电商设计师
This photo taken in July 2023 shows part of the Quying cemetery in Yingkou City, northeast China's Liaoning Province. (Liaoning provincial institute of cultural relics and archaeology/Handout via Xinhua)
画册设计SHENYANG电商设计师, Sept. 5 (Xinhua) -- Archaeologists have unearthed 10 tombs and the foundations of eight houses dating back to a period spanning from the Wei Kingdom (220-265) to the Jin Dynasty (265-420) in northeast China's Liaoning Province.
The Liaoning provincial institute of cultural relics and archaeology made these discoveries at the Quying cemetery in Yingkou City.
The excavation, initiated in July, also unveiled four ash pits, a kiln site, a well电商设计师, and over 100 artifacts.
According to Su Junqiang, an associate research fellow at the institute, the relics suggest that this site was once a residential area.
Notably, the artifacts, including pottery fragments adorned with grid-like polished dark patterns and engraved water ripple motifs, exhibit distinctive characteristics of the culture of Yan states during the Sixteen Kingdoms period (304-439), a culture in Liaoning but seldom identified in the region.
This discovery carries academic significance in shedding light on the distribution of ethnic groups and their cultural interactions in the Liaodong Peninsula during the period.
In 1972电商设计师, an archaeological team conducted excavations at the Quying cemetery before it was designated as a city-level cultural heritage protection unit by the Yingkou municipal government in 1984. ■
特别声明:以上内容(如有图片或视频亦包括在内)来源于网络,不代表本网站立场。本网站仅提供信息存储服务。如因作品内容、版权和其他问题需要同我们联系的,美工招聘请联系我们及时处理。联系方式:451255985@qq.com,进行删除。