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NANNING, Jan. 10 (Xinhuanet) -- Archaeologists have
discovered what is believed to be China's largest stone tool processing workshop
of the Neolithic Age in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, south China.
The workshop with an area of 1,200
square meters was spotted at the Beidaling Ruins, dating back about 7,000 years
ago, in the Du'an Autonomous County of Yao ethnicity, said Lin Qiang, a deputy
researcher fellow with autonomous regional cultural heritage research team.
Tens of thousands of stone tools and instruments such
as stonesin shape of hammers and chopping blocks, whetstone and semi-finished
stoneware were unearthed from the site of the workshop.
Lin Qiang said, judging from the pile-up of the
stoneware, the workshop site could have been used for approximately 100 years
before it was abandoned.
Apart from its large size, acknowledged Lin, this
ancient workshop has also left behind doubts and suspicions: where had these
stone tools had gone to and why ancestors discarded this workshop?
But, he noted, what amazes archaeologists is that
they excavated more than 20 tombs belonging to the Neolithic Age, the period
from the Shang Dynasty (1600 BC-1100 BC) to the Warring States Period (475
BC-221 BC) and the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD) respectively.
It is rare for tombs of different historical periods
to be found at the same site, archeologists said, adding that the discovery of
ancient tombs would provide evidence for the study ofancient cultural progress
in the area.
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