导游词200字
大家好,我是你们的导游——王导,今天就由我来给大家讲解颐和园的风景名胜。
请大家随着我走。
现在,我手指的这个是著名的长廊。
这个长廊可不一般。
它全长700多米,分成273间。
大家可以看到,每间的横槛上都有许多五彩图画,画得各式各样,有人物、花草、风景,几千幅画没有哪两幅是相同的。
难怪被称为“世界第一廊”。
大家往前看,这就是碧波荡漾的昆明湖。
这片湖静得像一面镜子。
游船经常从这里经过,大家可以听到船上游人们的欢歌笑语。
在昆明湖的上面,就是闻名遐迩的万寿山。
站在这里,我们可以看到颐和园的全部风景。
站在这里看,整个颐和园真可谓是无比壮观。
郁郁葱葱的树丛掩映着黄的绿的琉璃瓦屋顶和朱红的宫墙。
一座八角宝塔形的三层建筑耸立在半山腰上,黄色的琉璃瓦闪闪发光,这就是古香古色的佛香阁。
大家快随我看看这美丽的石桥吧
这座石桥有17个桥洞,叫十七孔桥。
桥栏杆上有上百根石柱,柱子上都雕刻着姿态不一的活灵活现的小狮子。
这座在历史上为帝王建造的古典园林,现已成为中国最著名的旅游参观热点之一,每年接待游客数百万人。
1986年,颐和园被联合国教科文组织列为世界文化遗产。
大家听了我的介绍,也心动了吧
那就亲自到颐和园看看吧
关于《世界遗产的导游词》 200字
兵马俑:秦始皇兵马俑博物馆,是建立在兵马俑坑原址上的遗址性博物馆。
自 1979年10月1日开馆以来,沐浴着国家改革开放的春风,经过艰苦创业,取得了辉煌的成就,成为举世闻名的大型遗址性博物馆。
兵马俑已被誉为“世界第八大奇迹”,“二十世纪考古史上的伟大发现之一”。
1987年12月,联合国教科文组织已将秦始皇陵(包括兵马俑坑)列入“世界文化遗产名录”。
它不仅是中国人民、也是全人类的一份珍贵文化财富。
秦始皇兵马俑博物馆的建立和发展,曾历经坎坷和艰辛,凝聚着许多人的心血和汗水。
兵马俑是 1974年3月发现的,当地农民在一片砂石堆积、墓冢累累的荒野上挖井时偶然发现了一些陶俑残片。
后经考古工作者一年多的精心勘探和试掘,发现是座规模宏伟的大型兵马俑坑(即一号俑坑),里面埋藏着和真人、真马大小相似的陶俑、陶马约6000件。
这一巨大的发现,在中国和世界上引起了轰动与震惊。
兵马俑坑由于规模宏伟,陶俑、陶马的数量巨大,发掘工作要延续数年乃至几十年。
在这漫长的岁月中,如何保护好这一珍贵的文化遗产,使它免遭风雨霜雪的侵害,成了令人忧心的重大问题。
当时我们考古工作者曾计划用竹竿、芦席搭盖一个临时性的保护大棚,以解决燃眉之急。
正当我们为此焦急之时,1975年8月26日,当时任国家文物局局长的王冶秋飞抵西安,传达了国务院要在此建立兵马俑博物馆的决定,并把它作为国家的专项工程。
秦兵马俑的导游词200字—350字急
lthough three million people come to see the GRAND CANYON OF THE COLORADO every year, it remains beyond the grasp of the human imagination. No photograph, no set of statistics, can prepare you for such vastness. At more than one mile deep, it’s an inconceivable abyss; at between four and eighteen miles wide it’s an endless expanse of bewildering shapes and colors, glaring desert brightness and impenetrable shadow, stark promontories and soaring, never-to-be-climbed sandstone pinnacles. Somehow it’s so impassive, so remote you could never call it a disappointment, but at the same time many visitors are left feeling peculiarly flat. In a sense, none of the available activities can quite live up to that first stunning sight of the chasm. The overlooks along the rim all offer views that shift and change unceasingly from dawn to sunset; you can hike down into the depths on foot or by mule, hover above in a helicopter or raft through the whitewater rapids of the river itself; you can spend a night at Phantom Ranch on the canyon floor, or swim in the waterfalls of the idyllic Havasupai Reservation. And yet that distance always remains the Grand Canyon stands apart. Until the 1920s, the average visitor would stay for two or three weeks. These days it’s more like two or three hours of which forty minutes are spent actually looking at the canyon. The vast majority come to the South Rim it’s much easier to get to, there are far more facilities (mainly at Grand Canyon Village), and it’s open all year round. There is another lodge and campground at the North Rim, which by virtue of its isolation can be a lot more evocative, but at one thousand feet higher it is usually closed by snow from mid-October until May. Few people visit both rims; to get from one to the other demands either a two-day hike down one side of the canyon and up the other, or a 215-mile drive by road. Finally, there’s a definite risk that on the day you come the Grand Canyon will be invisible beneath a layer of fog, thanks to the 250 tons of sulphurous emissions pumped out every day by the Navajo Generating Station, seventy miles upriver at Page. Admission to the park, valid for seven days on either rim, is $20 per vehicle or $10 for pedestrians and cyclists.