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30 красавіка 2026, 10:08
List honors China's top 10 archaeological discoveries
BEIJING, 30 April (BelTA - China Daily) - China released on Wednesday a
list of its top 10 archaeological discoveries of 2025, highlighting how
these findings allow a better understanding of the people, traditions
and innovations that shaped both the nation's past and the profound
history of humanity.
The annual list, which is considered one of
the highest honors in the field of archaeology in China, was prepared by
top-notch scholars from across the country and jointly released by the
Chinese Society of Cultural Relics and China Cultural Relics News.
Among
the top 10 is the Changbai Mountain Paleolithic site group in eastern
Jilin province, which covers 100,000 square kilometers and boasts more
than 1,000 locations from where stone tools have been unearthed.
The
discovery alters the impression that only small nomadic groups passed
through the region in the Paleolithic period, said Xu Ting, an
archaeology professor at Liaoning University and secretary of the
project in Jilin. Unearthed evidence points to sustained and widespread
human presence from 220,000 to 13,000 years ago, he added.
Some
projects among the selected top 10, like the Zhengjiagou site in
Zhangjiakou, Hebei province, offer new insights into the origins Chinese
civilization.
Archaeologists discovered more than 270
stone-piled tombs in this area, a number higher than the findings at the
Niuheliang site in Liaoning province, which is commonly believed to be
the nucleus of Hongshan culture.
Also on the top 10 list is the
Nanzuo site in Qingyang, Gansu province, where archaeologists have
unearthed a stunning settlement dating back 5,100 to 4,700 years and
covering 6 million square meters, about eight times the size of the
Palace Museum in Beijing.
The site boasts an architectural
complex of 4,000 square meters and has a central axis, indicating that
it was a high-level community that may have functioned as a capital
settlement in ancient China.
This year, the Zhongcun site in
Xiyang county, Shanxi province, has yielded five high-level aristocratic
tombs from the late Xia period, including the largest Xia tomb
discovered to date, demonstrating a high level of civilizational
development.
At the Zhengzhou Shang city site in Henan province,
which has been identified as the largest and highest-known early Shang
capital, archaeologists focused on the southern area of the inner city
and discovered large-scale storage facility foundations, a huge urban
water network, and evidence of bronze casting and bone toolmaking
industries.
The Changchun site in Fuping county, Shaanxi
province, offers clues of a large fief settlement of the Western Zhou
Dynasty (c. 11th century to 771 BC) within its royal domain, including a
large and well-organized cemetery, a settlement with a water network
and a handicraft area. These findings have allowed experts to better
understand the style of Western Zhou governance.
Some historical
records have been vindicated by archaeological discoveries for the first
time. For example, records show Shaoxing in Zhejiang province has 2,500
years of history since King Goujian of the Yue state from the Eastern
Zhou Dynasty (770-256 BC) built a new capital in Shaoxing in 490 BC. To
corroborate this, archaeological work yielded a layout of the capital,
including city walls, palace complex and sacrificial places.
According
to records, the site also housed the Kuaiji prefecture during the Han
(206 BC-AD 220) and Six (222-589) dynasties, which has been confirmed
following the discovery of government office building foundations and
many inscribed wooden and bamboo slips, or jiandu. These reveal many
facets of ancient societies, said Huo Wei, an archaeology professor at
Sichuan University.
Last year, the Xixia Imperial Tombs in the
Ningxia Hui autonomous region were inscribed on the World Heritage List.
Archaeological research continues to deepen the understanding of
Western Xia - a regime established in northwestern China by the Tangut
people and inhabited by various ethnic groups from 1038 to 1227.
The
Suyukou kiln site along the Helan Mountains in the region, which has
been listed among the top 10 discoveries of 2025, made fine white
porcelain for imperial use from 1080 to the end of the Xixia period.
It also features the earliest and most complete coal-fired kilns in northern China.