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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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veyed and excavated, and ancient cities, architectural plans, scales, and technology were documented,

all since the 19505. 81

Although planned archaeological activities were infrequent or sporadic during the Cultural

Revolution, extraordinary accidental discoveries and rescue excavations continued to occur.

The jade shrouds from the tombs of Prince Liu Sheng and his wife at Mancheng, Hebei

(second century BCE); a bronze galloping horse from Leitai, Wuwei, Gansu (186 CE); an almost

intact corpse of a noblewoman, textiles, silk paintings and documents, and lacquers from

Mawangdui, Changsha, Hunan (second century BCE); and the life-size terra-cotta army from the

burial pits (third century BCE) near the First Emperor's mausoleum at Lintong, Shaanxi, were

all unexpected discoveries. 82 These finds confirmed the prodigious capability of the ancient

Chinese people to create astonishing works of art. Gradually, exhibitions were organized and

sent abroad, beginning in 1972. These have attracted huge numbers of visitors, and have

increased interest in and understanding of Chinese culture and art. Perhaps more important,

such exhibitions heralded China's eventual reopening to the world.

1977 TO THE PRESENT: MATURATION

The arrest of the Gang of Four in late 1976 marked the end of the Cultural Revolution. 83 In the

wake of sweeping reforms initiated by Deng Xiaoping (1905-1997), China has fundamentally

changed. Under this favorable climate, archaeology in China has achieved maturity, owing in

part to the diverse means of scientific chronometric dating (and particularly the full utilization

of radiocarbon and carbon-14 dating techniques).

In 1977, Xia Nai used the information provided by carbon-14 dating to produce a chronological

framework for prehistoric cultures in seven regional clusters. He substantiated his 1962

thesis that several cultural systems had coexisted in the Yellow River and Yangzi River areas —

rice cultures flourished in the south, and millet cultures in the north. 84 In 1984, Xia further

suggested that a sophisticated and highly stratified society had emerged prior to the Shang

period (and no later than the Erlitou period). 85 Xia spurred rethinking of when, how, why, and

from where Chinese civilization was formed and developed. Xia Nai's 1977 study had recourse

to a mere ninety-four items dated by radiocarbon analysis; by 1991, radiocarbon dates had been

established for more than 2,100 objects. 86 Chronometric dating techniques other than radiocarbon

dating — amino-acid racemization, archaeomagnetism, dendrochronology, fission track,

obsidian hydration, potassium-argon, thermoluminescence, and uramium series — began to

be employed.

Epochal archaeological discoveries of early and middle Neolithic cultures in the Yellow

River watershed and the lower Yangzi River delta were realized in the 19708. In the north,

Neolithic cultures dated to the sixth millennium BCE were excavated at Dadiwan, Qin'an,

Gansu province; Peiligang, Xinzheng, Henan province; and Cishan, Wuan, Hebei province. 87

39 | MODERN CHINESE ARCHAEOLOGY

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