Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Ban Chiang Archaeological Site' has mentioned 'Bronze' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
During the first formal scientific excavation in 1967, several skeletons, together with bronze grave gifts, were unearthed. | WIKI |
The site's oldest graves do not include bronze artifacts and are therefore from a Neolithic culture; the most recent graves date to the Iron Age. | WIKI |
The excavation at Ban Chiang in 1974xe2x80x931975 was followed by an article by Chester Gorman and Pisit Charoenwongsa, claiming evidence for the earliest dates in the world for bronze casting and iron working. | WIKI |
Bronze making began circa 2000 BCE, as evidenced by crucibles and bronze fragments. | WIKI |
[7] Recovered bronze objects include bracelets, rings, anklets, wires and rods, spearheads, axes and adzes, hooks, blades, and little bells. | WIKI |
Ban Chiang, along with other surrounding villages in northeast Thailand, contains many bronze artifacts that demonstrate that metallurgy had been practiced in small, village settings nearly four thousand years ago. | WIKI |
This research has revealed that the site dates from 1,495 BC .and contains early evidence for settled agrarian occupation in Southeast Asia, along with evidence of wet rice agriculture, associated technological complex of domesticated farm animals, ceramic manufacture, and bronze tool-making technology. | UNESCO |
In addition to ceramics, the site has exceptional and uniquely early evidence of the knowledge of bronze-making by its inhabitants with remains of raw materials, production facilities, and complete bronze tools and ornaments. | UNESCO |
These early bronze finds make the site known as the metal tools production site in East and Southeast Asia. | UNESCO |
Later stratigraphic layers of the site contain evidence for the widespread transition from bronze to iron tool making, characteristic of agricultural settlements in the proto-historic period throughout the region. | UNESCO |