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| Remains of 6,000-year-old house discovered in Shaanxi |
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| www.chinaview.cn
2006-10-04 13:54:39
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XI'AN, Oct. 4 (Xinhua) -- Chinese archaeologists have discovered the
remains of houses dating back 6,000 years in northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
The remains were located on a section of a farming terrace in Linglong
Village, Chencang District of Baoji City. The remains were about one fifth the
size of the original houses which are estimated to be nearly 200 square meters,
archaeologists said.
The houses were built on two 8 to 10-cm-thick layers of hard earth. The
remains of a wall is nearly 15 meters long and 40 to 50 cm wide, and 103 cm
tall.
A 1.6 meter ditch was found outside the wall, which archaeologists believe
was used to discharge water.
The remains were destroyed during the middle or end of the Yangshao Culture
dating back 5,000 to 7,000 years when people usually lived in houses built
partly underground, said an expert with an archaeology team of Baoji.
However, the remains show the houses were built above ground, indicating
that people during the Yangshao Culture period had already begun to built houses
above ground.
The discovery also shows that ancient people were aware of the advantages
of building houses on the ground. They were more convenient to entry, dryer and
let in more sunlight, the expert said.
The Yangshao Culture, known for its painted pottery with a variety of finely
designed geometrical patterns, was centered in the middle reaches of the Yellow
River and extended to central China's Hubei Province and north China's Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region.
It remains unclear whether the houses had a special purpose such as
offering sacrifices to gods or ancestors, said archaeologists. Enditem
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