4,500-Year-Old Skeletons Found In SW China

AncientPages.com - Well-preserved human skeletons estimated to be about 4,500-years-old have been unearthed from a graveyard in southwest China's Sichuan Province, according to the archaeological team working in the area.

The graveyard was discovered on the site of a prehistoric city in Zhao'an Village, Dayi County, according to the Cultural Relics and Archaeology Research Institute of Chengdu City, capital of the province.

The numerous tombs are densely distributed and different burial methods are apparent, Zhou Zhiqing, director of the archaeological team working on the ruins, said.

Representational Image (Cambridge Univeristy - Image credit)

Representational Image (Cambridge Univeristy - Image credit) via DNA

He also said that it was the earliest and most complete graveyard of its kind found on the Chengdu Plain.

"The skeletons found were well preserved as they were beneath ground-water level and were cut off from air," Zhou said.

The find will help with research on neolithic people, such as into health, nutrition, oral diseases and diet composition and so on, according to Zhou, who believes that the skeletons will provide evidence for research on neolithic population, pathology and DNA test analysis.

In addition, archaeologists have discovered many cultural relics, including stone ware, pottery and two ivory bracelets.

The new findings will provide materials to aid China's archaeological research on culture resources and development along the upper reaches of the Yangtze River during Late Neolithic Age.

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source: Daily News And Analysis