In China the colourful and beautiful
sounds of the Eurasian Magpies (Figure 1) historically have been
described in many poems and throughout literature, as being an
auspicious bird that brings you happiness and fortune if you find them
flying in front of your window chattering. Many of the houses in the
Luonan County, both old and new, are decorated with small sculptures of
magpies that often embellish scores of roof ridges (Figure 2). Luonan
County is located southeast of Shaanxi and is a remote mountainous town
where our ROM-China Luonan project has been active since 1997.
Figure 1. Eurasian Magpie in flight commonly seen in North China.
Figure 2: A house with magpie decoration in Luonan, where our Luonan project took place.
Two days ago, during a survey trip in the
field, we encountered a group of magpies flying around and resting on
trees under which we were carefully searching for Pleistocene hominid
stone tools. Strangely enough, they had no interest in leaving and were
chattering loudly. I stopped to take out my camera and captured a few
amazing photos (Figures 3-4). When the magpies finally flew away, my
colleague, Dr. Shejiang Wang, the Director of the Luonan project,
muttered: “You know, for the last while every time we hear magpies
chattering, our team discovers the best artefacts during our
excavations”. I laughed, thinking that I know what the omens of the
chattering magpies meant, but didn’t believe we would find anything
during this magpie encounter.
Figure 3: One of the magpies we encountered during our survey that was under the tree where we were searching for Acheulian Tradition tools.
Figure 4: A magpie flying away after chattering, and bringing a fortunate message to us.
But, sure enough around ten minutes
later, and about 50 meters away, we located a stunning piece! It was
exactly what we were hoping to find. The artefact was embedded within a
layer of palaeosol sediments, which probably dates to as early as
400,000 years (Figures 5). The piece uncovered is a hand axe, a
well-made bifacial symmetric tool (Figure 6). Over the last decade, our
team has uncovered more than 200 hand axes from open-air sites in the
Luonan Basin. It is clear to us that this area was occupied by
hunter-gatherers who produced similar tools such as hand axes and
cleavers, which was commonly known as Acheulian tradition in the western
side of the Old World. This stone tool technology first appeared during
the Stone Age period in Europe and Africa where it roughly dates to
around 1.7 million and 0.2 million years ago. The discovery of hand
axes in the Luonan Basin is significant because it raises questions
around how East Asian hominids were able to adapt to this mountainous
environment differently from, or similar to, their European and African
counterparts. For example, our hand axe does not seem to have as much of
a sophisticated manufacturing process as the European and African stone
tools assemblages. But both Dr. Wang and I have observed, through a
decade of field investigations in the region, that these tools were
“good enough” to perform the necessary functions. A breakthrough came
around two years ago, when we discovered hand axes in association with
other typical Acheulian traditional tool types such as cleavers and
picks from excavated sites. The reason we made such significant
discoveries is because the team was able to excavate an area of more
than 800 square meters (compared to previously where the team was only
able to excavate 4 to 10 square meters each year). The salvaging
archaeology project was done during construction of a new highway that
reached all the way up to our field home-base (Figures 7 - 8).
Figure 5: Found it! A hand axe 50 meters away from the tree where magpies rested.
Figure 6: Dr. Chen Shen picking up the hand axe from a site that runs through the newly built highway.
The new G40 highway – the Shanghai-Xi’an
Expressway, which is 1,490 km (930 mi) in length - connects the cities
between Xi’an and Shanghai, and was completed last July. In 1997 it
usually would take us around 6 to 8 hours to travel to our sites, which
are hidden inside hills of the Qinling Mountains at an altitude of 1000
meters above sea level. The Qinling Mountains extend to about 1,500
kilometres across central China from the Gansu-Qinghai border in the
west to central Henan in the east. Now for the first time, I am able to
travel from the airport in Xi’an (where the terracotta warriors are
located) to our excavation sites in about 1 ½ hours.
Figure 7: This highway runs through the archaeological site, which would allow us to travel 1½ hours from
Xian International Airport to the Luonan archaeological field base that
is hidden in the mountainous area. Before the new highway travel time
used to take up to 6-8 hours.
Figure 8: Dr. Wang, the Director of the Luonan project, examining a tool exposed from a highway construction profile. A bit further down, a previous excavation pit can be seen.
also see Royal Ontario Museum website: http://www.rom.on.ca/en/blog/magpies-hand-axe-and-highway-dr-chen-shen-and-the-rom-china-luonan-project
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