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15 January 2019
Beast-faced carvings found at Chinese prehistoric settlement

The distinctive, often beastly, patterns found on classical Chinese bronzeware may be thousands of years older than first thought, archaeologists said after finding similar designs carved into the stone walls of a prehistoric settlement in the country's northwest.
     A team working at the Shimao archaeological site in Shaanxi province made the discovery during a recent excavation of the city's Neolithic remains, which are thought to date back to about 2,000 BCE. "The beast-face patterns found in Shimao might have had a significant influence on the motifs of China's Bronze Age," Sun Zhouyong, president of the Shaanxi Provincial Institute of Archaeology, said in a report.
     Researchers unearthed about 30 carvings at the site with designs similar to those found on the elaborately decorated bronze vessels of the Shang and Zhou dynasties (1600-256 BCE). While most of them featured a recurring geometric pattern, others were of monstrous faces, the report said.
     Shimao, which covers about 4 sq km, is China's largest prehistoric archaeological site, comprising fortifications, palaces, houses, tombs and sacrificial altars. Discovered in 1976 it was declared a protected cultural heritage site 30 years later but was not thoroughly excavated until 2011. In 2013, archaeologists found the skulls of more than 80 young women in a mass grave near the city walls, which some experts believe might have been part of a sacrificial offering to mark the start of construction.
     Researchers were working to find out whether there might have been a link between the people who carved the ancient stones and the craftsmen of the Zhou and Shang dynasties, the report said.

Edited from South China Morning Post (2 January 2019)

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