3000-year-old house ruins unearthed in NE China
Share - WeChat

SHENYANG - Chinese archaeologists have excavated the ruins of two houses dating back about 3,000 years in Shenyang, capital of Northeast China's Liaoning province.
A bronze short sword was discovered at the ruins, which dated back to China's Western Zhou Dynasty (1,046 B.C. - 771 B.C.).
The houses are part of the Beiwai Ruins, which covers an area of 100,000 square meters and dates back to the Bronze Age.
In 2017, Chinese archaeologists began excavation at the site and unearthed pottery, stone and bronze wares, said Zhao Xiaogang, deputy head of the city's institute of archaeology.
Related Stories
- PLA condemns Canadian, Australian warships' Taiwan Strait transit
- Delegation from Americas concludes urban development exchange in Shanghai
- Cargo, fishing vessels collide in Bohai Sea, search for missing underway
- China's first 8K space film ?SHENZHOU 13 premieres in Shanghai
- Flags spotlight Hebei's enduring war legacy
- Harbin Institute of Technology opens China-SCO doctoral training center