A curious Bronze Age artifact unearthed at a ceremonial site in southwestern China has now been identified as the earliest known and the largest of its kind, according to newly published research.
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China's earliest Bronze Age meteoritic iron artifact unearthed at Sanxingdui sacrificial site
In a study published in Archaeological Research in Asia, Dr. Haichao Li and a team of researchers analyzed the earliest ...
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Sanxingdui pit yields China’s earliest Bronze Age meteoritic iron artifact
An axe-like iron object pulled from a sacrificial pit at the Sanxingdui archaeological site in Southwest China has been ...
Buried deep in the south Georgia rolling hills, a tiny archaeological site has been rewriting history. Uncovered in the late 1950s, the Kvemo Bolnisi workshop was considered to be one of the ...
The discovery, published in the journal Archaeological Research in Asia, presents the results of analyses carried out on a ...
The lost city is notable not only for its construction, but its metallurgical production, too. Archaeologists have discovered a long-lost Bronze Age city. The settlement exhibits advanced urban ...
Scientists confirm a Bronze Age iron artifact from Sanxingdui was made from extraterrestrial material, revealing ancient ...
Research from Cranfield University sheds new light onto the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, showing how experimentation with iron-rich rocks by copper smelters may have sparked the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The site, shown here, was originally excavated during the Soviet period and was relocated using hand draw maps from a 1964 book.
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