Xiaohe Cemetery (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Xiaohe Cemetery" in English language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank English rank
4th place
4th place
2nd place
2nd place
1,653rd place
1,397th place
5th place
5th place
18th place
17th place
149th place
178th place
11th place
8th place
3rd place
3rd place
low place
7,877th place
3,448th place
5,925th place
304th place
1,952nd place
702nd place
520th place
1st place
1st place
low place
low place
7th place
7th place
3,946th place
6,960th place

books.google.com

  • Shuicheng, Li (2003). Bulletin. Stockholm: Fälth & Hässler. p. 13. "Biological anthropological research indicates that the physical characteristics of those buried at Gumugou cemetery along the Kongque River near Lop Nur in Xinjiang are very similar to those of the Andronovo culture and Afanasievo culture people from Siberia in Southern Russia. This suggests that all of these individuals belong to the Caucasian physical type.¹² Additionally, excavations in 2002 by Xinjiang archaeologists at the site of Xiaohe cemetery, first discovered by the Swedish archaeologist Folke Bergman,¹³ uncovered mummies and wooden human effigies that clearly have Europoid features [Figure 6.1]. According to the preliminary excavation report, the cultural features and chronology of this site are said to be quite similar to those of Gumugou.¹⁴ Other sites in Xinjiang also contain both individuals with Caucasian features and ones with Mongolian features. For example, this pattern occurs at the Yanbulark cemetery in Xinjiang, but individuals with Mongoloid features are clearly dominant.¹³ The above evidence is enough to show that, starting around 2,000 B.C., some so-called primitive Caucasians expanded eastward to the Xinjiang area as far as the area around Hami and Lop Nur. By the end of the second millennium, another group of people from Central Asia started to move over the Pamirs and gradually dispersed in southern Xinjiang. These western groups mixed with local Mongoloids¹⁶ resulting in an amalgamation of culture and race in middle Xinjiang east to the Tianshan. "

china.org.cn

  • "Burial Site from the Bronze Age, Lop Nur, Xinjiang". www.china.org.cn. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
  • "Silk Road Documentary Unearths Latest Findings". china.org.cn. Retrieved 28 July 2009.

cnki.com.cn

cdmd.cnki.com.cn

doi.org

eastwestcenter.org

harvard.edu

ui.adsabs.harvard.edu

nih.gov

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

nii.ac.jp

dsr.nii.ac.jp

nytimes.com

sciencedirect.com

semanticscholar.org

api.semanticscholar.org

sino-platonic.org

upenn.edu

  • Samuel Hughes (January–February 2011). "When West" (PDF). The Pennsylvania Gazette.

web.archive.org

worldcat.org

ynet.com

epaper.ynet.com