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  2. Peiligang culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peiligang_culture

    The culture is also one of the oldest in ancient China to make pottery. [1] This culture typically had separate residential and burial areas, or cemeteries, like most Neolithic cultures. Common artifacts include stone arrowheads, spearheads and axe heads; stone tools such as chisels, awls and sickles for harvesting grain; and a broad assortment ...

  3. List of Neolithic cultures of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Neolithic_cultures...

    The Chinese neolithic:trajectories to early states. Cambridge, UK New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-81184-8. Liu, Li; Chen, Xingcan (eds). 2012. The archaeology of China: from the late paleolithic to the early bronze age. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-64310-8; Underhill, Anne P (ed). 2013. A companion to Chinese ...

  4. Chinese ceramics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_ceramics

    Chinese pottery can also be classified as being either northern or southern. China comprises two separate and geologically different land masses, brought together by continental drift and forming a junction that lies between the Yellow and Yangtze rivers, sometimes known as the Nanshan-Qinling divide.

  5. Yangshao culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yangshao_culture

    The Yangshao culture crafted pottery: Yangshao artisans created fine white, red, and black painted pottery with human facial, animal, and geometric designs. Unlike the later Longshan culture, the Yangshao culture did not use pottery wheels in pottery-making. Excavations found that children were buried in painted pottery jars.

  6. Yuchanyan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuchanyan

    Yuchanyan is an early Neolithic cave site in Dao County (Daoxian), Hunan, China. The site yielded sherds of ceramic vessels and other artifacts which were dated by analysis of charcoal and bone collagen, giving a date range of 17,500 to 18,300 years old for the pottery. [2] The pottery specimens may be the oldest known examples of pottery. [3]

  7. Nanzhuangtou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanzhuangtou

    Over 47 pieces of pottery were discovered at the site. Nanzhuangtou is also the earliest Neolithic site yet discovered in northern China. There is evidence that the people at Nanzhuangtou had domestic dogs 10,000 years ago. [5] Stone grinding slabs and rollers and bone artifacts were also discovered at the site.

  8. Prehistoric Chinese religions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Chinese_religions

    The Chinese sinologist Li Chi and fellow proponents traced the origins of ritual bronze designs in China to works of pottery during the Neolithic, although the now-abundant source of excavated materials has rendered their argument unsubstantiated. [105] Erlitou's own pottery works were also derived from that of Dawenkou in Shandong. [106]

  9. Longshan culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longshan_culture

    Black egg-shell pottery stemmed cup of the Shandong Longshan. Shandong Museum Black pottery wine jar (lei).National Museum of China White pottery gui.Shandong Museum. The Longshan (or Lung-shan) culture, also sometimes referred to as the Black Pottery Culture, was a late Neolithic culture in the middle and lower Yellow River valley areas of northern China from about 3000 to 1900 BC.