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Ancient sculpture remnants reunited after 3,000 years (12)

(Xinhua) 08:33, June 17, 2022

Photo taken on June 1, 2022 shows scattered parts of a newly unearthed bronze sculpture at the No. 8 sacrificial pit at the Sanxingdui Ruins site in southwest China's Sichuan Province.

A newly unearthed bronze sculpture at the famed Sanxingdui Ruins site was successfully matched with another bronzeware part after being set apart about 3,000 years ago, the archaeological team confirmed Thursday.

The sophisticated bronze sculpture depicts a figure of a human head and snake body, with protruding eyes, tusks, and horns. Above the head is a cinnabar trumpet-shaped zun (an ancient wine vessel) and the figure is linked by its hands and a square pedestal urn-shaped lei (an ancient wine vessel.) Without the rear part of the body, the sculpture was recently excavated from the No. 8 sacrificial pit.

Archaeologists later found that another bronzeware part, which was unearthed from the No. 2 pit in 1986, can perfectly match with the figure's lost body part.

The incomplete part wears a tight skirt with cloud patterns and has strong legs with bird claws that step on two birds.

Archaeologists speculate that the human-head, snake-body, and bird-claw figure should be a divinity statue. (Xinhua/Shen Bohan)


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(Web editor: Peng Yukai, Liang Jun)

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