Traces of
Paleolithic age discovered in Vietnam
Archeologists
announced that prehistoric people living in Viet Nam knew how to use
hand-axes 700-800 thousand years ago. The remarks were made during a
presentation of the preliminary results of the archaeological study of An Khe
Town in the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai.
Yesterday
(April 11) researchers from the Viet Nam Institute of Archaeology (VIA) and
the Viet Nam Academy of Social Sciences reported on their excavation and
showcased remarkable artefacts they have collected.
Nguyen Gia
Doi, PhD, vice director of VIA, said they started excavating in late 2014.
Technical and financial support from Russia’s Novosibirsk Institute of
Archaeology and Ethnography made the project possible. The joint project
investigating this site will run until 2019.
“The local
people exploited stone from the mountains, exposing the vestige,” he said.
“We visited and examined many times. Then we decided to excavate trenches at
the Go Da and Roc Tung sites.”
Early this
year, they collected 58 stone artifacts and 25 pieces of tektite. Stone artifacts
collected include nine picks, five choppers, nine scrappers, two hammer
stones, six flaked tools, three amorphous cored tools, 12 flakes, and 12
stone cores.
Tektites
are gravel-size bodies composed of black, green, brown or gray natural glass
formed from terrestrial debris ejected during meteorite impacts.
Due to the
properties of tektites, scientists often use them to estimate dates for
artifacts found in the same stratigraphic layer.
Tektites in
Viet Nam from the Australian – Indochinese field have previously been
estimated to be around 700-800 thousands years old.
“That’s why
our preliminarily assessment is that the artefacts are associated with Homo
erectus, an ancestor to modern humans which arose at least 1.8 million years
ago,” said Doi.
Geographically,
this is a transitional area from the highlands to the delta-coastal region in
central Viet Nam. From the point of view of human geography, this is a
long-standing residential area of Bahnar people speaking a language in the
Mon-Khmer linguistic family.
“All sites
have a single, intact cultural layer with stone objects. No sign of kitchen,
tomb or human remains yet,” he said.
Doi
supposed that no traces of humans were found because the archaeological site
is outdoors, where organic matter would be destroyed easily. “Until now, we
have only found Palaeolithic human bones in caves, where they can be
preserved better,” he said.
This
finding added evidence about the earliest Vietnamese history known. The
excavation and research have just begun. It’s hoped that there will be new
findings during subsequent excavations, said Nguyen Xuan Thang, director of
the VASS.
“For
the first time, Vietnamese archaeologists have discovered tektites dating
from 700-800 thousands years ago, together with the early Palaeolithic
artifacts. This is a turning point in our awareness about the dawn of
national history.”
The
findings will supply materials to compile national history, contribute more
objects to be displayed at museums, and provide the foundation to develop a
plan for protecting and developing cultural tourism in the Central Highlands,
he said.
Results of
the excavation also contradict the view that only prehistoric Western people
used bifaced hand axes, while prehistoric Eastern people had choppers and
chopping tools.
Vietnamese
researchers intend to organise an international conference to announce
investigation results and to consult foreign experts about protecting the
site and further research.
VNS
|
Thứ Ba, 12 tháng 4, 2016
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