2026-03 Archive

In the quiet countryside of Guanghan, Sichuan Province, a discovery in 1986 shattered long-held narratives about the cradle of Chinese civilization. Farmers digging an irrigation ditch stumbled upon a cache of artifacts so bizarre, so utterly unlike
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In the quiet countryside of Guanghan, Sichuan, a discovery in 1986 shattered conventional narratives of Chinese civilization. The Sanxingdui ruins, dating back over 3,000 years to the mysterious Shu kingdom, yielded artifacts so bizarre and technolog
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The story of human civilization is often told through the well-trodden paths of the Nile, the Indus, the Tigris and Euphrates, and the Yellow River. For centuries, Chinese history was understood through a Central Plains-centric narrative, with the Sh
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The story of ancient Chinese civilization has long been told through a familiar narrative, centered on the Yellow River and the dynastic chronicles of the Central Plains. Then, in 1986, a discovery in the quiet Sichuan basin shattered that singular p
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Forget everything you think you know about ancient Chinese history. Nestled in the quiet countryside near Guanghan, Sichuan Province, lies a site that has single-handedly rewritten the narrative of Chinese civilization: the Sanxingdui Ruins. A weeken
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In the quiet countryside of Guanghan, Sichuan Province, lies an archaeological discovery that continues to rewrite history books and challenge our understanding of early civilizations. The Sanxingdui Ruins, dating back 3,000 to 5,000 years, represent
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The archaeological world was forever changed in 1986 when local workers in China’s Sichuan province stumbled upon two sacrificial pits filled with artifacts so bizarre and magnificent that they seemed to belong to another world. This was the Sanxingd
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The Sichuan Basin, long shrouded in the mists of legend and spicy heat, has once again become the epicenter of an archaeological revolution. At a site known as Sanxingdui—"Three Star Mound"—near the city of Guanghan, teams of archaeologists are not m
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The story of Sanxingdui is not a linear narrative but a series of seismic shocks to our understanding of Chinese and human civilization. For decades, history textbooks centered on the Yellow River as the sole cradle of Chinese culture. Then, from the
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The recent archaeological revelations from Sanxingdui have not merely expanded our historical knowledge; they have fundamentally shaken the narrative of Chinese civilization. Far from the Central Plains-centric story, this site in Sichuan Province sc
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Sophia Reed
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