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XI'AN - Archaeologists have identified the remains of the largest Stone Age building ever found in China -- thought to be a prehistoric "town hall" -- in Northwest China's Shaanxi province.
The remains of the pentagon-shaped structure, discovered at the Xiahe Site in Baishui county, date back to the Yangshao culture era of 5,000 to 3,000 BC in the New Stone Age.
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"The ancients erected four large wooden pillars and columns along the walls, making the structure of this size possible," said Zhang.
Zhang said the multiple-layer walls, the calcite-plastered floor and a 1.8-meter-wide fireplace in the center made the building "quite special."
Traces at the site suggested the above-ground structure was later carefully removed, rather than abandoned, said Zhang.
Researchers are still considering its exact purpose.
The Yangshao culture was a Neolithic culture existing along the Yellow River. Relics discovered from the time include colorful painted pottery. The most recent finds included the ruins of a building devastated by an early earthquake.
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