198 ancient tombs found in East China
(Xinhua)| Updated : 2021-04-13
Print PrintThe tombs unearthed at the Heze city of Shandong province [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
Archaeologists had found a total of 198 millennia-old tombs at a single relic site in East China's Shandong province as of April 13.
The tombs, unearthed in the city of Heze, include 180 that date back to the Han Dynasty (202 BC-220 AD) and 10 from the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (770-221 BC), according to Shandong's institute of cultural relics and archaeology.
All of the tombs belong to the 1.3-hectare Sundayuan Site, the recent excavation of which also revealed five pits from the Shang Dynasty (1600-1046 BC) and 27 from the Neolithic Longshan Culture, said Sun Qirui, an archaeologist with the institute.
Sun said that among the Han Dynasty tombs were earthen tombs with brick coffins and pottery figurines, and brick tombs complete with passage structures.
While few items were found in the Shang Dynasty pits, the Longshan Culture pits boast abundant artifacts, including pottery pieces carrying different patterns, he said.
The long time span of the Sundayuan Site has offered precious insight into cultural evolution and integration in the area, researchers have said.