| A high-altitude journey ends in China (AP)
 Updated: 2006-07-04 08:43
 China's new train from Beijing to Tibet arrived in the ancient capital of 
Lhasa Monday, ending its maiden journey after climbing to elevations so high 
that ballpoint pens and packaged foods burst.  Some passengers breathed oxygen from tubes - many just out of 
curiosity - as the pressurized train crossed a 16,640-foot pass in Tibet's 
Tanggula Mountains, a height the Chinese government says makes the $4.2 billion 
railway the world's highest. 
 
 
 
 Girls in track suits and traditional 
Tibetan robes draped white scarves, a customary greeting, on passengers arriving 
in Lhasa's new railway station.
 | ![A passenger wears an oxygen tube on board the first Beijing-to-Lhasa train as it cruises along the Qinghai-Tibet railway July 3, 2006. Many passengers were affected by high-altitude problem as the train passed over 4,500 metres. [Reuters]](xin_07070304085249816641.jpg) A passenger wears an oxygen tube on board the 
 first Beijing-to-Lhasa train as it cruises along the Qinghai-Tibet railway 
 July 3, 2006. Many passengers were affected by high-altitude problem as 
 the train passed over 4,500 metres. 
[Reuters]
 |  Tibetan antelope and wild donkeys grazed beneath stunning vistas of 
snowcapped mountains and deep-blue skies as the train rolled through the 
treeless, sparsely populated area. 
 China's government says it is spending $190 million on environmental 
protection along the Golmud-Lhasa stretch of the railway. 
 Trains completed shorter trips on the line between Lhasa and Golmud in 
Qinghai province while passengers on the 16-car train from the Chinese capital 
were in the midst of their journey. 
 Before the last leg of the trip to Lhasa, the train stopped in Golmud early 
Monday to switch its standard engine for three powerful locomotives required to 
haul the train at high altitude. 
 The only signs of human habitation in the arid highlands south of Golmud were 
occasional small train stations and herders tending yaks. 
 After the train climbed above 13,000 feet, pens and bags of processed food 
burst due to the low air pressure. Laptop computers and digital music players 
failed, because moving parts in their disk drives are cushioned by tiny air bags 
that break at high altitude. 
 The railway is projected to help double tourism revenues in Tibet by 2010 and 
cut transport costs for goods by 75 percent. Until now, goods going to and from 
Tibet have been trucked over mountain highways that are often blocked by 
landslides or snow, making trade prohibitively expensive. |