Top 10 archaeological discoveries of 2023 announced in Beijing as sites reveal more of China’s history
The top 10 new archaeological discoveries in China in 2023 were announced in Beijing on March 22, 2024. The projects are prominent representatives of field archaeological work in the past year. (PHOTO / XINHUA)
Incredible efforts made by Chinese archaeologists last year have filled many gaps in knowledge about the origin of human beings and the formation of the Chinese civilization. This was evident from the list of China’s top 10 archaeological discoveries in 2023, which was announced by the National Cultural Heritage Administration in Beijing on March 22.
The top 10 discoveries were chosen from among 22 finalists out of more than 1,600 archaeological projects carried out last year through an open ballot by 21 of China’s top-tier experts from archaeological institutes and universities.
Half of the finalists are prehistoric sites, said Wang Wei, director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Academic Division of History, who is also one of the judges.
The Paleolithic Bashan site in Yishui county, Shandong province, stands out as it showcases the consecutive development history of people and their culture in the area from some 10,000 to 100,000 years ago.
An influential hypothesis suggests Homo sapiens originated in Africa. An important reference for it is that evidence of human activity from 50,000 to 100,000 years ago had not been found in East Asia before.
“The Bashan site group fills in the blank and thus plays a key role in East Asia’s Paleolithic archaeological studies,” said Wang Youping, a professor at Peking University.
Some of the artifacts discovered during various archaeological projects carried out in China last year on display. (PHOTO / XINHUA)
The Neolithic Keqiutou site complex dating back 3,000 to 7,500 years in Pingtan county, Fujian province, offers key clues for tracing people’s economic forms in what is now China’s southeast coast and the spread of Austronesian peoples across the Pacific Ocean.
“They not only relied on fishing but also farming for a living. The project enriches understanding of how prehistoric people utilized marine resources and prehistoric agriculture,” said Chen Xingcan, head of the Institute of Archaeology at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
The Qujialing Neolithic site dating back 4,200 to 5,900 years in Jingmen, Hubei province, which is by the Yangtze River, sheds light on the wisdom of ancient people, as archaeologists have found one of the earliest and clearest water-management systems that can resist droughts and floods and provide water for irrigation and daily use.
Some of the artifacts discovered during various archaeological projects carried out in China last year on display. (PHOTO / XINHUA)
“The site shows prehistoric people’s water management idea changed from passively preventing flooding to actively controlling water, realizing a stride from adapting to nature to transforming it,” said Zhao Hui, a professor at Peking University.
“From the projects, we find that excavations and studies on the origin of civilization in different areas have got unprecedented attention,” said Wang Wei.
“It’s an exciting phenomenon. It is clear the civilizational process of different areas will contribute to the understanding of the origin and formation of the entire Chinese civilization and its pluralistic and integrated pattern,” he added.
The Mopanshan site dating back 6,000 years in Langxi county, Anhui province, also indicates how civilizations got complicated by the Yangtze.
Some findings revolutionized people’s understanding of the Shang Dynasty (c.16th-11th century BC).
Some of the artifacts discovered during various archaeological projects carried out in China last year on display. (PHOTO / XINHUA)
The Shuyuanjie burial site in the early Shang capital in Zhengzhou, Henan province, is a long-anticipated discovery because archaeologists have always hoped to find a high-level cemetery since archaeological efforts started in the 1950s but failed to achieve a breakthrough till now.
A great number of bronze artifacts have been unearthed from this cemetery, covering nearly all types of their counterparts discovered at Yinxu Ruins, a late Shang capital in Anyang, Henan province.
“This means the bronzeware ritual system had developed in the early Shang stage,” said Wang Wei.
Some of the artifacts discovered during various archaeological projects carried out in China last year on display. (PHOTO / XINHUA)
The Zhaigou site in Qingjian county, Shaanxi province, has yielded information on the tombs of heads of Shang vassal states.
“The tombs can be compared with some of the Shang kings’ tombs in Yinxu Ruins in their scale. They will help us understand the relationship between the Shang Dynasty and the vassal states,” said Chen of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Some other projects unveil ancient products and trade. Efforts on the Chencun Ceramic Kiln site in Huozhou, Shanxi province, unveil the development of Huozhou kilns, a historically recorded kiln group but less known by people now.
(PHOTO / XINHUA)
“Archaeological studies show the Huozhou kilns entered a mature phase during the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234) ... and reached a peak in the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368), becoming the major kiln group producing refined white porcelain in North China,” said Huo Wei, an archaeology professor at Sichuan University.
Studies on the Northwest Continental Slope No 1 and No 2 Shipwrecks found at a depth of 1,500 meters in the South China Sea show the prosperous commercial and cultural exchanges along the ancient Maritime Silk Road in the middle of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
“They symbolize China’s underwater archaeology has reached the deep sea and help us understand the marine civilization in China,” said Song Jianzhong, a researcher at the National Center for Archaeology.