URUMQI, Nov. 26 (Xinhua) -- Chinese archaeologists have carefully stripped the 2,200-year-old clothing from four mummies in order to prevent the delicate outfits from decaying with the dried corpses.
Three skulls and four mandible bones of different sizes have been uncovered so far, leading archaeologists to believe they belonged to one man, two women, and a little boy.
"It may be a family buried together, including a husband and two wives with one child," said Xu Dongliang with the Academia Turfanica, who joined the undressing work, which started on Nov. 20.
Among the clothes were woolen pants, knitted mantles, fabric coats, silk scarves, and brightly-colored sheepskin boots, which offer a glimpse into the delicate handicrafts of that time, according to Xu.
Inside the fabric coat, the adult male was wearing a brown and red belt made of leather and wool and decorated with green silk. The female mummies were wearing woolen coats outside with silk scarves underneath, as well as agate stones believed to be from necklaces or waist accessories. "These are proof that the family was aristocratic," said Xu.
The mummies were unearthed from a cluster of ancient tombs found at a highway construction site in Turpan Prefecture in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in 2007. About 31 tombs containing clothed mummies, a large amount of silk cloth, woolen fabric and the world's first artificial leg have so far been discovered at the site.
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