Chinese archaeologists have begun the second-stage excavation of the ruins of a north China town, hoping to find more evidence for the argument that it is the starting point of the ancient maritime silk road.
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| Archaeologists work at the ancient Haifeng town ruins site in Huanghua, north China's Hebei Province [Credit: Xinhua/Yang Shiyao] |
The first-stage excavation of the site began in July 2016 and lasted for more than five months in a 300-square-meter excavation area in the port city of Huanghua, Hebei Province, with findings including 1,000-year-old architectural sites, ancient roads, and pieces of pottery and porcelain.
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| Archaeologists work at the ancient Haifeng town ruins site in Huanghua, north China's Hebei Province [Credit: Xinhua/Yang Shiyao] |
Located in the southeast of Haifeng town ruins and about 400 meters from the first excavation, the new site covers 1,000 square meters.
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| Archaeologists work at the ancient Haifeng town ruins site in Huanghua, north China's Hebei Province [Credit: Xinhua/Yang Shiyao] |
"The ongoing excavation is to determine the functions of the port ruins' different zones," said Lei.
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| An archaeologist works at the ancient Haifeng town ruins site in Huanghua, north China's Hebei Province [Credit: Xinhua/Yang Shiyao] |
About 25 kilometers east of Huanghua, the Haifeng town ruins cover a total area of 2.28 million square meters as a national protected heritage site.
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| An archaeologist displays a scrap of broken porcelain at the ancient Haifeng town ruins site in Huanghua, north China's Hebei Province [Credit: Xinhua/Yang Shiyao] |
Source: Xinhua Net [March 17, 2017]










