China's Boat-building Dates Back 7,500 Years
Chinese archaeologists have unearthed a
wooden boat dating back at least 7,500 years in Xiaoshan City of
east China's Zhejiang Province. It is the most ancient boat ever
discovered in China.Chinese
archaeologists have unearthed a wooden boat dating back at least
7,500 years in Xiaoshan City of east China's Zhejiang Province.
It is the most ancient boat ever discovered in China. "The
discovery of a boat this ancient is a rare event in the
archaeological history of the world," said Jiang Leping, a
researcher with the Zhejiang Institute of Cultural Relic
Archaeology.
Great Britain discovered a wooden oar used 7,500 years ago, but
failed to find any boat remains.
The dugout canoe, two meters long and 70 centimeters broad at
its widest place with a 15-centimeter-deep hold, has two spiles,
or wooden pegs, shaped like tree stumps on each side.
Mao Zhaoxi, a professor in the History Department of Zhejiang
University, considers that the canoe is quite valuable for
research on the history of boat-building used by human beings in
the Neolithic Age.
According to this historian, a boat dating back about 5,000
years was excavated earlier this year in Suzhou City, in east
China's Jiangsu Province. However, the newly-discovered canoe
confirms that the country's boat-building history extends back
an additional 2,000 years.
A four meter-wide ravine, once a silt-filled river, was also
excavated near the site where the canoe was found. In view of
the fact that several oars and some wood have been found in the
ravine, experts believe that ancient people used to build boats
along the river.
The canoe excavation site, also known as the Kuahuqiao ruins,
contains the most ancient neolithic cultural relics in Zhejiang.
Over the past decade, numerous pieces of precious pottery,
stoneware and jade articles dating back 7,000 to 8,000 years
have been discovered there.
Source:
english.people.com.cn
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