摘要
In 1997, the Guangzhou Municipal Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology carried out a rescuing excavation of the ancient tombs discovered at Hengzhigang Road in Guangzhou City. The excavated three tombs are all wooden-chambered earth pits and belong to the middle and late Western Han period. They yielded 103 objects, including chiefly pottery, and also a small number of bronzes, talcum articles and crystal and agate beads. The pottery is principally hard clay ware grayish-white in body, coated with yellowish-brown glaze, mostly decorated with designs, and bearing cut signs in some cases. The excavation provided new material for studying the tomb shape and burial custom of this period.
In 1997, the Guangzhou Municipal Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology carried out a rescuing excavation of the ancient tombs discovered at Hengzhigang Road in Guangzhou City. The excavated three tombs are all wooden-chambered earth pits and belong to the middle and late Western Han period. They yielded 103 objects, including chiefly pottery, and also a small number of bronzes, talcum articles and crystal and agate beads. The pottery is principally hard clay ware grayish-white in body, coated with yellowish-brown glaze, mostly decorated with designs, and bearing cut signs in some cases. The excavation provided new material for studying the tomb shape and burial custom of this period.
出处
《考古》
CSSCI
北大核心
2003年第5期35-43,共9页
Archaeology