ĦĦĦĦHONG KONG, March 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Two of Taiwan's oldest high-altitude
archaeological sites were unearthed in Hsinmei, an aboriginal village near the
summit of Mount Ali in the southern county of Chiayi, reports reaching here from
Taipei said Thursday.
ĦĦĦĦTaiwan's archaeological experts confirmed that the newly discovered
cultural relics were buried about 3,800 years ago, making them more than 1,000
years older than the 2,500-year-old Puli cultural relics discovered a decade
ago.
ĦĦĦĦHo Chuan-kun, a leading archaeologist in Taiwan, was quoted as saying that
the new discovery would advance the history of high-altitude human activities in
Taiwan by more than a millennium.
ĦĦĦĦTwo weeks ago, Ho led his team of researchers and 10 excavatorson an
arduous expedition in the region again. This time, they dug two carefully
selected sites in accordance with a legend that Takubuyanu people liked to plant
mango trees beside their homes.
ĦĦĦĦThe workers dug two 1.5-meter-deep caves, each of which coveredeight square
meters. In the first cave, two well-preserved limestone sarcophagi were
recovered.
ĦĦĦĦAt the second site, located some 300 meters away, researchers discovered a
number of stone articles, including axes and hoes aswell as pieces of pottery
utensils. Archaeologists said the site used to be a residential area and that
the articles unearthed belonged to two different eras.
ĦĦĦĦHo said an analysis of recovered pottery artifacts proves that those found
at the bottom layer were left some 3,800 years ago andthose at the upper layer
were created about 1,700 years ago.
ĦĦĦĦA few years ago, ruins suspected to be left by the now extinct Takubuyanu
people were discovered at the border between Chashan and Hsinmei. Farmers in the
Chashan area have often unearthed primeval stone slabs and coffins when digging
on their farmland. Enditem
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