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Archaeologists reveal Great Wall of China could be hundreds of years older than previously thought

Archaeologists reveal Great Wall of China could be hundreds of years older than previously thought

Iraqi News23-02-2025

Archaeological excavations in eastern China have revealed that parts of the Great Wall are much older than first thought.
In fact, recent research has proved that the wall is approximately 300 years older than previously estimated - dating back to the Western Zhou Dynasty (1046-771BC).
The discovery in Shandong province has shown that the Unesco World Heritage site was not a single construction project, but rather a series of fortifications built across multiple dynasties.
Until now, it was believed the first major walls were built around the 7th century BC.
New excavations covering over 1,000 square metres have unearthed sections of the wall dating to both the Western Zhou Dynasty and the early Spring and Autumn Period of 770-476BC.
Researchers employed a multidisciplinary approach to date these sections, analysing traditional artefacts alongside plant remains and animal bones found at the site.
The findings revealed how ancient Chinese engineers expanded the wall to approximately 30 metres at the peak of Qi State during the Warring States Period.
Ancient texts indicate the wall underwent multiple phases of development, including periods of collapse, abandonment and restoration.
A particularly well-preserved section of the wall - built during the Warring States Period (475 BC to 221 BC) - has emerged as the most significant find at the site.
"This section is the earliest known Great Wall in China," said Liu Zheng, who is a member of the Chinese Society of Cultural Relics.
Archaeologists have also managed to uncover a wealth of historical structures at the excavation site in Shandong province.
"We found buried sections of roads, house foundations, trenches, ash pits, and walls at the site," said Zhang Su, project leader from the Shandong Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology.
The latest research has established that the Great Wall's sections near the ancient city of Pingyin served purposes beyond military defence.
The proximity to this historically documented settlement has led experts to believe that the wall played a strategic role in controlling trade routes and transport networks.

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Archaeological Armageddon: Climate change threatens Iraq's unexcavated history
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Archaeological Armageddon: Climate change threatens Iraq's unexcavated history

Shafaq News/ The ruins of ancient cities lie cracked and crumbling under the scorching sun. Dust storms sweep across ziggurats older than the pyramids. In Iraq — the cradle of civilization — history is not just being forgotten; it's being erased. From the marshes of Sumer to the walls of Babylon (Babil), climate change is now the greatest threat to a heritage that once shaped the modern world. As heat intensifies and water disappears, the birthplace of writing, law, and astronomy faces a quiet, devastating extinction. A Race Against Time Iraq ranks among the top five countries most affected by climate extremes, according to the United Nations. Soaring temperatures, intensified sandstorms, prolonged droughts, and rising soil salinity are accelerating the destruction of the country's archaeological wealth. Ahmed Al-Elyawi, spokesperson for Iraq's Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Antiquities, told Shafaq News that 'Extreme weather now poses direct and serious risks to antiquities,' a threat significant enough to prompt both national and international conferences focused on preservation. 'Without urgent and coordinated action, the physical legacy of Mesopotamia may be lost to time — before it is fully uncovered or understood.' A Vast but Vulnerable Legacy Iraq's 15,000 known archaeological sites reflect an unmatched timeline of human history, from the Sumerians to the Abbasids. Yet fewer than 10% have been excavated due to decades of conflict, underfunding, and a lack of infrastructure. These ruins — ziggurats, palaces, temples, canals — are not just cultural symbols; they are scientific archives essential to understanding the origins of urban life. 'What lies beneath is just as valuable as what we see on the surface,' said Amer Abdul-Razzaq, a leading Iraqi archaeologist. 'And both are threatened.' Climate's Toll on Ancient Structures The impact of environmental extremes is tangible. Exposed mudbrick structures like Ur and Babylon, built from sun-dried bricks, are crumbling under intense heat and UV radiation. The Ministry of Culture's Climate Change Committee has documented damage caused by fluctuating humidity and rising salinity. 'Subsurface sites are threatened by increasing soil salinity, especially in the alluvial plains of southern Iraq, where more than 15,000 unexcavated sites remain,' said Muntasir Sabah Al-Hasnawi, the committee's head. Dust storms, which now sweep across Iraq nearly 300 days a year in some regions, are burying sites that had already been excavated. 'Strong winds form dunes that have buried several excavated sites, especially in desert regions where most ancient cities are located,' Abdul-Razzaq warned. Marshlands on the Brink Nowhere is the crisis more visible than in the southern marshlands — a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2016. These wetlands, once tied to the Sumerians, are drying due to climate change, upstream damming, and drought. 'Marshland areas like Al-Chibayish, Hawizeh, and Al-Hammar are suffering from severe drought and water shortages,' Abdul-Razzaq added, noting that the shrinking wetlands also threaten tourism and local livelihoods. Preservation Plans Face Major Gaps According to Al-Elyawi, Iraq's Ministry of Culture has organized field assessments, workshops, and joint initiatives with the environment and water ministries. 'We have put forward many recommendations in partnership with neighboring countries to confront the severe challenges to Iraq's archaeological heritage,' he said. However, experts say implementation has been slow. Al-Hasnawi emphasized that 'we need scientific strategies and significant financial resources to mitigate damage,' including green belts, improved drainage, and climate-adaptive coatings. But field teams still lack modern tools, and preservation budgets remain limited. 'We have the plans, but not the tools,' Al-Hasnawi admitted. A Global Responsibility Despite rising awareness, Iraqi experts are calling for broader support. Abdul-Razzaq criticized current preservation efforts as inadequate and urged greater funding from the federal government. 'Desertification is not just turning farmland into sand — it is swallowing our past,' he said. 'The loss is silent, but it is happening every day.' Specialists recommend a multi-pronged strategy: accelerate excavation and digital documentation using drones and 3D scanning; build physical protections around vulnerable structures; and, most crucially, integrate cultural preservation into Iraq's broader climate policy. Al-Hasnawi and Abdul-Razzaq both agree that without international funding and technical expertise, even the best local efforts will fall short.

Archaeologists reveal Great Wall of China could be hundreds of years older than previously thought
Archaeologists reveal Great Wall of China could be hundreds of years older than previously thought

Iraqi News

time23-02-2025

  • Iraqi News

Archaeologists reveal Great Wall of China could be hundreds of years older than previously thought

Archaeological excavations in eastern China have revealed that parts of the Great Wall are much older than first thought. In fact, recent research has proved that the wall is approximately 300 years older than previously estimated - dating back to the Western Zhou Dynasty (1046-771BC). The discovery in Shandong province has shown that the Unesco World Heritage site was not a single construction project, but rather a series of fortifications built across multiple dynasties. Until now, it was believed the first major walls were built around the 7th century BC. New excavations covering over 1,000 square metres have unearthed sections of the wall dating to both the Western Zhou Dynasty and the early Spring and Autumn Period of 770-476BC. Researchers employed a multidisciplinary approach to date these sections, analysing traditional artefacts alongside plant remains and animal bones found at the site. The findings revealed how ancient Chinese engineers expanded the wall to approximately 30 metres at the peak of Qi State during the Warring States Period. Ancient texts indicate the wall underwent multiple phases of development, including periods of collapse, abandonment and restoration. A particularly well-preserved section of the wall - built during the Warring States Period (475 BC to 221 BC) - has emerged as the most significant find at the site. "This section is the earliest known Great Wall in China," said Liu Zheng, who is a member of the Chinese Society of Cultural Relics. Archaeologists have also managed to uncover a wealth of historical structures at the excavation site in Shandong province. "We found buried sections of roads, house foundations, trenches, ash pits, and walls at the site," said Zhang Su, project leader from the Shandong Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology. The latest research has established that the Great Wall's sections near the ancient city of Pingyin served purposes beyond military defence. The proximity to this historically documented settlement has led experts to believe that the wall played a strategic role in controlling trade routes and transport networks.

NOAH WAY Scientists decipher world's oldest map on 3,000-year-old Babylonian tablet to reveal location of ‘Noah's Ark'
NOAH WAY Scientists decipher world's oldest map on 3,000-year-old Babylonian tablet to reveal location of ‘Noah's Ark'

Iraqi News

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A CLEVER team of scientists have managed to decipher the world's oldest map and claim it may show the location of "Noah's Ark". The 3,000-year-old Babylonian tablet has puzzled archaeologists for centuries with experts only uncovering the true meaning behind the mysterious relic in the past few weeks. The patterned cuneiform tablet was discovered in the Middle East before being acquired by the British Museum in 1882. Ever since it was found people have tried to figure out what the map-like symbols etched onto the tablet may mean. The carvings have been dubbed Imago Mundi by scientists who say it shows an aerial view of Mesopotamia that dates back to the 6th century BC. Ancient Mesopotamia - now known as modern-day Iraq - is surrounded by a double ring dubbed the 'Bitter River,' which marked the borders of the known world at the time. After over a month of analysing the symbols on both the back and front of the tablet, researchers now claim it shows clear references to Bible stories. The back is said to act like a secret key showing travellers the route they may take and detailing what they should look out for. One section reportedly says anyone on the journey must go through "seven leagues to see something that is thick as a parsiktu-vessel". Based on other ancient Babylonian scriptures the word parsiktu typically helps to explain the size of a vessel needed to survive the Great Flood. Another passage also appears to show a path to "Urartu" followed by instructions on how to get there. Urartu is believed to be the place where a man and his family landed a gigantic ark they had made, according to ancient Mesopotamian poems. Researchers say that Urartu - also known as Ararat - sits at the top of a mountain in Turkey and it is said to be where the ark sat following the 150-day flood. British Museum cuneiform expert Dr. Irving Finkel says: "It shows that the story was the same, and of course that one led to the other but also, that from the Babylonian point of view, this was a matter of fact thing. "That if you did go on this journey you would see the remnants of this historic boat." The Biblical story of Noah's Ark closely follows the Babylonian version. Its version says that the god Ea sent a terrifying flood down to Earth that destroyed humanity except for one family. Utnapishtim and his closest ones built a huge ark after being ordered to by the god before filling it with animals. The following six month flooding plunged the world into darkness with just Utnapishtim, his family and all those animals on the ark surviving. They ended up safely stationed at one of the peak's of Urartu as the flooding came to an end. Dr Finkel added: "In this account, the details are given and the God says 'You have to do this, this and this' and then the Babylonian Noah says 'I did this, this and this. I've done it! "And I made these structures as thick parsiktu vessel." The Gilgamesh Flood story is known from several clay tablets dating back over 3,000 years. Whereas the Biblical Flood was said to be about 5,000 years ago. It is still widely debated if the Turkish mountain of Ararat mentioned in the Babylonian passages truly exists. The cuneiform tablet also confirms several other things to scientists. One of this is the Babylonian's belief in the God of creation Marduk and other mythical monsters such as scorpion-man and a lion-headed bird called Anzu. It comes as another Babylonian mystery was recently cracked by experts as a tablet containing a code was finally deciphered. The research team successfully decoded the 4,000-year-old text bizarrely about lunar eclipses. The newly discovered texts reveal that the Babylonians viewed lunar eclipses as terrifying ominous signs of death and destruction.

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