Line Overview
In that distant northern frontier,
There is a vast land that has been deeply touched by nature - Hulunbuir Grassland
Endless emerald green
The distant blue sky
White clouds
flocks and herds
Outline a series of captivating paintings
Hulun Buir
Contains endless poetry and imagination
It's not just a grassland
It is a green scarf draped over the earth by nature
It is the purest breath in the world
It is a pure land where the soul can reside
Hulun Buir
It's not just a geographical term
It is a released emotion
A longing for the soul
A love for life
Inner Mongolia has 30% of China's grasslands and is home to two of the four major grasslands. The evaporation of Inner Mongolia grasslands is more than six times the precipitation, and it is the rivers flowing out of the Greater Khingan Range that nourish the two major grasslands of Hulunbuir and Xilingol. In other words, Daxing'anling is the mother of the grassland mother river, let's call it "Grandmother Mountain" for now. Inner Mongolia grassland has the flatness and vastness that other grasslands in China do not have. It is the essence of Eurasian grassland and the cradle of grassland culture. It is this vast environment, where only the sky, grasslands, and wind can be seen from afar, that has shaped the strong survival abilities and ambitious goals of ethnic groups such as the Xiongnu, Donghu, Khitan, Jurchen, and Mongolians, who constantly wield their whips in the distance.
The Hulunbuir Grassland is located on the Hulunbuir Plateau west of the Greater Khingan Range and is named after Hulun Lake and Bell Lake. The overall terrain is high in the east and low in the west, with an altitude between 650 and 700 meters. Hulunbuir Grassland is a world-renowned natural pasture and one of the four major grasslands in the world, known as the best grassland in the world.
The Hulunbuir Grassland is the birthplace of numerous ancient civilizations and nomadic peoples. Ethnic groups such as the Eastern Hu, Xiongnu, Xianbei, Shiwei, Huihe, Turkic, Khitan, Jurchen, and Mongolian once thrived here, and are praised by the academic community as the "cradle of nomadic peoples in northern China", occupying a high position in world history.