Fast as a Bullet?
The CRH 380 model (pictured above at the CSR Qingdao Sifang train factory) is the star of the Chinese high-speed rail fleet-a program moving very quickly, despite occasional safety concerns, to connect China's population centres.
Some Chinese trains can reach cruising speeds of 217 miles (350 kilometres) an hour - and when pushed to top speed can exceed 300 miles (482 kilometres) an hour.
Such advances may come at a cost. Development of China's high-speed rail has been wrought with unanswered questions about safety as well as the origins of China's quickly attained technology, according to a new National Geographic investigative report.
For instance, Chinese executives who run the country's rail development have been accused of pushing the though rural areas with little thought to the affected communities. But some Chinese technocrats see trains like the 380 as symbols of how China can "leapfrog" Western countries.
- With reporting by Ian Johnson
Farms Taking a Hit
Farms in the countryside between China's biggest cities have seen the largest impacts of rail construction. When engineers connect two cities, the straight line between them is developed for tracking and tunnels.
Farmer Ye Shaoguang (not pictured) said that the rail system shows China's industrial heft. But his mother-in-law worries that the vibrations from nearby explosions could destroy their house.
Guangzhou South Station
Guangzhou South Station opened in 2010 to help shuttle travellers to the northern city of Wuhan. Along the route, trains can reach 220 miles (354 kilometres) an hour.
In the case of Guangzhou, train travel is fast, but not always convenient. The station is an hour from town, while the airport is nearly half that distance.
Assembling the Train
Factory workers assemble the superfast 380A train model at Qingdao Sifang Locomotive and Rolling Stock Company, the country's largest and oldest train manufacturer. The factory employs 8,000 people.
While some have charged that technology for the 380A and other models was pirated from the West and Japan, officials deny the charge. Yet the quickness of China's development has cast some doubt on the origins of Chinese leaps in technological know-how.
Hauling Coal
As China's rail technology grows, coal remains a dominant industry in China.
While electric trains shuttle passengers between large cities, steam locomotives like the ones above are still used to haul coal to power plants that generate the electricity.
Packed Train
Fast trains are for the elite, but the working classes in China still use steam locomotives to travel between smaller cities.
The Jiayang steam train (pictured), a relic from the 1950s, is one of the last regularly operating passenger steam trains in China.
The train connects six villages along the Bajiao Valley in Sichuan Province, a distance of only 14 miles (23 kilometres). The train operates four trips a day, each of them crowded, a conductor told National Geographic reporter Ian Johnson.
Letting Off Some Steam
High-speed electric trains are expected to eventually replace slower steam locomotives like those pictured here in the Fuxing region of China. Many regions still use the steam trains to shuttle coal and coal waste from mines to power plants, and then to ash fields.
Heading Home
Aboard a high-speed train to Zhengzhou, groups of students head back to school in September after the summer break.
The back-to-school period is the second busiest travel time in China, behind the annual Chinese New Year celebrations in the spring, when migrant workers traditionally return home.
Just a Blur
Leaving stations, high-speed Chinese trains can quickly accelerate to more than 200 miles (320 kilometres) an hour.
Related Article: Pictures: A Rare Look Inside China's Energy Machine
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