Mount tai 1
Mount Tai is located in the middle of Shandong Province and the north of Tai 'an City, with a total area of 250 square kilometers. It was called Daishan in ancient times, but it was renamed Taishan in the Spring and Autumn Period, and was honored as the East Yue of the five mountains in China. In ancient times, the East was the place where everything alternated and early spring took place. Therefore, Mount Tai has the reputation of "the length of the five mountains" and "the exclusive respect of the five mountains".
Mount Tai is rich in natural heritage. There have been 1 12 peaks, 98 cliffs, 18 caves, 58 strange rocks, 102 valleys, 56 pools of waterfalls and 64 mountain springs in the scenic spot since ancient times. * * Plants 144 families with 989 species, and the vegetation coverage rate is. Taishan Scenic Area has a thousand years of historical and cultural heritage. There are 22 ancient buildings, 97 ancient ruins, 8 19 stone tablets and more than 800 stone carvings, which provide important and rich physical materials for the study of ancient history and calligraphy in China. The main landscapes include Tiangong Palace, Nantianmen, Bi Xia Temple, Sunguanfeng, Shi Jing and Heilongtan.
2. Huangshan Mountain
Huangshan Mountain is located in the south of Anhui Province and is under the jurisdiction of Huangshan City. Legend has it that Xuanyuan Huangdi, the ancestor of China, cultivated himself and lived forever. There are thousands of peaks in Huangshan Mountain, with beautiful scenery and towering mountains. There are 72 famous peaks, of which "Lotus", "Guangming Top" and "Tiandu" are all above 1 0,800 meters above sea level, which is magnificent.
Huangshan Mountain covers an area of about 1.200 square kilometers, and the scenic area is 1.654 square kilometers. It combines "the majesty of Mount Tai, the smoke of Mount Heng, the waterfalls of Mount Lushan, the beauty of Emei, the exquisiteness of geese and the preciseness of Huashan", and the two lakes, three waterfalls, sixteen springs and twenty-four streams compete with each other, especially. Xu Xiake, a geographer in the Ming Dynasty, visited Huangshan twice, leaving the praise that "the Five Mountains returned without looking at the mountains, and Huangshan returned without looking at the mountains".