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BEIJING, April 25 (Xinhuanet)-- Mummies unearthed in
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in 2003 have been well-preserved, scientists
said recently.
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| One of the mummies excavated at the Xiaohe
Tomb Site in the Lop Nur Desert
[baidu] | Excavated from the Xiaohe Tomb Complex
in the Lop Nur Desert, Zhu Hong, director of the Frontier Archeology Study
Department of Jilin University in Jilin Province, said: "The mummies were
unbelievably well-preserved, even better than the mummies in Egypt. Even lice on
the dead people's heads have been preserved."
Zhu participated in the excavation in 2003 and
studied the mummies with two other experts this year between January 31 and
February 12.
Archeologists unearthed 167 tombs at Xiaohe site,
which sprawls over a 2,500-square-meter oval-shaped dune. About 174 kilometers
away sit the ruins of the Loulan Kingdom, an ancient civilization that vanished
1,500 years ago.
The complex contained about 330 tombs. More than 160
were spoiled. Most objects found in the tombs remained untouched.
Idelisi Abuduresule, head of the Xinjiang Cultural
Relics and Archeology Research Institute, said they will help studies on social
culture and customs of that period.
The institute launched the excavation project in 2003
with the approval of the State Administration of Cultural Heritage.
The tomb complex yielded rare cultural relics
including wooden objects, animal hair fabrics, jade, stoneware, as well as the
fur and bones of animals such as sheep, cattle, fowl and lynx
It also yielded objects symbolic of genitals,
suggesting a belief in phallicism. Few bronze ware pieces were unearthed. Zhu
said bronze ware objects may have been too rare to be buried as funerary
objects.
Most tombs had the same design, experts said. Ancient
people dug sand pits, used coffins made of poplar wood and then erected carved
wood pieces to indicate the dead person's gender, Zhu said.
Idelisi said more riddles will be studied. "Why were
the tombs terraced? Why were the wooden posts cut into a variety of shapes from
columns to prisms and what did people use for carving? Why didn't we find any
traces of human life near such a massive burial site?" he asked.
Idelisi said the burial style is unique and solving
its mysteries will likely involve the research efforts of not only archeologists
and historians, but also anthropologists, religion experts and environment
researchers.
Experts believe the tomb complex might belong to the
Bronze Age and are attempting to determine the date of the tombs through
tree-ring analysis of coffins and chronometry on soil samples from the tombs.
The massive burial site was first discovered in 1934
by Swedish explorer Folke Bergman. His archeological diary helped Chinese
researchers spot the site at the end of 2000, when the diary was published in
Chinese. Enditem |