Discovered a 3000-year-old grave population in China

Picture 1 of Discovered a 3000-year-old grave population in China Tombs discovered by archaeologists Chinese archaeologists have discovered a population of 22 graves thought to be of the Chinese emperor's emperor's non-emperor family who lived 3,000 years ago.

The 80,000-meter-wide population of these 22 tombs was found by archaeologists at Qi Mountain in the northwestern part of China's West Province. 10 of the 22 graves have 4 corridors, a sign that their owners are ranked highest in the Zhou Dynasty.

4 carved plates on the 700 shells of excavated turtles show that these graves are related to the king's family. Scientists also found a city wall of 1500m long and 6 ruins of construction.

Emperor Zhou was the founder of the Western Zhou Dynasty. He is famous for establishing the rank in the feudal dynasty and moral conventions in society, laying the foundation for Chinese culture.

Đ.TÂM (According to AFP)