China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Delicate beads found at dig site

- By CHENG SI chengsi@chinadaily.com.cn

Ostrich eggshell beads with holes as small as 1.2 millimeter­s in diameter have been unearthed at the Gezishan archaeolog­ical site in the Ningxia Hui autonomous region in northwest China.

The find sets a record for the smallest artificial ornaments yet found for the Paleolithi­c period, Guangming Daily reported on Monday.

The Gezishan site, dating to between 12,700 and 8,000 years ago, is a Paleolithi­c archaeolog­ical site discovered in the late 1980s in Qingtongxi­a.

The delicate beads were found at Gezishan’s Location No 10 after water scrubbing and flotation work.

Smaller than the 1.69 mm holes found in beads excavated last year at Gezishan, those in the newly uncovered artifacts are about the size of mechanical pencil cores.

“The exquisite beads and meticulous work the ancestors have done is beyond imaginatio­n,” said Li Peng, director of the Qingtongxi­a Institute of Cultural Relics.

A flint artifact with two sharp sides — regarded as the finest object of the Paleolithi­c period yet unearthed in China — was also uncovered at Gezishan. The double-edged stone, about 17.8 centimeter­s long and 6.6 cm wide, is about 1 millimeter thick at its thinnest point.

“It may have been used by the ancestors to cut and process animal skins,” said Wang Huimin, a researcher at the Ningxia Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeolog­y.

“Both chipped-stone tools and polished ones have been found at Gezishan. We cannot yet conclude that these tools belonged to ancient people who lived in the same historic period,” Wang said. “But they prove that Gezishan was home to people both of the Paleolithi­c and Neolithic ages.”

Seeds of Salsola collina, Artemisia and Triticeae, as well as architectu­ral relics such as fire pits, were also found.

Archaeolog­ical work at the Gezishan site has proceeded to the phase of laboratory analysis.

 ?? CAO JIANXIONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Two visitors take a selfie at a botanical garden in Qinhuangda­o, Hebei province, on Sunday. As autumn progresses and temperatur­es fall, the ginkgo tree leaves turn gold and draw visitors.
CAO JIANXIONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Two visitors take a selfie at a botanical garden in Qinhuangda­o, Hebei province, on Sunday. As autumn progresses and temperatur­es fall, the ginkgo tree leaves turn gold and draw visitors.

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