The Piyang-Donggar site ties at Donggar township of Zanda county in Ngari prefecture, Tibetan Autonomous Region, and consists of the Piyang sites at Piyang village and the Donggarsites at Donggar village. The whole si...The Piyang-Donggar site ties at Donggar township of Zanda county in Ngari prefecture, Tibetan Autonomous Region, and consists of the Piyang sites at Piyang village and the Donggarsites at Donggar village. The whole site comprises Buddhist grottoes, temp[es and pagodas, and tombs.The tombs in Area V of the Donggar sites and the Sasongtang and GeIintang cemeteries on the Piyangsite, al] discovered through the surveys here reported, form a group in the shape of the character “品”. inan area of about 200 sq m, excavation revea[ed 26 tombs, one horse hurial pit and an array of standingatones. Among the unearthed objects are pottery, bronzes, irons, stone artifacts and bamboo ware. Theygo back to the time corresponding to the Qin-Han period in the Central Plains.展开更多
The Takangba petroglyphs stand on the Takangha wilderness at Wujiang township inRutog county, Tibetan Autonomous Region. According to their location they can be divided into thewestern and the eastern areas. Altogethe...The Takangba petroglyphs stand on the Takangha wilderness at Wujiang township inRutog county, Tibetan Autonomous Region. According to their location they can be divided into thewestern and the eastern areas. Altogether there are ten relatively complete pictures. The representationsare all made by pecking, and some pictures overlap one another. Dated to the time no later than the in-troduction of Buddhism in the 6th century and no earlier than the first appearance of metal-ware in Tibet,the Takangba petroglyphs constitute a batch of rather early remains among the Tibetan petroglyphs.展开更多
This cemetery lies in the Gehusailu mountain valley, Doggar township of Zanda county, Ngari prefecture of Tibetan Autonomous Region. A survey discovvred there about 50 piles ofpebbles and stones, which must he tomb mo...This cemetery lies in the Gehusailu mountain valley, Doggar township of Zanda county, Ngari prefecture of Tibetan Autonomous Region. A survey discovvred there about 50 piles ofpebbles and stones, which must he tomb mounds. Some tombs have no stone barrows and other surfacemarks. Rather plentiful pottery shards, stone artifacts, two bronzes and a few fragmental human boneswere collected during the survey. The cemetery might he dated from 2500 to 2000 BP.展开更多
文摘The Piyang-Donggar site ties at Donggar township of Zanda county in Ngari prefecture, Tibetan Autonomous Region, and consists of the Piyang sites at Piyang village and the Donggarsites at Donggar village. The whole site comprises Buddhist grottoes, temp[es and pagodas, and tombs.The tombs in Area V of the Donggar sites and the Sasongtang and GeIintang cemeteries on the Piyangsite, al] discovered through the surveys here reported, form a group in the shape of the character “品”. inan area of about 200 sq m, excavation revea[ed 26 tombs, one horse hurial pit and an array of standingatones. Among the unearthed objects are pottery, bronzes, irons, stone artifacts and bamboo ware. Theygo back to the time corresponding to the Qin-Han period in the Central Plains.
文摘The Takangba petroglyphs stand on the Takangha wilderness at Wujiang township inRutog county, Tibetan Autonomous Region. According to their location they can be divided into thewestern and the eastern areas. Altogether there are ten relatively complete pictures. The representationsare all made by pecking, and some pictures overlap one another. Dated to the time no later than the in-troduction of Buddhism in the 6th century and no earlier than the first appearance of metal-ware in Tibet,the Takangba petroglyphs constitute a batch of rather early remains among the Tibetan petroglyphs.
文摘This cemetery lies in the Gehusailu mountain valley, Doggar township of Zanda county, Ngari prefecture of Tibetan Autonomous Region. A survey discovvred there about 50 piles ofpebbles and stones, which must he tomb mounds. Some tombs have no stone barrows and other surfacemarks. Rather plentiful pottery shards, stone artifacts, two bronzes and a few fragmental human boneswere collected during the survey. The cemetery might he dated from 2500 to 2000 BP.