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Cave fossils reveal pre-historic human inhabitants
Archaeologists have found
evidence of pre-historic human habitation dating back as much as 10,000 years at
the Son Cave in the northern province of Ninh Binh.
Cao Tan, a researcher from the Heritage Section of the provincial Department of
Culture, Sports and Tourism, said an excavation discovered a layer of red
sediment containing animal bones and the shells of fresh-water mollusks such as
mountain and stream snails.
They are a sure sign of the presence of human beings living in the cave in the
late Pleistocene period, more than 10,000 years ago, said Tan.
The findings included assorted shells of marine mollusk such as barnacles and
oysters belonging to the Holocene epoch dating to between 5,000 and 7,000 years
ago.
Based on this, archaeologists surmise that the Son Cave since may have served as
shelter for prehistoric humans with different living environments at two
different stages of history.
In the first stage, the surrounding environment was marked by limestone
mountains and fresh water streams and springs, while the later stage was
characterised by seas and lagoons caused by the expansion of the sea during the
Holocene era.
Local archaeologists, however, acknowledged that the real significance of the
find could only be determined after thorough research by experts.
The Son Cave is located within the historic site of the ancient capital Hoa Lu
under King Dinh Tien Hoang, the founder of the second Vietnamese dynasty, from
968-979.
Source: VNA |
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