A cluster of 99 ancient tombs, more than 2,000 years old, has been found in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, according to local authorities.
An archaeological team from the regional institute of cultural relics and archaeology discovered a complex of tombs in Jungar Banner, including 99 tombs and a sacrificial pit dating between the late Warring States Period (475-221 B.C.) and the early Western Han Dynasty (202 B.C.-8 A.D.).
Most of the tomb owners were found without coffins in tombs that vary in size. The biggest one measured about five meters in length, three meters in width and three meters in height, and the smallest one was barely larger than a human body.
Animal offerings, including skeletons of goats, cattle, and dogs, were found in nearly one-third of the tombs.
Animal sacrifice was a familiar burial ritual among residents living along the Great Wall during the Warring States Period, according to archaeologists. The Great Wall wound through part of northern China at that time.
Cooking utensils, dating back to the late Warring States Period, such as ceramic kettles, were unearthed, as well as 10 bronze government seals from the Western Han Dynasty.
"This shows the area of the tombs was under the control of the central government during the early Western Han Dynasty," said Hu Chunbai, head of the archaeological team.
(Top Photo: A file photo taken in 2010 shows a relic site near Hulun Buir city, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China. /VCG Photo)
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