Dubova, Nadezhda A., (2019). "Gonur Depe – City of Kings and Gods, and the Capital of Margush Country (Modern Turkmenistan)", in: Urban Cultures of Central Asia from the Bronze Age to the Karakhanids, Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden, p. 29: "...in 1972, Professor Victor Sarianidi picked up the first fragments of pottery from the surface of a huge hill named by the local people 'Gonur Depe' ('Grey Hill' in Turkmen). Excavations were not carried out there every year after that: Sarianidi was busy excavating near the Kopet Dagh Mountains, at other sites in ancient Murghab Delta, and in northern Afghanistan..."
Dubova, Nadezhda A., (2019). " Gonur Depe – City of Kings and Gods, and the Capital of Margush Country (Modern Turkmenistan)", in Christoph Baumer and Mirko Novák (eds.), Urban Cultures of Central Asia from the Bronze Age to the Karakhanids, Proceedings of the First International Congress on Central Asian Archaeology held at the University of Bern, 4–6 February 2016, Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden, pp. 29-53.
Sataev, Robert M., Nadezhda A. Dubova, and Muhamed A. Mamedov, (2019). "The internal chronology and periodization of Gonur Depe", in Antiquities of East Europe, South Asia and South Siberia in the context of connections and interactions within the Eurasian cultural space (new data and concepts): Proceedings of the International Conference, November 18–22, 2019, St. Petersburg, p. 41.
Andrew Lawler, Central Asia's Lost Civilization -- The unveiling of a 4,000-year-old civilization calls into question conventional ideas about ancient culture, trade, and religion. November 29, 2006 discovermagazine.com