| Brief Introdution to Sanxingdui Ruins |
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| Back to Sichuan Index Back to Sanxingdui Index The Sanxingdui
culture occurred between 2800 B.C. to 800 B.C., from Neolithic age:
Dragon Hill culture to the end of Shang and early Zhou period. The first Sanxingdui relics
were discovered by a farmer in 1929 and in the next seventy years more
were excavated. During this period, generations of archaeologists
worked on the discovery and understanding of the Sanxingdui culture.
In 1986, two major sacrificial pits were found and they aroused widespread
attention in the global academic circle. The Sanxingdui finds are
exciting, but they remain enigmatic. No texts have been found, nor
is there any mention of this culture in the records of other states,
either during or after the late Shang period. Analysis of lead and
other elements in the bronzes indicates sources similar to those of other
cultures along the Lower Yangzi river basin. Some Chinese
archaeologists and historians have attempted to link this culture with the
later Shu culture, which was also centered in Sichuan. At this
point, however, the unique culture that produced these artifacts remains a
mystery.
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