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Dolmens on the Upper Reaches of the Huifa River

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Dolmens on the Upper Reaches of the Huifa River
Dolmens on the Upper Reaches of the Huifa River is located in China
Dolmens on the Upper Reaches of the Huifa River
Location within China
LocationJilin Province
RegionLiuhe County
Coordinates42°16′46″N 125°54′14″E / 42.279388°N 125.903925°E / 42.279388; 125.903925
TypeTombs
History
PeriodsMid to Late Pottery Period
CulturesNorthern-style East Asian megaliths, Yemaek, Seodansan[1]
Architecture
Architectural stylesMegalithic tombs
Dolmens on the Upper Reaches of the Huifa River
Traditional Chinese輝髮河上游石棚墓
Simplified Chinese辉发河上游石棚墓
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHuīfāhé shàngyóu shípéng mù

The Dolmens on the Upper Reaches of the Huifa River are a collection of more than 80 megalithic tombs found along two tributaries of the Huifa River.[2]

Overview

The dolmens are located in the administrative divisions of Liuhe County and Meihekou City in Tonghua, Jilin. They are distributed throughout the drainage basins of the Yitong (Chinese: 一統河; pinyin: yītǒng hé) and Santong (Chinese: 三統河; pinyin: sāntǒng hé) rivers, both tributaries of the Huifa River. Most were built on low-lying mountain ridges.[2]

More than 80 dolmens have been recorded. The majority were made using a worked granite slab for the floor, three to four rectangular or square slabs as walls, and a large slab that was placed on the top to act as an overhanging roof. Most slabs measure over 1 metre, but the largest is approximately 2 metres.[2] The deceased was sometimes interred inside the dolmen or in a pit below the monument. In the latter cases, the walls of the grave were either made from stone or tamped earth.[3]

Excavations of the burials have discovered human remains, stone arrowheads, and reddish-brown coarse pottery.[4]

Dates

Based on a presumed relationship between the dolmens and other archaeological sites, Hong Feng suggested that they mainly date to the ninth century BCE, with some potentially being built into the fifth century BCE.[1] Yu Xiaohui, however, has argued that the dolmens represent the northernmost point where Northern-style East Asian megaliths are found. As a result, they are probably later than similar structures on the Liaoning Peninsula and may date later to around the fifth century BCE.[3]

Protection

The dolmens were listed as a Major Historical and Cultural Site Protected at the National Level in 2006.[2]

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Hong (1985), p. 28.
  2. ^ a b c d Yu (2010), p. 9.
  3. ^ a b Yu (2010), p. 12.
  4. ^ Hong (1985), p. 26.

Works cited