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Camels, usually known as the ships of the desert, here show that they are pretty handy for traversing the snow-covered tundra as well.
These incredible pictures are from the winter Naadam festival in Hulun Buir, in north China's Inner Mongolia region.
The event showcases Mongolian nomads' traditional sports and pastimes, including folk dancing, wrestling, archery, and, or course camel racing.
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The festival's origin lies in the warlike past of the Mongolian people, and it is believed to have existed for centuries in one form or another.
The Naadam - which in Mongolian means, simply, games - begins with an elaborate introduction ceremony featuring dancers, athletes, horse riders, and musicians.
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Towns with significant Mongolian populations in China have their own, smaller Naadam celebrations.
The Hulun Buir festival is the latest event seized upon by Chinese authorities to promote tourism in remote parts of the coutry during the cold winter months.
China's latest five-year economic plan calls for tourism revenues to rise 10 per cent annually to 2.3trillion yuan by 2015, up from 1.44trillion yuan in 2010.
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source: dailymail