (?) is the generic term in Chinese used for  most grains, one also sees such translations as "Corn rick mountain".  Mai means "grain". Ji means "stack" or "mound". Shan means "mountain".  The mountain is formed of purplish red sandstone.  They are just one of  the string of Buddhist grottoes that can be found in this area of  northwest China, lying more or less on the main routes connecting China  and Central Asia.






 
 
It has like all kinds of other source games, so if you take pleasure in them, you'll likely enjoy
ReplyDeleteFailure, along with it is many happy easter. Kill the chaingun
commando at the bottom and make your way across the broken metal.
The left trigger no longer runs, you now have to click the left analog stick to run.
My web site: doom 3