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10 красавіка 2026, 09:12
4,000-year-old water channel network discovered in central China
ZHENGZHOU, 10 April (BelTA - Xinhua) - An artificial water channel
system dating back some 4,000 years has been unearthed in central
China's Henan Province, providing important evidence of the state-level
organizational capacity and urban layout of the Xia Dynasty (2070
BC-1600 BC), China's earliest known dynasty, authorities said on
Thursday.
The discovery at the Wangchenggang site in Dengfeng,
Henan, was revealed at a forum showcasing the province's latest
archaeological findings.
Two new artificial ditches from the
early Xia Dynasty have been identified at the site, each about three
meters wide with a confirmed length of over 120 meters. Running
north-south, the ditches were connected to a roughly 10-meter-wide moat,
forming a complete water supply, drainage and spatial zoning system,
according to Ma Long, a local archaeologist leading the on-site
excavation.
"The two ditches are consistent in form,
demonstrating a high level of planning, design and engineering
standards," said Ma. He added that an estimated thousands of cubic
meters of earth were removed to build them, a task that could only be
completed with large-scale, well-organized labor.
In addition to
the ditches and moat, multiple minor channels, measuring between 0.3 and
one meter in width, were uncovered. These channels were linked to
individual buildings or kilns, enabling the rapid drainage of rainwater
and wastewater, thus keeping the living environment dry.
"Such a
large and hierarchically structured artificial water channel system
indicates that as early as the Xia Dynasty, the Wangchenggang site had
unified organizational capacity and standardized engineering practices,"
said Yang Wensheng, vice director of the Henan Provincial Institute of
Cultural Heritage and Archaeology. He added that this serves as an
important archaeological evidence for the maturity of early state
formation.
Further excavation and research work are currently underway.