TAIYUAN -- Archaeologists have discovered more than 400 tombs dating back to the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (770-256 BC) and the Han dynasty (202 BC-220 AD) in North China's Shanxi province.
The excavation site in the city of Shuozhou spans 8 hectares, according to the Shanxi archaeology research institute.
In some tombs, the relics items, mainly pottery, have strong characteristics of local aboriginal cultural artifacts in the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, while in others, the engraved characters on the unearthed pots indicate they were stamps used by market regulators in the Qin (221-207 BC) and Han dynasties.
The findings have provided rich archaeological materials for the study of the layout and hierarchy of tombs, as well as funeral customs of the region along the Great Wall in North China from the Eastern Zhou to Han dynasties, said Gao Zhenhua, with the Shanxi archaeology research institute.