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Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; lit. 'Three Star Mound ') is an archaeological site and a major Bronze Age culture in modern Guanghan , Sichuan , China. Largely discovered in 1986, [ 2 ] following a preliminary finding in 1927, [ 3 ] archaeologists excavated artifacts that radiocarbon dating placed in the 12th-11th ...
View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap 31.003100; 104.218100 Almost 1000 more Public Domain photos from Sanxingdui, plus 160,000 more from Chinese and world historical sites and museums at www.WorldHistoryPics.com
View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap 31.003100; 104.218100 Almost 1000 more Public Domain photos from Sanxingdui, plus 160,000 more from Chinese and world historical sites and museums at www.WorldHistoryPics.com
Little was known about the Shu kingdom until a farmer stumbled across a series of sacrificial pits containing otherworldly masks, sculptures and ornaments.
The Sanxingdui Ruins lie in Guanghan City. The site was first discovered in 1929 by a farmer who came across jade and stone artifacts while repairing a sewage ditch, according to Live Science.
View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap 31.003100; 104.218100 Almost 1000 more Public Domain photos from Sanxingdui, plus 160,000 more from Chinese and world historical sites and museums at www.WorldHistoryPics.com
The Sanxingdui Museum (三星堆博物馆) is a public heritage museum in Guanghan, Sichuan, China. The museum is located in the northeast corner of the ruins of Sanxingdui , which is at the bank of Duck River in the west of Guanghan City, Sichuan Province , known as a famous historical and cultural city.
English: Line drawing of a bronze figure on a pedestal unearthed at Sanxingdui, possibly represents a "high priest" or leader of religious practice. — Te Winkle, Kimberley S. (2005). "A Sacred Trinity: God, Mountain and Bird. Cultic Practices of the Bronze Age Chengdu Plain" in Sino-Platonic Papers (No. 149).