Ancient cliff paintings found in NW China valley
Updated: 2014-10-26 21:28
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||
LANZHOU - Chinese archaeologists have discovered more than 40 rock paintings in northwestern Gansu Province that may shed light on nomadic lives thousands of years ago.
Found in the Chijinshan Valley near Jinchang City, the paintings depict human faces, animals and hunting scenes. They were carved on smooth cliffs and remain well-preserved, according to the Gansu provincial cultural heritage administration.
Researchers said the majority of paintings were created in the period between the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (770 BC - 221 BC) and the Han Dynasty (202 BC - 220 AD), similar to the 200 rock paintings discovered in Jinchang in the 1990s.
Gansu was home to many ancient nomadic settlements in early Chinese history. Murals offer precious clues to studies on their lives due to a lack of historical records in this regard.
- Accord reached on key bank
- Remembrance of Flying Tigers & WWII Veterans
- Lang Lang plays at the UN Day concert
- Politicians don't let minor injuries stop them
- iPhone loses subsidies in China
- Shanghai travels to Texas
- In California: Cash, Cash, Cash
- Concert with Chinese pianist helps UN celebrate anniversary
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Decoding China cyber-society |
Safeguarding foreigners' rights |
Getting my first hair cut in Ningbo |
The ancient army that's still growing |
China responds over "hacker infiltration to Apple's iCloud" |
Hard times for the lords of the rings |
Today's Top News
China's 361 will make uniforms for Rio 2016 Olympic Games
China to provide the 4th batch of assistance to fight ebola
Concert with Chinese pianist helps UN celebrate anniversary
Accord reached on Asia infrastructure bank
Civil service exam hit amid corruption crackdown
'Miracle' premature baby ready to go home
Minister praises China's vision over AIIB
China pledges $81.7m Ebola aid to Africa
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |