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Terracotta army in a battle for survival

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They may have guarded the tomb of China's first emperor for thousands of years, but the terracotta warriors are facing their toughest battle yet.

The life-sized clay figures unearthed three decades ago in Shaanxi province are starting to fall apart and Chinese and US scientists have launched a two-year research project to study the impact that indoor air pollutants are having on the Emperor Qin Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum in Xian .

Cao Junji , executive director of the aerosol and environment division at the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Earth Environment and head of the research team, said it was time to take action to save the relics.

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'If nothing is done now, in 100 years the warriors may have corroded to such an extent that the pits will look just like a coal mine and not have any aesthetic value,' he said.

'If a leg or a shoulder falls off, the whole figure is damaged. There are only a few hundred of them - how many more can we afford to have damaged?'

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The richly coloured terracotta figures with individual facial expressions lay underground for about 2,000 years, but began to lose their lustre and turn an oxidised grey once they were exposed to air.

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