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Judi Lynn

(162,358 posts)
Thu Jan 4, 2018, 12:56 AM Jan 2018

ANCIENT CHINA: SATELLITE AND DRONE IMAGERY OF PREHISTORIC SILK ROAD CORRIDOR REVEALS LONG-LOST IRRIG


BY KASTALIA MEDRANO ON 1/3/18 AT 12:34 PM

Archaeologists have discovered an ancient irrigation system in northwestern China that explains how the region’s herding communities were able grow crops in one of the driest climates anywhere in the world. The system, dated to around the 3rd or 4th century A.D. and lost for centuries, lies in the foothills of the Tian Shan Mountains—part of the central corridor of the prehistoric Silk Road.

A team of archaeologists from Washington University in St. Louis made the discovery using data from drone and satellite imagery. They found “unmistakable outlines” of irrigation canals, cisterns and check dams (smaller, more makeshift-style dams), according to a university press release. They believe it's possible that the knowledge required to build such irrigation systems originated with early communities such as these, traveling along the corridor to Xinjiang province the same way crops did.

The team analyzed satellite imagery from the university’s Spatial Analysis, Interpretation and Exploration laboratory and studied a region called MGK—named for the nearby Mohuchahan Valley, according to the university press release. They then mapped the site in greater detail using a consumer-grade quadrocopter drone, as well as cutting-edge photogrammetry software that created a comprehensive 3D model of the site by stitching together roughly 2,000 geotagged aerial photos, according to the press release. A paper describing the research was published in the journal Archaeological Research in Asia.

“There are numerous studies on the crops that probably spread through the Silk Road and the prehistoric Silk Road,” corresponding author Yuqi Li, an archaeology graduate student in the university’s Department of Anthropology, told Newsweek via email. “Wheat and millets (foxtail and broomcorn) were probably the most important crops to understand trade and exchange along the prehistoric Silk Road. All of them are staple crops, so they had a large impact on people' diet.”

More:
http://www.newsweek.com/ancient-china-irrigation-system-traveled-silk-road-corridor-satellite-drone-769482?piano_t=1
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