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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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192OS-194 os: FORMATION

The Swede Johan Gunnar Andersson (was impelled by the uncertain political climate of the

early 1900$ to shift his attention from geology to palaeontology in 1917. With Ding Wenjiang's

unfailing encouragement, as well as his own fund-raising skills, Andersson secured support

from both China and Sweden for publicity, financial assistance, and staff for palaeontological

and archaeological undertakings. 27

In 1921, Andersson was responsible for three major discoveries: the Neolithic cave at

Shaguotun, Jinxi area, Liaoning province; the Neolithic settlement at Yangshao village, Mianchi

county, Henan province (Yangshao culture [c. 5000-3000 BCE]); and the Palaeolithic cave at

Zhoukoudian, Beijing, which led to the discovery of Peking Man, or Sinanthropus pekinensis

(700,000-200,000 BP). 28

The Yangshao excavation best represents modern Chinese archaeology in its inaugural

phase. It took several years to complete the Yangshao excavation. Although Andersson had collected

vertebrate fossils from Yangshao village as early as 1918, it was not until his assistant assembled

several hundred stone artifacts from the site that Andersson himself returned to

Yangshao. In April 1921 he found some painted pottery but did not realize its importance until

he returned to Beijing and read a report on the American geologist Raphael Pumpelly's 1903-

1904 exploration to Anau, in present-day Turkmenistan, which referred to protohistoric painted

pottery. 29 With the permission of the government and the support of Ding Wenjiang, Andersson

organized a team and launched an excavation from October to December of the same year. 30

Andersson believed that the painted Yangshao pottery had been brought to the Yellow

River valley in prehistoric migrations from Eastern Europe. Therefore he searched for the roots

of the Yangshao culture in the Gansu and Qinghai provinces, in northwestern China. During

explorations in 1923 -1924 he discovered the remains of six regional prehistoric and Bronze Age

cultures, including the Majiayao (Machang) (3300-2050 BCE) and the Qijia (2000-1700 BCE).

He identified and distinguished the characteristics of these cultures and then established a

chronology of prehistoric cultures in the upper Yellow River area. 31 Andersson's nomenclature

was adopted and remains in use today, though his chronology is not entirely accurate. Although

he and his teammates had been trained in geology and palaeontology by Walter Granger

(American, 1872 -1941) of the American Museum of Natural History, New York, 32 their excavation

skills and experience were in developmental stages. Few comparative data and no carbon-

14 tests were then available. For all that, his achievement — the discovery of a Stone Age in

the "cradle area" of Chinese civilization — was remarkable. Andersson's work revealed that a

previously unknown civilization, which used polished stone tools, painted pottery, and an advanced

system of agriculture, had inhabited the Central Plains, the eventual seat of the dynastic

cultures.

Andersson's early hypothesis that Chinese civilization had been transmitted from the West

may have been influenced by the cultural diffusion theory prevalent among Western intellectu-

29 I MODERN CHINESE ARCHAEOLOGY

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