Vast Bronze Age City Discovered In The Plains Of Kazakhstan New Scientist
Vast Bronze Age City Discovered In The Plains Of Kazakhstan New Scientist A large 140 hectare settlement dating back 3600 years has been discovered in the plains of north eastern kazakhstan, transforming our understanding of life in prehistoric eurasia. Semiyarka uncovers a hidden bronze age powerhouse where steppe nomads forged an advanced urban and industrial civilization. an immense bronze age settlement has emerged from the kazakh.
Vast Bronze Age City Discovered In The Plains Of Kazakhstan New Scientist Archaeologists have uncovered the remains of a major bronze age settlement on the kazakh steppe region, shedding new light on a key phase of central asian prehistory. the discovery reveals a regional centre for large scale bronze production more than 3,500 years ago. Archaeologists studied semiyarka, dubbed the city of seven ravines, a settlement from 1600 bc that may have been a powerhouse for metal production. here’s what they found. University college of london archaeologist miljana radivojevic and her colleagues recently mapped the site with drones and geophysical surveys (like ground penetrating radar, for example), tracing. Archaeologists in northeastern kazakhstan have discovered a remarkable bronze age settlement that is changing the ways scholars understand life, technology, and social organization across the eurasian steppe.
Vast Bronze Age City Discovered In The Plains Of Kazakhstan New Scientist University college of london archaeologist miljana radivojevic and her colleagues recently mapped the site with drones and geophysical surveys (like ground penetrating radar, for example), tracing. Archaeologists in northeastern kazakhstan have discovered a remarkable bronze age settlement that is changing the ways scholars understand life, technology, and social organization across the eurasian steppe. Archaeologists have identified a sprawling 140 hectare settlement perched dramatically above the irtysh river in northeastern kazakhstan, as one of the most remarkable discoveries in steppe archaeology in decades. Twenty years after its discovery, archaeologists are finally revealing the secrets of semiyarka, a bronze age settlement in kazakhstan that may have been a center of exchange and power. In northeastern kazakhstan, perched high above the irtysh river, the remains of a bronze age settlement have emerged from the earth—a place so large, so deliberately built, and so unexpectedly sophisticated that it is rewriting our understanding of life in prehistoric eurasia. Archaeologists have identified a sprawling 140 hectare settlement perched dramatically above the irtysh river in northeastern kazakhstan, as one of the most remarkable discoveries in steppe.
Vast Bronze Age City Discovered In The Plains Of Kazakhstan New Scientist Archaeologists have identified a sprawling 140 hectare settlement perched dramatically above the irtysh river in northeastern kazakhstan, as one of the most remarkable discoveries in steppe archaeology in decades. Twenty years after its discovery, archaeologists are finally revealing the secrets of semiyarka, a bronze age settlement in kazakhstan that may have been a center of exchange and power. In northeastern kazakhstan, perched high above the irtysh river, the remains of a bronze age settlement have emerged from the earth—a place so large, so deliberately built, and so unexpectedly sophisticated that it is rewriting our understanding of life in prehistoric eurasia. Archaeologists have identified a sprawling 140 hectare settlement perched dramatically above the irtysh river in northeastern kazakhstan, as one of the most remarkable discoveries in steppe.
Vast Bronze Age City Discovered In The Plains Of Kazakhstan New Scientist In northeastern kazakhstan, perched high above the irtysh river, the remains of a bronze age settlement have emerged from the earth—a place so large, so deliberately built, and so unexpectedly sophisticated that it is rewriting our understanding of life in prehistoric eurasia. Archaeologists have identified a sprawling 140 hectare settlement perched dramatically above the irtysh river in northeastern kazakhstan, as one of the most remarkable discoveries in steppe.
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