"China's Top Six Archeological Discoveries in 2011" was recently released by China Academy of Social Sciences (CASS).
The list includes a Paleolithic site at Ulan Moron Town of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, a prehistoric settlement site near Horqin Left Middle Banner in Inner Mongolia, a cemetery of the Western Zhou Dynasty (11th century-770 BC) at Suizhou City in Hubei Province, a mausoleum of the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-23 AD) in Xuyi County in Jiangsu Province, a Western Han tomb in Dingtao County in Shandong Province and the Cham Grotto in Dinggye County of the Tibet Autonomous Region.
Compared with 2010's spectacular findings of Cao Cao's tomb, dinosaur bones and an ancient shipwreck, 2011 seems to be a small year. But archeologists still notched up some remarkable discoveries contributing to the knowledge of human history.
"The academic and scientific value is the major standard for judging the list," says Liu Qingzhu, a researcher in the Archaeology Institute of CASS, who also comments online about each discovery."All the discoveries help to fill in the blanks in the archeological map of China," says Chen Chun, professor of cultural heritage and museum studies at Shanghai Fudan University.
According to Professor Chen, the discoveries are significant, for example, the Cham Grotto in Tibet helps explain the origins and development of Tibetan Buddhism. But what's more important is follow-up analysis and careful study, which takes time.