In the Middle Urals, archeologists discovered an unknown settlement of the X-IV century BC

13 June 2017, 16:04 | Art
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In the Nevyansky district of the Sverdlovsk region archaeologists discovered a previously unknown to science village of the X-IV century BC (the Late Bronze Age), the area of ??which reaches 1,836 square meters, writes Znak. Com. The archaeological object scientists called "the village of Bynga II".

Finds are fragments of walls of ceramic vessels of Gamayun culture. It is believed that these tribes formed in the basin of the Lozva River and the headwaters of the Tavda River as a result of the mixing of the hunters and fishermen of the Lozvinsk culture of the Konda river basin that migrated from the north and partly the groups of the Atlim culture, which was widespread in the 12th-8th centuries BC in the Lower Ob region. Later, the carriers of the Gamayun culture moved to the Middle and Southern Trans-Urals.

Note that this culture got its name from a single-layer parking lot on the Gamayun cape of the Upper Isetsky Pond. Archaeologists studied it in the middle of the last century.

An unknown settlement was discovered by researchers from the Research and Production Center for the Protection and Use of Historical and Cultural Monuments of the Sverdlovsk Region during exploration work.




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